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meta
meta is a tool for managing multi-project systems and libraries. It answers the conundrum of choosing between a mono repo or many repos by saying "both", with a meta repo!
meta is powered by plugins that wrap common commands, letting you execute them against some or all of the repos in your solution at once. meta is built on loop, and as such inherits loops ability to easily target a particular set of directories for executing a common command (eg meta git status --include-only dir1,dir2
. See loop for more available options).
meta is packaged with a few of these core plugins by default: https://github.com/mateodelnorte/meta/blob/master/package.json#L63-L66
Why meta?
- clone a many-project architecture in one line
- give every engineer on your team the same project setup, regardless of where it's cloned
- npm / yarn install against all your projects at once
- execute arbitrary commands against many repos to manage your projects
- super simple plugin architecture using commander.js
- easily wrap commands for working with any platform, not just Node!
- meta repo keeps code in per project repos, benefiting deployment and reuse
- use the same tools you always use. no strange side effects of git submodules or subtree
- give different teams different slices of your architecture, with multiple metarepos!
- use
meta project migrate
to migrate mono-repos to a meta repo consisting of many repos
getting started
installing
npm i -g meta
will install a meta
command on your system.
initializing a new meta project
To create a new meta project:
- create a new directory for your meta project
mkdir my-meta-repo
- initialize a new git repository in your new dir:
cd my-meta-repo && git init
- initialize your new repository as a meta repo:
meta init
meta will have created a .meta file to hold references to any child repositories you add.
- (a) to create a new project, use
meta project create [folder] [repo url]
(b) to import an existing project, usemeta project import [folder] [repo url]
for each project added, meta will update your .gitignore file and the .meta file with references to the new child repo
You can now perform commands against all of the repositories that make up your meta repository by using meta exec
.
For example, to list all of the files in each project:
meta exec "ls -la"
cloning an existing meta project
To clone an existing meta repo, rather than git clone
like you are used to, simply execute meta git clone [meta repo url]
instead. meta
will clone your meta repo and all child repositories at once.
meta git clone git@github.com:mateodelnorte/meta.git
Getting meta project updates
If you are working on a team and another members adds a project to the meta repository, to get the project, run meta git update
.
# get new .meta file
git pull origin master
# clone missing projects
meta git update
working with meta
meta exec
The most basic way to interact with meta repositories is to use the meta exec
command. This will let you run any command against the projects that make up your meta repo.
meta exec "git checkout master"
In many cases, that is enough. There are also special cases where the functionality provided by the initial tool wasn't quite meta-y enough, and for those, there are plugins.
Even meta-exec, itself is a plugin, but it comes with meta by default.
plugins
All meta functionality is contributed by plugins - node modules that begin with meta-
and are either installed globally or in your meta repo's node_modules directory. We recommend you install them as devDependencies in your meta repo's package.json. Plugins add additional sub commands to meta, and can leverage loop or meta-loop to easily execute a common command against your meta repo and all child repos.
Here's how easy it is to install meta-npm
as a plugin, and gain the ability to meta npm install
all your repos at once:
Going deeper - meta plugins are able to wrap common commands for a friendly user experience, such as meta npm install
. They are also able to extend the native tool's capabilities. For example, git update
is not a git command, but meta git update
will clone any repos that exist in your .meta file that aren't cloned locally - a problem that doesn't exist with a single git repo.
You shouldn't have much new syntax to memorize for some crazy new utilities nobody knows about. For instance, if you want to check the git status
of all your repositories at once, you can just type meta git status
:
In the case a command has not been wrapped with a plugin, just use meta exec
instead.
Available Plugins
Third-party Plugins
Available Templates
Usage Scenarios
Product Development Team
Your product consists of multiple applications and services. As the project lead, you can use meta
to group together the projects so every developer is able to meta git clone
a single project to get everything they need for development.
Furthermore, you could add a docker-compose
file at this root level to run all of the services and applications:
version: '3.7'
services:
app1:
image: app1
build:
context: projects/app1
ports:
- 1234:1234
env_file: projects/app1/.env
app2:
image: app2
build:
context: projects/app2
ports:
- 1234:1234
env_file: projects/app2/.env
service1:
image: service1
build:
context: projects/service1
ports:
- 1236:1234
env_file: projects/service1/.env
service1:
image: service1
build:
context: src/service2
ports:
- 1237:1234
env_file: src/service2/.env
The meta repo is a good place for things like this, including scripts and a Makefile
that are responsible for meta things, like gettings secrets for each project, like .env
files for local development.
Take this example Makefile
at the root of a meta repo:
onboard:
meta exec "make setup"
setup: install-tools get-secrets
install-tools:
echo "add install scripts here"
get-secrets:
echo "get secrets via SOPS/Vault/however and cp into appropriate projects"
The command make onboard
would start the setup task in the root and all of the child directories.
Each project can then contain a Makefile
like so:
setup:
npm ci
npm run dev
To get new projects up and running you can give them the instructions:
meta git clone git@github.com/yourorg/metaproject
cd metaproject
make onboard
And they would have a fully running dev environment.
