/** * This is the main configuration file for Rush. * For full documentation, please see https://rushjs.io */ { "$schema": "https://developer.microsoft.com/json-schemas/rush/v5/rush.schema.json", /** * (Required) This specifies the version of the Rush engine to be used in this repo. * Rush's "version selector" feature ensures that the globally installed tool will * behave like this release, regardless of which version is installed globally. * * The common/scripts/install-run-rush.js automation script also uses this version. * * NOTE: If you upgrade to a new major version of Rush, you should replace the "v5" * path segment in the "$schema" field for all your Rush config files. This will ensure * correct error-underlining and tab-completion for editors such as VS Code. */ "rushVersion": "5.120.2", /** * The next field selects which package manager should be installed and determines its version. * Rush installs its own local copy of the package manager to ensure that your build process * is fully isolated from whatever tools are present in the local environment. * * Specify one of: "pnpmVersion", "npmVersion", or "yarnVersion". See the Rush documentation * for details about these alternatives. */ "pnpmVersion": "8.8.0", // "npmVersion": "6.14.15", // "yarnVersion": "1.9.4", /** * Older releases of the Node.js engine may be missing features required by your system. * Other releases may have bugs. In particular, the "latest" version will not be a * Long Term Support (LTS) version and is likely to have regressions. * * Specify a SemVer range to ensure developers use a Node.js version that is appropriate * for your repo. * * LTS schedule: https://nodejs.org/en/about/releases/ * LTS versions: https://nodejs.org/en/download/releases/ */ "nodeSupportedVersionRange": ">=18.15.0 <19.0.0 || >=20.9.0 <21.0.0", /** * If the version check above fails, Rush will display a message showing the current * node version and the supported version range. You can use this setting to provide * additional instructions that will display below the warning, if there's a specific * tool or script you'd like the user to use to get in line with the expected version. */ // "nodeSupportedVersionInstructions": "Run 'nvs use' to switch to the expected node version.", /** * Odd-numbered major versions of Node.js are experimental. Even-numbered releases * spend six months in a stabilization period before the first Long Term Support (LTS) version. * For example, 8.9.0 was the first LTS version of Node.js 8. Pre-LTS versions are not recommended * for production usage because they frequently have bugs. They may cause Rush itself * to malfunction. * * Rush normally prints a warning if it detects a pre-LTS Node.js version. If you are testing * pre-LTS versions in preparation for supporting the first LTS version, you can use this setting * to disable Rush's warning. */ // "suppressNodeLtsWarning": false, /** * If you would like the version specifiers for your dependencies to be consistent, then * uncomment this line. This is effectively similar to running "rush check" before any * of the following commands: * * rush install, rush update, rush link, rush version, rush publish * * In some cases you may want this turned on, but need to allow certain packages to use a different * version. In those cases, you will need to add an entry to the "allowedAlternativeVersions" * section of the common-versions.json. */ "ensureConsistentVersions": true, /** * Large monorepos can become intimidating for newcomers if project folder paths don't follow * a consistent and recognizable pattern. When the system allows nested folder trees, * we've found that teams will often use subfolders to create islands that isolate * their work from others ("shipping the org"). This hinders collaboration and code sharing. * * The Rush developers recommend a "category folder" model, where buildable project folders * must always be exactly two levels below the repo root. The parent folder acts as the category. * This provides a basic facility for grouping related projects (e.g. "apps", "libraries", * "tools", "prototypes") while still encouraging teams to organize their projects into * a unified taxonomy. Limiting to 2 levels seems very restrictive at first, but if you have * 20 categories and 20 projects in each category, this scheme can easily accommodate hundreds * of projects. In practice, you will find that the folder hierarchy needs to be rebalanced * occasionally, but if that's painful, it's a warning sign that your development style may * discourage refactoring. Reorganizing the categories should be an enlightening discussion * that brings people together, and maybe also identifies poor coding practices (e.g. file * references that reach into other project's folders without using Node.js module resolution). * * The defaults are projectFolderMinDepth=1 and projectFolderMaxDepth=2. * * To remove these