This is a CLI tool for generating lists of licenses for all dependencies of a project using pnpm.
Either install pnpm-licenses
globally or use npx @quantco/pnpm-licenses
to run it.
usage: pnpm-licenses [command] [options]
commands:
list [options] List all dependencies and their licenses
--prod, -p Only consider production dependencies
--json-input Read input from stdin as json, instead of calling pnpm ourselves
--json-input-file, -i Read input from a (json) file, instead of calling pnpm ourselves or reading from stdin
--output-file, -o Output to a file instead of stdout
--filter="<json object>" Filter out dependencies via glob patterns.
Example: --filter='["@quantco/*", "@pnpm/*"]'
--filter='["**", "!@quantco/*", "!@pnpm/*"]' (inverted match)
--help Get help for the list command
generate-disclaimer [options] Generate a disclaimer for all dependencies
--prod, -p Only consider production dependencies
--json-input Read input from stdin as json, instead of calling pnpm ourselves
--json-input-file, -i Read input from a (json) file, instead of calling pnpm ourselves or reading from stdin
--output-file, -o Output to a file instead of stdout
--filter="<json object>" Filter out dependencies via glob patterns.
Example: --filter='["@quantco/*", "@pnpm/*"]'
--filter='["**", "!@quantco/*", "!@pnpm/*"]' (inverted match)
--help Get help for the generate-disclaimer command
version Print the version number (also available as --version)
help Print this help message (also available as --help)
There are two major commands available: list
and generate-disclaimer
This lists the dependencies of a project and their licenses (including text!).
Note that the license texts are sometimes extracted or inferred using all kinds of metadata, there might not be a matching LICENSE
file on disk.
This command can be used to implement your own disclaimer generation in case you want some slightly different behavior than generate-disclaimer
gives you.
Using --filter
(or -f
) you can filter out dependencies via glob patterns. See multimatch - Globbing patterns for a description of the syntax.
If you'd like to invert the pattern use the following: ["**", "!@quantco/*", "!@pnpm/*"]
(i.e. for a given list of patterns called patterns
use ['**', ...patterns.map(p => '!' p)]
formatted as JSON).
npx @quantco/pnpm-licenses list --prod --output-file=output.json
npx @quantco/pnpm-licenses list --prod --output-file=output.json --filter='["@quantco/*", "@pnpm/*"]'
pnpm licenses list --prod --json | npx @quantco/pnpm-licenses list --json-input
npx @quantco/pnpm-licenses list --json-input-file=dependencies.json
You'll receive a giant array of objects, each representing a dependency:
type Dependency = {
name: string // from package.json
version: string // from package.json
path: string // file path to directory of dependency on disk
license: string // from package.json
author?: string | undefined // from package.json
homepage?: string | undefined // from package.json
description?: string | undefined // from package.json
additionalText?: string | undefined // set for dependencies with "public domain like" licences as a replacement for "Copyright (c) <author>"
licenseText: string | undefined // license text
}
Note that if multiple versions of a package are installed the output will contain the same package multiple times with differing versions (and paths)
--prod, -p Only consider production dependencies
--json-input Read input from stdin as json, instead of calling pnpm ourselves
--json-input-file, -i Read input from a (json) file, instead of calling pnpm ourselves or reading from stdin
--output-file, -o Output to a file instead of stdout
--filter, -f Filter out dependencies via glob patterns.
This is the main command that you'll probably want to use. It generates a single large disclaimer for all third-party licenses you have in your pnpm project.
Using --filter
(or -f
) you can filter out dependencies via glob patterns. See multimatch - Globbing patterns for a description of the syntax.
If you'd like to invert the pattern use the following: ["**", "!@quantco/*", "!@pnpm/*"]
(i.e. for a given list of patterns called patterns
use ['**', ...patterns.map(p => '!' p)]
formatted as JSON).
The file will look as follows:
THE FOLLOWING SETS FORTH ATTRIBUTION NOTICES FOR THIRD PARTY SOFTWARE THAT MAY BE CONTAINED IN PORTIONS OF THIS PRODUCT
The following software may be included in this product: <package name> (<package version>)
This software contains the following license and notice below:
MIT License
Copyright (c) <author>
<actual license text>
---
The following software may be included in this product: <package name> (<package version>)
This software contains the following license and notice below:
...
pnpm licenses list --json --prod | npx @quantco/pnpm-licenses generate-disclaimer --json-input --output-file=third-party-licenses.txt
npx @quantco/pnpm-licenses generate-disclaimer --prod --output-file=third-party-licenses.txt
npx @quantco/pnpm-licenses generate-disclaimer --prod --filter='["@quantco/*", "@pnpm/*"]'
--prod, -p Only consider production dependencies
--json-input Read input from stdin as json, instead of calling pnpm ourselves
--json-input-file, -i Read input from a (json) file, instead of calling pnpm ourselves or reading from stdin
--output-file, -o Output to a file instead of stdout
--filter, -f Filter out dependencies via glob patterns.
You can also use this as part of your own library using the programmatic api.
import {
generateDisclaimer,
getDependencies,
getLicenseText,
resolveLicensesBestEffort
} from '@quantco/pnpm-licenses/dist/api'
import type { PnpmDependency, PnpmDependencyResolvedLicenseText } from '@quantco/pnpm-licenses/dist/api'
Have a look at the type definitions for more details.
This package is in the very early stages of development. If you find any bugs or have any feature requests, please open an issue on GitHub.