Generates jsii source files for multiple languages from TypeScript.
This package can be either used as a library or through a CLI.
The library entry point is the srcmak function:
import { srcmak } from 'jsii-srcmak';
await srcmak(srcdir[, options]);The CLI is jsii-srcmak:
$ jsii-srcmak srcdir [OPTIONS]The srcdir argument points to a directory tree that includes TypeScript files
which will be translated through jsii to one of the supported languages.
If called with no additional arguments, srcmak will only jsii-compile the source. If compilation fails, it will throw an error. This is a nice way to check if generated typescript code is jsii-compatible:
const srcdir = generateSomeTypeScriptCode();
// verify it is jsii-compatible (throws otherwise)
await srcmak(srcdir);CLI:
$ jsii-srcmak /source/directoryTo produce a Python module from your source, use the python option:
await srcmak('srcdir', {
python: {
outdir: '/path/to/project/root',
moduleName: 'name.of.python.module'
}
});Or the --python-* switches in the CLI:
$ jsii-srcmak /src/dir --python-outdir=dir --python-module-name=module.name- The
outdir/--python-outdiroption points to the root directory of your Python project. - The
moduleName/--python-module-nameoption is the python module name. Dots (.) delimit submodules.
The output directory will include a python module that corresponds to the original module. This code depends on the following python modules:
To produce a Java module from your source, use the java option:
await srcmak('srcdir', {
java: {
outdir: '/path/to/project/root',
package: 'hello.world'
}
});Or the --java-* switches in the CLI:
$ jsii-srcmak /src/dir --java-outdir=dir --java-package=hello.world- The
outdir/--java-outdiroption points to the root directory of your Java project. - The
package/--java-packageoption is the java package name.
The output directory will include a java module that corresponds to the
original module. This code depends on the following maven package (should be defined directly or indirectly in the project's pom.xml file):
The output directory will also include a tarball [email protected] that must be bundled in your project.
To produce a C# module from your source, use the csharp option:
await srcmak('srcdir', {
csharp: {
outdir: '/path/to/project/root',
namespace: 'HelloWorld'
}
});Or the --csharp-* switches in the CLI:
$ jsii-srcmak /src/dir --csharp-outdir=dir --csharp-namespace=HelloWorld- The
outdir/--csharp-outdiroption points to the root directory of your C# project. - The
package/--csharp-namespaceoption is the C# root namespace.
The output directory will include a C# project that corresponds to the original module. This code depends on the following NuGet package (It is already defined as a dependency in the generated project):
The output directory will also include a tarball [email protected] that must be bundled in your project (It is already included as an embedded resource in the generated project).
The entrypoint option can be used to customize the name of the typescript entrypoint (default is index.ts).
For example, if the code's entry point is under /srcdir/foobar/lib/index.ts then I can specify:
await srcmak('/srcdir', {
entrypoint: 'foobar/lib/index.ts'
});Or through the CLI:
$ jsii-srcmak /srcdir --entrypoint lib/main.tsThe deps option can be used to specify a list of node module directories (must have a package.json file) which will be symlinked into the workspace when compiling your code.
This is required if your code references types from other modules.
Use this idiom to resolve a set of modules directories from the calling process:
const modules = [
'@types/node', // commonly needed
'foobar' // a node module in *my* closure
];
const getModuleDir = m =>
path.dirname(require.resolve(`${m}/package.json`));
await srcmak('srcdir', {
deps: modules.map(getModuleDir)
});Or through the CLI:
$ jsii-srcmak /src/dir --dep node_modules/@types/node --dep node_modules/constructsTo build this project, you must first generate the package.json:
npx projen
Then you can install your dependencies and build:
yarn install
yarn build
It's a silly little pun that stems from another pun: jsii has jsii-pacmak
which stands for "package maker". That's the tool that takes in a .jsii manifest
and produces language-idiomatic packages from it. This tool produces sources
from a .jsii manifest. Hence, "source maker". Yeah, it's lame.
Distributed under the Apache 2.0 license.