restrictions, you could set projectFolderMinDepth=1 * and set projectFolderMaxDepth to a large number. */ "projectFolderMinDepth": 2, "projectFolderMaxDepth": 2, /** * Today the npmjs.com registry enforces fairly strict naming rules for packages, but in the early * days there was no standard and hardly any enforcement. A few large legacy projects are still using * nonstandard package names, and private registries sometimes allow it. Set "allowMostlyStandardPackageNames" * to true to relax Rush's enforcement of package names. This allows upper case letters and in the future may * relax other rules, however we want to minimize these exceptions. Many popular tools use certain punctuation * characters as delimiters, based on the assumption that they will never appear in a package name; thus if we relax * the rules too much it is likely to cause very confusing malfunctions. * * The default value is false. */ // "allowMostlyStandardPackageNames": true, /** * This feature helps you to review and approve new packages before they are introduced * to your monorepo. For example, you may be concerned about licensing, code quality, * performance, or simply accumulating too many libraries with overlapping functionality. * The approvals are tracked in two config files "browser-approved-packages.json" * and "nonbrowser-approved-packages.json". See the Rush documentation for details. */ // "approvedPackagesPolicy": { // /** // * The review categories allow you to say for example "This library is approved for usage // * in prototypes, but not in production code." // * // * Each project can be associated with one review category, by assigning the "reviewCategory" field // * in the "projects" section of rush.json. The approval is then recorded in the files // * "common/config/rush/browser-approved-packages.json" and "nonbrowser-approved-packages.json" // * which are automatically generated during "rush update". // * // * Designate categories with whatever granularity is appropriate for your review process, // * or you could just have a single category called "default". // */ // "reviewCategories": [ // // Some example categories: // "production", // projects that ship to production // "tools", // non-shipping projects that are part of the developer toolchain // "prototypes" // experiments that should mostly be ignored by the review process // ], // // /** // * A list of NPM package scopes that will be excluded from review. // * We recommend to exclude TypeScript typings (the "@types" scope), because // * if the underlying package was already approved, this would imply that the typings // * are also approved. // */ // // "ignoredNpmScopes": ["@types"] // }, /** * If you use Git as your version control system, this section has some additional * optional features you can use. */ "gitPolicy": { /** * Work at a big company? Tired of finding Git commits at work with unprofessional Git * emails such as "beer-lover@my-college.edu"? Rush can validate people's Git email address * before they get started. * * Define a list of regular expressions describing allowable e-mail patterns for Git commits. * They are case-insensitive anchored JavaScript RegExps. Example: ".*@example\.com" * * IMPORTANT: Because these are regular expressions encoded as JSON string literals, * RegExp escapes need two backslashes, and ordinary periods should be "\\.". */ "allowedEmailRegExps": ["[^@]+@users\\.noreply\\.github\\.com"], /** * When Rush reports that the address is malformed, the notice can include an example * of a recommended email. Make sure it conforms to one of the allowedEmailRegExps * expressions. */ "sampleEmail": "example@users.noreply.github.com" /** * The commit message to use when committing changes during 'rush publish'. * * For example, if you want to prevent these commits from triggering a CI build, * you might configure your system's trigger to look for a special string such as "[skip-ci]" * in the commit message, and then customize Rush's message to contain that string. */ // "versionBumpCommitMessage": "Bump versions [skip ci]", /** * The commit message to use when committing changes during 'rush version'. * * For example, if you want to prevent these commits from triggering a CI build, * you might configure your system's trigger to look for a special string such as "[skip-ci]" * in the commit message, and then customize Rush's message to contain that string. */ // "changeLogUpdateCommitMessage": "Update changelogs [skip ci]", /** * The commit message to use when commiting changefiles during 'rush change --commit' * * If no commit message is set it will default to 'Rush change' */ // "changefilesCommitMessage": "Rush change" }, "repository": { /** * The URL of this Git repository, used by "rush change" to determine the base branch for your PR. * * The "rush change" command needs to determine which files are affected by your PR diff. * If you merged or cherry-picked