You can not select more than 25 topics Topics must start with a letter or number, can include dashes ('-') and can be up to 35 characters long.
Thomas Chazot bd1233ba46
Début du projet
2 years ago
..
lib Début du projet 2 years ago
test Début du projet 2 years ago
.npmignore Début du projet 2 years ago
.travis.yml Début du projet 2 years ago
README.md Début du projet 2 years ago
decache.js Début du projet 2 years ago
package.json Début du projet 2 years ago
setup.js Début du projet 2 years ago

README.md

decache

Build Status codecov.io Code Climate Dependency Status devDependency Status

In node.js when you require() a module, node stores a cached version of the module, so that all subsequent calls to require() do not have to reload the module from the filesystem.

decache ( Delete Cache ) lets you delete modules from node.js require() cache this is useful when testing your modules/projects.

Why?

When testing our modules we often need to re-require the module being tested. This makes it easy.

What?

An easy way to delete a cached module.

How? (usage)

### install

Install the module from npm:

npm install decache --save-dev

Use it in your code:

// require the decache module:
var decache = require('decache');

// require a module that you wrote"
var mymod = require('./mymodule.js');

// use your module the way you need to:
console.log(mymod.count()); // 0   (the initial state for our counter is zero)
console.log(mymod.incrementRunCount()); // 1

// delete the cached module:
decache('./mymodule.js');

//
mymod = require('./mymodule.js'); // fresh start
console.log(mymod.count()); // 0   (back to initial state ... zero)

Modules other than .js, like for example, .jsx, are supported as well.

Note that native modules with the .node extension are ignored from decaching because they behave unexpectedly when decached.

If you have any questions or need more examples, please create a GitHub issue: https://github.com/nelsonic/decache/issues

Thanks!