Ultra fast monorepo script runner and build tool.
- zero-config: works out of the box with your existing monorepo
- non-intrusive: no need to make any changes to your packages.json files
- workspaces: detects packages in existing
lerna
,yarn
,npm@7
andpnpm
workspaces, or recursively searches them - ultra fast builds:
ultra
keeps track of file changes in your repo and only actuallybuild
a package when needed - parallel builds:
ultra
builds your packages concurrently by default - workspace dependencies: workspace dependencies are automatically resolved and used for parallel builds
- execute anything: one command to run package scripts,
node_modules
binaries or system binaries, recursively in your repository. - faster script execution:
ultra
hijacks anynpm
,pnpm
,yarn
andnpx
calls for faster execution. - concurrency within scripts: you can add optional configuration to
package.json
to run parts of a script in parallel. No need to change the actualscripts
- filtering: filter on package names or subdirectories
- monitoring: node process monitor (like
top
for node) - output zooming when executing multiple commands in parallel,
ultra
will try to keep as much concurrent output on the screen as possible, by only showing the last lines of the commands. Once the commands complete running, a full log is written to the terminal. This is very useful when building a bunch of packages with--watch
for instance. - missing scripts when executing scripts recursively, only packages that have the script defined, will execute it.
π₯ View Demo
Ultra parses your package.json
and hijacks any npm run
, yarn
and npx
calls.
Shell operators like &&
, ;
and ||
are also interpreted.
For example:
{
"scripts": {
"lint": "yarn lint:ts && yarn lint:eslint && yarn lint:docs",
"lint:eslint": "npx eslint bin/*.js src/*.ts __tests__/*.ts --cache",
"lint:docs": "npx markdownlint README.md",
"lint:ts": "npx tsc -p tsconfig.build.json --noEmit",
"lint:fix": "yarn lint:eslint --fix"
}
}
Running ultra lint:fix
will spawn exactly one child process, directly with the correct command, instead of spawning yarn
intermediately
Ultra will additionally execute any configured pre
and post
scripts, just like npm run
and yarn run
.
When using -r
or --recursive
, the command will be executed in every package of your repository, excluding the root package. If you also want to run in the root package, combine --recursive
with --root
.
Commands are always run concurrently with a default concurrency of 10
(can be changed with --concurrency
)
Ultra finds packages based on your monorepo workspace:
- lerna
- pnpm
- yarn workspace
- when no monorepo manager was found, we look recursively for packages
Use --filter <filter>
to filter packages in the workspace. The filter argument can use wildcards to filter package names and/or subdirectories:
$ ultra -r --filter "@scope/app" pwd
...
$ ultra -r --filter "@scope/*" pwd
...
$ ultra -r --filter "apps/*" pwd
...
When the filter is prefixed with a +
, then all dependencies of the filtered packages will also be included.
For example, let's say you have a package "app1" that depends on "lib1", then using the filter +app1
, will execute the command
on both app1
and lib1
, using the workspace topology.
Ultra
automatically detects workspace dependencies, while still allowing parallel builds. Packages are build concurrently as soon as their dependencies are build (also concurrently).
Every package directory contains a .ultra.cache.json
file that contains hashes of all files and build artifacts in your repository. Internally this uses git ls-files
for files under source control and simple mtime
timestamps for build artifacts.
When building a package, the current state is compared with the .ultra.cache.json
. Builds are skipped when no changes were detected.
Optimized builds using the dependency tree and files cache, are automatically triggered when running the build
script or using --build
with a custom script or command.
All commands below will trigger optimized builds.
$ ultra -r --build
...
$ ultra -r build
...
$ ultra -r --build mycustombuildscript
...
If for some reason you want to rebuild a package, use --rebuild
or rebuild
.
If you want some files to be excluded from the .ultra.cache.json
, you can create a .ultraignore
file. The format is similar to .gitignore
. Whenever a file changes that is listed in your .ultraignore
, a rebuild will not be triggered.
With ultra --monitor
you can easily monitor all running node processes on your machine.
For every process, you can also see the package where the command was executed and a clean command line.
Ultra parses your package.json
scripts and will only execute the commands that are really needed. Any script interdependencies are resolved during the parsing stage.