commits from the main branch into your PR branch, those commits * should be excluded from this diff (since they belong to some other PR). In order to do that, * Rush needs to know where to find the base branch for your PR. This information cannot be * determined from Git alone, since the "pull request" feature is not a Git concept. Ideally * Rush would use a vendor-specific protocol to query the information from GitHub, Azure DevOps, etc. * But to keep things simple, "rush change" simply assumes that your PR is against the "main" branch * of the Git remote indicated by the repository.url setting in rush.json. If you are working in * a GitHub "fork" of the real repo, this setting will be different from the repository URL of your * your PR branch, and in this situation "rush change" will also automatically invoke "git fetch" * to retrieve the latest activity for the remote main branch. */ "url": "https://github.com/tiktok/sparo", /** * The default branch name. This tells "rush change" which remote branch to compare against. * The default value is "main" */ "defaultBranch": "main" /** * The default remote. This tells "rush change" which remote to compare against if the remote URL is * not set or if a remote matching the provided remote URL is not found. */ // "defaultRemote": "origin" }, /** * Event hooks are customized script actions that Rush executes when specific events occur */ "eventHooks": { /** * A list of shell commands to run before "rush install" or "rush update" starts installation */ "preRushInstall": [ // "common/scripts/pre-rush-install.js" ], /** * A list of shell commands to run after "rush install" or "rush update" finishes installation */ "postRushInstall": [], /** * A list of shell commands to run before "rush build" or "rush rebuild" starts building */ "preRushBuild": [], /** * A list of shell commands to run after "rush build" or "rush rebuild" finishes building */ "postRushBuild": [], /** * A list of shell commands to run before the "rushx" command starts */ "preRushx": [], /** * A list of shell commands to run after the "rushx" command finishes */ "postRushx": [] }, /** * Installation variants allow you to maintain a parallel set of configuration files that can be * used to build the entire monorepo with an alternate set of dependencies. For example, suppose * you upgrade all your projects to use a new release of an important framework, but during a transition period * you intend to maintain compatibility with the old release. In this situation, you probably want your * CI validation to build the entire repo twice: once with the old release, and once with the new release. * * Rush "installation variants" correspond to sets of config files located under this folder: * * common/config/rush/variants/ * * The variant folder can contain an alternate common-versions.json file. Its "preferredVersions" field can be used * to select older versions of dependencies (within a loose SemVer range specified in your package.json files). * To install a variant, run "rush install --variant ". * * For more details and instructions, see this article: https://rushjs.io/pages/advanced/installation_variants/ */ "variants": [ // { // /** // * The folder name for this variant. // */ // "variantName": "old-sdk", // // /** // * An informative description // */ // "description": "Build this repo using the previous release of the SDK" // } ], /** * Rush can collect anonymous telemetry about everyday developer activity such as * success/failure of installs, builds, and other operations. You can use this to identify * problems with your toolchain or Rush itself. THIS TELEMETRY IS NOT SHARED WITH MICROSOFT. * It is written into JSON files in the common/temp folder. It's up to you to write scripts * that read these JSON files and do something with them. These scripts are typically registered * in the "eventHooks" section. */ // "telemetryEnabled": false, /** * Allows creation of hotfix changes. This feature is experimental so it is disabled by default. * If this is set, 'rush change' only allows a 'hotfix' change type to be specified. This change type * will be used when publishing subsequent changes from the monorepo. */ // "hotfixChangeEnabled": false, /** * This is an optional, but recommended, list of allowed tags that can be applied to Rush projects * using the "tags" setting in this file. This list is useful for preventing mistakes such as misspelling, * and it also provides a centralized place to document your tags. If "allowedProjectTags" list is * not specified, then any valid tag is allowed. A tag name must be one or more words * separated by hyphens or slashes, where a word may contain lowercase ASCII letters, digits, * ".", and "@" characters. */ // "allowedProjectTags": [ "tools", "frontend-team", "1.0.0-release" ], /** * (Required) This is the inventory of projects to be managed by Rush. * * Rush does not automatically scan for projects