olical/depot

Find newer versions of your dependencies in your deps.edn file.


Keywords
clojure
License
Unlicense

Documentation

Depot Clojars Project

Warning: I'm not actively maintaining this project, I'm finally releasing v2+ since it's been sitting around for far too long. It contains a bunch of breaking changes that are mentioned in CHANGES.md.

You may have better luck with liquidz/antq or slipset/deps-ancient. If you'd like to see this project developed and maintained further I'm open to inviting other maintainers or promoting forks. I'm reluctant to transfer ownership and publishing rights to the artifact since that's been used for malicious purposes in recent times.

If this version isn't to your liking you can still rely on v1.8.4 (or earlier) and the legacy documentation in README-v1.md.

Find newer versions of your dependencies in your deps.edn file using the Clojure CLI. This works for maven and git dependencies.

Usage

You can try it out easily with this one liner:

$ clojure -Sdeps '{:aliases {:outdated {:replace-deps {olical/depot {:mvn/version "2.1.0"}}}}}' -M:outdated -m depot.outdated.main
Checking for old versions in: deps.edn
  org.clojure/clojure {:mvn/version "1.9.0"} -> {:mvn/version "1.10.1"}

I'd recommend adding depot as an alias in your own deps.edn file, this will allow it to check itself for updates:

Note: Replace the ellipsis with the current version shown above.

{:deps {}
 :aliases {:outdated {:replace-deps {olical/depot {:mvn/version "..."}}
                      :main-opts ["-m" "depot.outdated.main"]}}}
$ clojure -Aoutdated --aliases outdated
Checking for old versions in: deps.edn
  olical/depot {:mvn/version "..."} -> {:mvn/version "..."}

Controlling which files are checked

By default Depot looks for deps.edn in the current working directory. You can instead pass one or more filenames in explicitly.

$ clojure -Aoutdated ../my-project/deps.edn

Controlling which part of the file are checked

By default, only dependencies under the top-level :deps are considered.

To also consider :extra-deps and :override-deps under aliases, see the the --aliases and --every flags.

To prevent Depot from touching certain parts of your deps.edn, mark them with the ^:depot/ignore metadata.

{:deps {...}

 :aliases
 {;; used for testing against older versions of Clojure
  :clojure-1.8 ^:depot/ignore {:extra-deps
                               {org.clojure/clojure {:mvn/version "1.8.0"}}}
  :clojure-1.9 ^:depot/ignore {:extra-deps
                               {org.clojure/clojure {:mvn/version "1.9.0"}}}}}

The metadata can be placed on the artifact name, the coord map or on any map containing the dependency in question.

Updating deps.edn

By default, depot only prints the new versions. To update the file in place, include the --write flag. This will leave any formatting, whitespace, and comments intact.

$ clojure -Aoutdated --write
Updating old versions in: deps.edn
  rewrite-clj {:mvn/version "0.6.0"} -> {:mvn/version "0.6.1"}
  cider/cider-nrepl {:mvn/version "0.17.0"} -> {:mvn/version "0.18.0"}
  clj-time {:mvn/version "0.14.4"} -> {:mvn/version "0.15.1"}
  olical/cljs-test-runner {:sha "5a18d41648d5c3a64632b5fec07734d32cca7671"} -> {:sha "da9710b389782d4637ef114176f6e741225e16f0"}

Freezing snapshots

Maven has a concept called "virtual" versions, these are similar to Git branches, they are pointers to another version, and the version they point to can change over time. The best known example are snapshot releases. When your deps.edn refers to a version 0.4.1-SNAPSHOT, the version that actually gets installed will look like 0.4.1-20190222.154954-1.

A maintainer can publish as many snapshots as they like, all with the same version string. This means that re-running the same code twice might yield different results, if in the meanwhile a new snapshot was released. So installing 0.4.1-SNAPSHOT again later on may install a completely different version.

For the sake of stability and reproducibility it may be desirable to "lock" this version. This is what the --resolve-virtual flag is for. The --resolve-virtual flag will resolve the virtual version to the current timestamped version that the SNAPSHOT is an alias of, so that your code is once again deterministic.

Besides SNAPSHOT versions --resolve-virtual will also handle the special version strings "RELEASE" and "LATEST"

% clojure -Aoutdated --resolve-virtual
Checking virtual versions in: deps.edn
   cider/piggieback {:mvn/version "0.4.1-SNAPSHOT"} -> {:mvn/version "0.4.1-20190222.154954-1"}

Existing work

This project is inspired by lein-ancient, it relies on version-clj (by the same author, xsc) for parsing and comparison of version numbers.

Contributors

  • @Olical - Initial work and general maintenance.
  • @daaku - Ensuring :override-deps is adhered to in the non-mutating mode.
  • @kennyjwilli - Git dependency support and table improvements.
  • @lverns - Reducing the runtime significantly by making multiple requests in parallel.
  • @plexus - Both the --update and --resolve-virtual systems, so many improvements!
  • @robert-stuttaford - Presenting results in a neat table.
  • @seancorfield - Support for :override-deps.
  • @dharrigan - Bump dependencies, fixing warnings.
  • @dotemacs - Updating dependencies, supporting newer tools.deps.alpha versions.

Unlicenced

Find the full unlicense in the UNLICENSE file, but here's a snippet.

This is free and unencumbered software released into the public domain.

Anyone is free to copy, modify, publish, use, compile, sell, or distribute this software, either in source code form or as a compiled binary, for any purpose, commercial or non-commercial, and by any means.

Do what you want. Learn as much as you can. Unlicense more software.