This ensures there's pretty much no overhead in execution by Ultra itself, since it's only running once.
yarn run
or npm run
on the other hand, will spawn new yarn
or npm
child processes as needed by the package scripts.
npm run |
npx |
yarn |
yarn exec |
ultra |
|
---|---|---|---|---|---|
package.json scripts |
β | β | β | β | β |
./node_modules/.bin/ |
β | β | β | β | β |
system binaries | β | β | β | β | β |
execution overhead (1) | 250ms | 60ms | 220ms | 200ms | 65ms |
1. each program was run 10x with the command
true
or{scripts:{"true":"true}}
to calculate the execution overhead
Suppose you would want to run a script that calls 5 other scripts by using &&
and/or post
/pre
.
- Using
yarn
, you would have a total overhead of 2.5s (10x 250ms) - Using
ultra
, you hit the overhead only once, so the total overhead would still be 65ms
To make execution ultra fast, you can configure which scripts
should be ran concurrently.
β there's no need to switch your scripts over to ultra. Even with the optional configuration you can still use
yarn
ornpm
to run your scripts if you want to.
Example builds:
yarn |
ultra not concurrent |
ultra concurrent |
|
---|---|---|---|
build Ultra-Runner | 8.9s | 7.2s | 5.1s |
build Devmoji | 16s | 13s | 8s |
There are three output formats that each can be combined with --silent
to hide command output.
--pretty
is the default. It shows output in a hierarchical way and uses spinners to see exactly what's happening.
Make sure to check out the animation at the top of this page. Every executed step shows the execution time.
--pretty
combined with --silent
is useful if you're only interested to see the overview:
--no-pretty
doesn't use spinners and prefixes command output with the command name. This is useful for logging purposes.
Combining --no-pretty
with --silent
shows a flat overview.
--raw
will show the exact output as you would expect when running the commands stand alone. If the command you're executing is interactive (reads from stdin), then this is the mode you should use.
Install with npm
or yarn
globally
npm install -g ultra-runner
yarn global add ultra-runner
locally inside your project. use with
npx ultra
npm install --dev ultra-runner
yarn add --dev ultra-runner
Now run ultra --info
within your repository to see everything related to your monorepo
See optional configuration for information on how to setup concurrent script execution.
$ ultra --help
Usage: ultra [options] <cmd> [cmd-options]
Workspace:
--recursive, -r Run command in every workspace folder concurrently [boolean]
--filter Filter package name or directory using wildcard pattern [string]
--root When using --recursive, also include the root package of the workspace [boolean]
--concurrency Set the maximum number of concurrency [number] [default: 10]
Status:
--info Show workspace dependencies [boolean]
--list List package scripts. Also works with --recursive [boolean]
--monitor Show node process list, updated every 2 seconds [boolean]
--monitor-interval Set process list interval in seconds [number] [default: 2]
Build:
--build, -b Use dependency tree to build packages in correct order [boolean]
--rebuild Triggers a build without checking for file changes [boolean]
Formatting:
--pretty enable pretty output, spinners and separate command output. Default when a TTY [boolean] [default: true]
--raw Output only raw command output [boolean]
--silent Skip script output. ultra console logs will still be shown [boolean]
--color colorize output [boolean] [default: true]
Options:
--version Show version number [boolean]
--dry-run, -d Show what commands would be executed, without actually executing them [boolean]
To allow parallel execution of your scripts, you can specify scripts that should run concurrently,
in your package.json
.
{
"scripts": {
"lint:eslint": "npx eslint bin/*.js src/*.ts __tests__/*.ts --cache",
"lint:docs": "npx markdownlint *.md",
"lint:ts": "npx tsc -p tsconfig.build.json --noEmit",
"lint": "yarn lint:eslint && yarn lint:docs && yarn lint:ts",
"prebuild": "yarn lint && yarn jest",
"build": "..."
},
"ultra": {
"concurrent": ["lint"]
}
}
yarn build
will run thelint
andjest
commands sequentiallyultra build
will run alllint
commands concurrently and then executejest
. (note that we can also addprebuild
toconcurrent
, since tests don't depend on linting. this way all commands would run concurrently)