using wildcards, for a few reasons: * 1. Depth-first scans are expensive, particularly when tools need to repeatedly collect the list. * 2. On a caching CI machine, scans can accidentally pick up files left behind from a previous build. * 3. It's useful to have a centralized inventory of all projects and their important metadata. */ "projects": [ // { // /** // * The NPM package name of the project (must match package.json) // */ // "packageName": "my-app", // // /** // * The path to the project folder, relative to the rush.json config file. // */ // "projectFolder": "apps/my-app", // // /** // * An optional category for usage in the "browser-approved-packages.json" // * and "nonbrowser-approved-packages.json" files. The value must be one of the // * strings from the "reviewCategories" defined above. // */ // "reviewCategory": "production", // // /** // * A list of Rush project names that are to be installed from NPM // * instead of linking to the local project. // * // * If a project's package.json specifies a dependency that is another Rush project // * in the monorepo workspace, normally Rush will locally link its folder instead of // * installing from NPM. If you are using PNPM workspaces, this is indicated by // * a SemVer range such as "workspace:^1.2.3". To prevent mistakes, Rush reports // * an error if the "workspace:" protocol is missing. // * // * Locally linking ensures that regressions are caught as early as possible and is // * a key benefit of monorepos. However there are occasional situations where // * installing from NPM is needed. A classic example is a cyclic dependency. // * Imagine three Rush projects: "my-toolchain" depends on "my-tester", which depends // * on "my-library". Suppose that we add "my-toolchain" to the "devDependencies" // * of "my-library" so it can be built by our toolchain. This cycle creates // * a problem -- Rush can't build a project using a not-yet-built dependency. // * We can solve it by adding "my-toolchain" to the "decoupledLocalDependencies" // * of "my-library", so it builds using the last published release. Choose carefully // * which package to decouple; some choices are much easier to manage than others. // * // * (In older Rush releases, this setting was called "cyclicDependencyProjects".) // */ // "decoupledLocalDependencies": [ // // "my-toolchain" // ], // // /** // * If true, then this project will be ignored by the "rush check" command. // * The default value is false. // */ // // "skipRushCheck": false, // // /** // * A flag indicating that changes to this project will be published to npm, which affects // * the Rush change and publish workflows. The default value is false. // * NOTE: "versionPolicyName" and "shouldPublish" are alternatives; you cannot specify them both. // */ // // "shouldPublish": false, // // /** // * Facilitates postprocessing of a project's files prior to publishing. // * // * If specified, the "publishFolder" is the relative path to a subfolder of the project folder. // * The "rush publish" command will publish the subfolder instead of the project folder. The subfolder // * must contain its own package.json file, which is typically a build output. // */ // // "publishFolder": "temp/publish", // // /** // * An optional version policy associated with the project. Version policies are defined // * in "version-policies.json" file. See the "rush publish" documentation for more info. // * NOTE: "versionPolicyName" and "shouldPublish" are alternatives; you cannot specify them both. // */ // // "versionPolicyName": "", // // /** // * An optional set of custom tags that can be used to select this project. For example, // * adding "my-custom-tag" will allow this project to be selected by the // * command "rush list --only tag:my-custom-tag". The tag name must be one or more words // * separated by hyphens or slashes, where a word may contain lowercase ASCII letters, digits, // * ".", and "@" characters. // */ // // "tags": [ "1.0.0-release", "frontend-team" ] // }, // // { // "packageName": "my-controls", // "projectFolder": "libraries/my-controls", // "reviewCategory": "production", // "tags": [ "frontend-team" ] // }, // // { // "packageName": "my-toolchain", // "projectFolder": "tools/my-toolchain", // "reviewCategory": "tools", // "tags": [ "tools" ] // } // Build tests { "packageName": "sparo-output-test", "projectFolder": "build-tests/sparo-output-test" }, { "packageName": "sparo-real-repo-test", "projectFolder": "build-tests/sparo-real-repo-test" }, { "packageName": "build-test-utilities", "projectFolder": "build-tests/test-utilities" }, // Sparo { "packageName": "sparo", "projectFolder": "apps/sparo", "versionPolicyName": "sparo", "shouldPublish": true }, { "packageName": "sparo-lib", "projectFolder": "apps/sparo-lib", "versionPolicyName": "sparo", "shouldPublish": true }, // Document site { "packageName": "website", "projectFolder": "apps/website" } ] }