NET-Web-API-w-Angular/my-app/node_modules/@npmcli/installed-package-contents/README.md

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# @npmcli/installed-package-contents
Get the list of files installed in a package in node_modules, including
bundled dependencies.
This is useful if you want to remove a package node from the tree _without_
removing its child nodes, for example to extract a new version of the
dependency into place safely.
It's sort of the reflection of [npm-packlist](http://npm.im/npm-packlist),
but for listing out the _installed_ files rather than the files that _will_
be installed. This is of course a much simpler operation, because we don't
have to handle ignore files or package.json `files` lists.
## USAGE
```js
// programmatic usage
const pkgContents = require('@npmcli/installed-package-contents')
pkgContents({ path: 'node_modules/foo', depth: 1 }).then(files => {
// files is an array of items that need to be passed to
// rimraf or moved out of the way to make the folder empty
// if foo bundled dependencies, those will be included.
// It will not traverse into child directories, because we set
// depth:1 in the options.
// If the folder doesn't exist, this returns an empty array.
})
pkgContents({ path: 'node_modules/foo', depth: Infinity }).then(files => {
// setting depth:Infinity tells it to keep walking forever
// until it hits something that isn't a directory, so we'll
// just get the list of all files, but not their containing
// directories.
})
```
As a CLI:
```bash
$ installed-package-contents node_modules/bundle-some -d1
node_modules/.bin/some
node_modules/bundle-some/package.json
node_modules/bundle-some/node_modules/@scope/baz
node_modules/bundle-some/node_modules/.bin/foo
node_modules/bundle-some/node_modules/foo
```
CLI options:
```
Usage:
installed-package-contents <path> [-d<n> --depth=<n>]
Lists the files installed for a package specified by <path>.
Options:
-d<n> --depth=<n> Provide a numeric value ("Infinity" is allowed)
to specify how deep in the file tree to traverse.
Default=1
-h --help Show this usage information
```
## OPTIONS
* `depth` Number, default `1`. How deep to traverse through folders to get
contents. Typically you'd want to set this to either `1` (to get the
surface files and folders) or `Infinity` (to get all files), but any
other positive number is supported as well. If set to `0` or a
negative number, returns the path provided and (if it is a package) its
set of linked bins.
* `path` Required. Path to the package in `node_modules` where traversal
should begin.
## RETURN VALUE
A Promise that resolves to an array of fully-resolved files and folders
matching the criteria. This includes all bundled dependencies in
`node_modules`, and any linked executables in `node_modules/.bin` that the
package caused to be installed.
An empty or missing package folder will return an empty array. Empty
directories _within_ package contents are listed, even if the `depth`
argument would cause them to be traversed into.
## CAVEAT
If using this module to generate a list of files that should be recursively
removed to clear away the package, note that this will leave empty
directories behind in certain cases:
- If all child packages are bundled dependencies, then the
`node_modules` folder will remain.
- If all child packages within a given scope were bundled dependencies,
then the `node_modules/@scope` folder will remain.
- If all linked bin scripts were removed, then an empty `node_modules/.bin`
folder will remain.
In the interest of speed and algorithmic complexity, this module does _not_
do a subsequent readdir to see if it would remove all directory entries,
though it would be easier to look at if it returned `node_modules` or
`.bin` in that case rather than the contents. However, if the intent is to
pass these arguments to `rimraf`, it hardly makes sense to do _two_
`readdir` calls just so that we can have the luxury of having to make a
third.
Since the primary use case is to delete a package's contents so that they
can be re-filled with a new version of that package, this caveat does not
pose a problem. Empty directories are already ignored by both npm and git.