# Stealthy-Require [![Build Status](https://img.shields.io/travis/analog-nico/stealthy-require/master.svg?style=flat-square)](https://travis-ci.org/analog-nico/stealthy-require) [![Coverage Status](https://img.shields.io/coveralls/analog-nico/stealthy-require.svg?style=flat-square)](https://coveralls.io/r/analog-nico/stealthy-require) [![Dependency Status](https://img.shields.io/david/analog-nico/stealthy-require.svg?style=flat-square)](https://david-dm.org/analog-nico/stealthy-require) This is probably the closest you can currently get to require something in node.js with completely bypassing the require cache. `stealthy-require` works like this: 1. It clears the require cache. 2. It calls a callback in which you require your module(s) without the cache kicking in. 3. It clears the cache again and restores its old state. The restrictions are: - [Native modules cannot be required twice.](https://github.com/nodejs/node/issues/5016) Thus this module bypasses the require cache only for non-native (e.g. JS) modules. - The require cache is only bypassed for all operations that happen synchronously when a module is required. If a module lazy loads another module at a later time that require call will not bypass the cache anymore. This means you should have a close look at all internal require calls before you decide to use this library. ## Installation [![NPM Stats](https://nodei.co/npm/stealthy-require.png?downloads=true)](https://npmjs.org/package/stealthy-require) This is a module for node.js and is installed via npm: ``` bash npm install stealthy-require --save ``` ## Usage Let's say you want to bypass the require cache for this require call: ``` js var request = require('request'); ``` With `stealthy-require` you can do that like this: ``` js var stealthyRequire = require('stealthy-require'); var requestFresh = stealthyRequire(require.cache, function () { return require('request'); }); ``` The require cache is bypassed for the module you require (i.e. `request`) as well as all modules the module requires (i.e. `http` and many more). Sometimes the require cache shall not be bypassed for specific modules. E.g. `request` is required but `tough-cookie` – on which `request` depends on – shall be required using the regular cache. For that you can pass two extra arguments to `stealthyRequire(...)`: - A callback that requires the modules that shall be required without bypassing the cache - The `module` variable ``` js var stealthyRequire = require('stealthy-require'); var requestFresh = stealthyRequire(require.cache, function () { return require('request'); }, function () { require('tough-cookie'); // No return needed // You can require multiple modules here }, module); ``` ## Usage with Module Bundlers - [Webpack](https://webpack.github.io) works out-of-the-box like described in the [Usage section](#usage) above. - [Browserify](http://browserify.org) does not expose `require.cache`. However, as of `browserify@13.0.1` the cache is passed as the 6th argument to CommonJS modules. Thus you can pass this argument instead: ``` js // Tweak for Browserify - using arguments[5] instead of require.cache var requestFresh = stealthyRequire(arguments[5], function () { return require('request'); }); ``` ## Preventing a Memory Leak When Repeatedly Requiring Fresh Module Instances in Node.js If you are using `stealthy-require` in node.js and repeatedly require fresh module instances the `module.children` array will hold all module instances which prevents unneeded instances to be garbage collected. Assume your code calls `doSomething()` repeatedly. ``` js var stealthyRequire = require('stealthy-require'); function doSomething() { var freshInstance = stealthyRequire(require.cache, function () { return require('some-module'); }); return freshInstance.calc(); } ``` After `doSomething()` returns `freshInstance` is not used anymore but won’t be garbage collected because `module.children` still holds a reference. The solution is to truncate `module.children` accordingly: ``` js var stealthyRequire = require('stealthy-require'); function doSomething() { var initialChildren = module.children.slice(); // Creates a shallow copy of the array var freshInstance = stealthyRequire(require.cache, function () { return require('some-module'); }); module.children = initialChildren; return freshInstance.calc(); } ``` The `slice` operation removes all new `module.children` entries created during the `stealthyRequire(...)` call and thus `freshInstance` gets garbage collected after `doSomething()` returns. ## Technical Walkthrough ``` js // 1. Load stealthy-require var stealthyRequire = require('stealthy-require'); // This does nothing but loading the code. // It has no side-effects like patching the module loader or anything. // Any regular require works as always. var request1 = require('request'); // 2. Call stealthyRequire with passing the require cache and a callback. var requestFresh = stealthyRequire(require.cache, function () { // 2a. Before this callback gets called the require cache is cleared. // 2b. Any require taking place here takes place on a clean require cache. // Since the require call is part of the user's code it also works with module bundlers. return require('request'); // Anything returned here will be returned by stealthyRequire(...). // 2c. After this callback gets called the require cache is // - cleared again and // - restored to its old state before step 2. }); // Any regular require again works as always. // In this case require returns the cached request module instance. var request2 = require('request'); // And voilà: request1 === request2 // -> true request1 === requestFresh // -> false ``` ## Contributing To set up your development environment for `stealthy-require`: 1. Clone this repo to your desktop, 2. in the shell `cd` to the main folder, 3. hit `npm install`, 4. hit `npm install gulp -g` if you haven't installed gulp globally yet, and 5. run `gulp dev`. (Or run `node ./node_modules/.bin/gulp dev` if you don't want to install gulp globally.) `gulp dev` watches all source files and if you save some changes it will lint the code and execute all tests. The test coverage report can be viewed from `./coverage/lcov-report/index.html`. If you want to debug a test you should use `gulp test-without-coverage` to run all tests without obscuring the code by the test coverage instrumentation. ## Change History - v1.1.1 (2017-05-08) - Fix that stops `undefined` entries from appearing in `require.cache` *(Thanks to @jasperjn from reporting this in [issue #4](https://github.com/analog-nico/stealthy-require/issues/4))* - v1.1.0 (2017-04-25) - Added ability to disable bypassing the cache for certain modules *(Thanks to @novemberborn for suggesting this in [issue #3](https://github.com/analog-nico/stealthy-require/issues/3))* - Added section in README about a [potential memory leak](#preventing-a-memory-leak-when-repeatedly-requiring-fresh-module-instances-in-nodejs) *(Thanks to @Flarna and @novemberborn for bringing that up in [issue #2](https://github.com/analog-nico/stealthy-require/issues/2))* - Performance optimizations *(Thanks to @jcready for [pull request #1](https://github.com/analog-nico/stealthy-require/pull/1))* - v1.0.0 (2016-07-18) - **Breaking Change:** API completely changed. Please read the [Usage section](#usage) again. - Redesigned library to support module bundlers like [Webpack](https://webpack.github.io) and [Browserify](http://browserify.org) - v0.1.0 (2016-05-26) - Initial version ## License (ISC) In case you never heard about the [ISC license](http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ISC_license) it is functionally equivalent to the MIT license. See the [LICENSE file](LICENSE) for details.