Anatomy of a JavaScript/Node project.
While the following structure is not an absolute requirement or enforced by the tools, it is a recommendation based on what the JavaScript and in particular Node community at large have been following by convention.
Beyond a suggested structure, no tooling recommendations, or sub-module structure is outlined here.
lib/
is intended for code that can run as-issrc/
is intended for code that needs to be manipulated before it can be usedbuild/
is for any scripts or tooling needed to build your projectdist/
is for compiled modules that can be used with other systems.bin/
is for any executable scripts, or compiled binaries used with, or built from your module.test/
is for all of your project/module's test scriptsunit/
is a sub-directory for unit testsintegration/
is a sub-directory for integration testsenv/
is for any environment that's needed for testingThe difference in using lib
vs src
should be:
lib
if you can use node's require()
directlysrc
if you can not, or the file must otherwise be manipulated before useIf you are committing copies of module/files that are from other systems, the use of (lib|src)/vendor/(vendor-name)/(project-name)/
is suggested.
If you have scripts/tools that are needed in order to build your project, they should reside in the build
directory. Examples include scripts to fetch externally sourced data as part of your build process. Another example would be using build/tasks/
as a directory for separating tasks in a project.
If your project/module is to be built for use with other platforms (either directly in the browser), or in an AMD
system (such as require.js
), then these outputted files should reside under the dist
directory.
It is recommended to use a (module)-(version).(platform).[min].js
format for the files that output into this directory. For example foo-0.1.0.browser.min.js
or foo-0.1.0.amd.js
.
The bin
folder is for any system modules your package will use and/or generate.
node_gyp
output for your module's binary code.package.json/bin
scripts for your module