Como os pares são resolvidos
Um dos melhores recursos do pnpm é que em um projeto, uma versão específica de um pacote sempre terá um conjunto de dependências. There is one exception from this rule, though - packages with peer dependencies.
As dependências de peer são resolvidas a partir de dependências instaladas mais acima no gráfico de dependência, pois compartilham a mesma versão que seu pai. That means
that if foo@1.0.0
has two peers (bar@^1
and baz@^1
) then it might have
multiple different sets of dependencies in the same project.
- foo-parent-1
- bar@1.0.0
- baz@1.0.0
- foo@1.0.0
- foo-parent-2
- bar@1.0.0
- baz@1.1.0
- foo@1.0.0
In the example above, foo@1.0.0
is installed for foo-parent-1
and
foo-parent-2
. Both packages have bar
and baz
as well, but they depend on
different versions of baz
. As a result, foo@1.0.0
has two different sets of
dependencies: one with baz@1.0.0
and the other one with baz@1.1.0
. To
support these use cases, pnpm has to hard link foo@1.0.0
as many times as
there are different dependency sets.
Normally, if a package does not have peer dependencies, it is hard linked to a
node_modules
folder next to symlinks of its dependencies, like so:
node_modules
└── .pnpm
├── foo@1.0.0
│ └── node_modules
│ ├── foo
│ ├── qux -> ../../qux@1.0.0/node_modules/qux
│ └── plugh -> ../../plugh@1.0.0/node_modules/plugh
├── qux@1.0.0
├── plugh@1.0.0
However, if foo
has peer dependencies, there may be multiple sets of
dependencies for it, so we create different sets for different peer dependency
resolutions:
node_modules
└── .pnpm
├── foo@1.0.0_bar@1.0.0+baz@1.0.0
│ └── node_modules
│ ├── foo
│ ├── bar -> ../../bar@1.0.0/node_modules/bar
│ ├── baz -> ../../baz@1.0.0/node_modules/baz
│ ├── qux -> ../../qux@1.0.0/node_modules/qux
│ └── plugh -> ../../plugh@1.0.0/node_modules/plugh
├── foo@1.0.0_bar@1.0.0+baz@1.1.0
│ └── node_modules
│ ├── foo
│ ├── bar -> ../../bar@1.0.0/node_modules/bar
│ ├── baz -> ../../baz@1.1.0/node_modules/baz
│ ├── qux -> ../../qux@1.0.0/node_modules/qux
│ └── plugh -> ../../plugh@1.0.0/node_modules/plugh
├── bar@1.0.0
├── baz@1.0.0
├── baz@1.1.0
├── qux@1.0.0
├── plugh@1.0.0
We create symlinks either to the foo
that is inside
foo@1.0.0_bar@1.0.0+baz@1.0.0
or to the one in
foo@1.0.0_bar@1.0.0+baz@1.1.0
.
Como consequência, o resolvedor do módulo Node.js encontrará os pares corretos.
If a package has no peer dependencies but has dependencies with peers that are
resolved higher in the graph, then that transitive package can appear in the
project with different sets of dependencies. For instance, there's package
a@1.0.0
with a single dependency b@1.0.0
. b@1.0.0
has a peer dependency
c@^1
. a@1.0.0
will never resolve the peers of b@1.0.0
, so it becomes
dependent from the peers of b@1.0.0
as well.
Here's how that structure will look in node_modules
. In this example,
a@1.0.0
will need to appear twice in the project's node_modules
- resolved
once with c@1.0.0
and again with c@1.1.0
.
node_modules
└── .pnpm
├── a@1.0.0_c@1.0.0
│ └── node_modules
│ ├── a
│ └── b -> ../../b@1.0.0_c@1.0.0/node_modules/b
├── a@1.0.0_c@1.1.0
│ └── node_modules
│ ├── a
│ └── b -> ../../b@1.0.0_c@1.1.0/node_modules/b
├── b@1.0.0_c@1.0.0
│ └── node_modules
│ ├── b
│ └── c -> ../../c@1.0.0/node_modules/c
├── b@1.0.0_c@1.1.0
│ └── node_modules
│ ├── b
│ └── c -> ../../c@1.1.0/node_modules/c
├── c@1.0.0
├── c@1.1.0