Developing a Library with many modules
Meta itself is developed with meta. This way you have a monorepo like feel while developing, but with individual components with their own release cycles.
It takes advantage of npm link
, just like tools like Lerna do.
Using meta npm link && meta npm link --all
enables a good development experience by creating symlinks so each project uses the development version of any other project in the meta repo:
# install meta
npm i -g meta
# clone and enter the meta repo
meta git clone git@github.com:mateodelnorte/meta.git
cd ./meta
# install plugins
npm install
# run install for all child repos
meta npm install
# create symlinks to/from all child repos
meta npm link --all
# link meta itself globally
npm link
There is admittedly now the problem of updating each repository to use the newly published versions of each other. For this, we recommend using a tool like Renovate, Dependabot, or Greenkeeper.
See this article for an example: Bring In The Bots, And Let Them Maintain Our Code!
Migrating a Monorepo to many repos
'meta project migrate' helps you move from a monorepo to a meta repo by moving directories from your existing repo into separate child repos, with git history intact. These are then referenced in your '.meta' file and cloned, making the operation transparent to your codebase.
For example, given the following monorepo structure:
- monorepo-base
- project-a
- project-b
- project-c
Create git repos for project-a
, project-b
, and project-c
, then run:
cd monorepo-base
meta init
meta project migrate project-a git@github.com/yourorg/project-a
meta project migrate project-b git@github.com/yourorg/project-b
meta project migrate project-c git@github.com/yourorg/project-c
This will keep the git history of each subproject in tact, using some git magic:
- Explanation: https://help.github.com/en/articles/splitting-a-subfolder-out-into-a-new-repository
- Implementation: https://github.com/mateodelnorte/meta-project/blob/master/lib/splitSubtree.js
How it works
- Migrate will first create a copy of your project in a temporary directory and replace the remote 'origin' with the provided <childRepoUrl>
- It will split the history from <destFolder> and push to the provided <childRepo>: https://help.github.com/en/articles/splitting-a-subfolder-out-into-a-new-repository
- Next <destFolder> is removed from your monorepo, and then cloned back into the same location.
In the eyes of the monorepo, the only thing that has changed is the .meta file, however, <destFolder> now also has it's own distinct history.
Migration Phase
If you need the monorepos structure to stay in tact for any extended duration, such as supporting legacy CI systems, you can stop here.
While in this 'migration' phase, you need to commit to the child directory's git history as well as the monorepo's git history. These commits can literally be made twice by cd-ing around or both can be made at once using 'meta git commit'.
Finishing the Migration
When the monorepo no longer needs to be maintained you can simply add the migrated project to your '.gitignore'.
This will cause changes to only be tracked in the child repo, rather than both, such as during the migration phase.
FAQs
How can I create a group of repositories, to, for example, run npm install on only node projects?
There are two ways to do this:
- Meta repos can contain other meta repos. Make smaller groups of repos that only contain projects with commands that will be executed together. This is commonly not an option such as in migrating legacy monorepos.
- Use a
Makefile
to declare the groups, and usemake
commands:
NODE_APPS=app1,service1,app2,service2
node-install:
meta npm install --include-only $(NODE_APPS)
Then you can run make node-install
Can I run things in parallel?
Yes.
meta exec "npm ci" --parallel
Output is even grouped nicely together for you at the end! :)
How to escape expressions
If you try to evaluate an expression run in meta exec, you'll notice that the expression is evaluated before being run in the target projects.
➜ meta exec "echo `pwd`" --include-only=plugins/meta-loop
plugins/meta-loop:
/Users/patrickleet/dev/mateodelnorte/meta
plugins/meta-loop ✓
In these cases, simply escape the expression so that it is not executed until being run against each project rather than ahead of time:
➜ meta exec "echo \`pwd\`" --include-only=plugins/meta-loop
plugins/meta-loop:
/Users/patrickleet/dev/mateodelnorte/meta/plugins/meta-loop
plugins/meta-loop ✓
Or...
➜ meta exec "echo \$(pwd)" --include-only=plugins/meta-loop
plugins/meta-loop:
/Users/patrickleet/dev/mateodelnorte/meta/plugins/meta-loop
plugins/meta-loop ✓
Developing meta locally
The best way to get started is to do the following:
npm i -g meta
meta git clone git@github.com:mateodelnorte/meta.git
cd ./meta
npm install
meta npm install
meta npm link --all
npm link
This will clone the meta project, meta
, enter the directory, and then use meta
to perform npm install
, npm link --all
in each directory listed in projects
of the .meta
JSON configuration file, and link meta itself to be used as a global command.
You can then write your command and test using ./bin/meta git gh [subcommand]
.
You can run the above as a single command:
meta git clone git@github.com:mateodelnorte/meta.git && cd ./meta && npm i && meta npm install && meta npm link --all && npm link
Yarn lovers can do the same:
npm i -g meta
meta git clone git@github.com:mateodelnorte/meta.git
cd ./meta
yarn
meta yarn install
meta yarn link --all
yarn link
Or
meta git clone git@github.com:mateodelnorte/meta.git && cd ./meta && yarn && meta yarn install && meta yarn link --all && yarn link
See discussion here for more details