Command-line utility for installing Angular libraries into the Angular CLI-based projects.
- Install library from the NPM or local package (i.e. tarball file)
- Register assets, styles and scripts with
angular.json
- Register library modules in the application
- Format updated application module with Prettier
- Generate new configuration file for a library
Install as a global package using the following command:
npm i -g @ngstack/install
You can use the tool everywhere using ngi
alias.
Run ngi
without parameters to see the internal help.
Name | Description |
---|---|
-v, --version | output the version number |
-n, --name <name> | set library name if installing from custom sources (default: null) |
--init | create a new configuration file |
--module <module> | module to use for the registration (default: app) |
--import [modules] | list of modules to import |
--skip-install | skip installing library |
--skip-assets | skip copying assets |
--skip-module | skip module registration |
--skip-format | skip code formatting |
-h, --help | output usage information |
Add and publish an ngi.json
file as part of your library.
Example:
{
"assets": [
{
"glob": "**/*.json",
"input": "./assets",
"output": "./assets/plugins"
}
],
"modules": [
{
"name": "MyExtensionModule",
"namespace": "my-extension"
}
]
}
Based on the configuration above, the tool is going to perform the following actions:
- copy all JSON files from
assets
to theassets/plugin
folder - generate
import { MyExtensionModule } from 'my-extension';
in the/src/app/app.module.ts
- put the
MyExtensionModule
into the moduleimports
section
The asset configuration format is based on the Angular CLI settings.
However, the input
property defines the path relative to the library structure, rather than application one.
{
"glob": "**/*.json",
"input": "./assets",
"output": "./assets/plugins"
}
You can also register custom styles and scripts in the corresponding sections within angular.json
file.
Example (ngi.json):
{
"styles": ["./styles/one.css", "./styles/two.css"],
"scripts": ["./scripts/test1.js", "./scripts/test2.js"]
}
Upon execution the ngi
tool is going to use relative paths to the extension folder.
Example (angular.json)
{
"styles": [
"node_modules/my-extension/styles/one.css",
"node_modules/my-extension/styles/two.css"
],
"scripts": [
"node_modules/my-extension/scripts/test1.js",
"node_modules/my-extension/scripts/test2.js"
]
}
The tool works best with the ngi.json
configuration files that are published with the libraries.
However it is also possible to install an arbitrary Angular library.
In this case you need to provide one or multiple module names to import.
ngi @company/library --import=Module1,Module2
As a result of the command above, the tool is going to install @company/library
from the NPM,
and setup the main application module with two imports:
import { Module1 } from '@company/library';
import { Module2 } from '@company/library';
@NgModule({
imports: [Module1, Module2]
})
export class AppModule {}
Note that you will have to setup asset rules for angular.json
file manually.
Install library my-extension
from the NPM
and perform integration tasks if ngi.json
file present.
ngi my-extension
Install library from the tarball generated by the npm pack
command.
Use my-extension
name to find and use library in the node_modules
.
ngi my-extension-0.0.1.tgz my-extension
Perform only application module integration for manually installed library
ngi my-extension-0.0.1.tgz my-extension --skip-install --skip-assets
MIT