In the framework package we are directly importing many uninstalled dependencies. The issue does not occur for transitive dependencies. However, the `glob` package is not a transitive dependency of any production dependency and hence it fails.
Fixes: #11044
Fixes: FRMW-2877
Fixes: FRMW-2863
Adds the `plugin:build` command that is used to compile the source code of a plugin for publishing it to a package registry. The command is similar to the `build` command, except it does not copy the `package.json` and the `lock` files to the build output
Fixes: FRMW-2865
In this PR we add support for developing a plugin in watch mode. During the file change, we re-compile the source code (incrementally), publishes the package, and updates the installations of the plugin.
We are using `yalc` under the hood and it must be installed as a dev dependency in the plugin project and the main Medusa app.
* feat(core-flows,framework,medusa): list shipping options pass in cart as pricing context
* chore: add test for shipping options returning free shipping
What:
- `Dirent` class from `NodeJS` has different properties in different versions, causing issues in our loaders.
- Util `readDirRecursive` was introduced, avoiding old node versions to break
FIXES: https://github.com/medusajs/medusa/issues/8419
Fixes: FRMW-2742
In this PR, we fix the build output of the backend source code, which eliminates a lot of magic between the development and production environments.
Right now, we only compile the source files from the `src` directory and write them within the `dist` directory.
**Here's how the `src` directory with a custom module looks like**
```
src
├── modules
│ └── hello
│ ├── index.ts
```
**Here's the build output**
```
dist
├── modules
│ └── hello
│ ├── index.js
```
Let's imagine a file at the root of your project (maybe the `medusa-config.js` file) that wants to import the `modules/hello/index` file. How can we ensure that the import will work in both the development and production environments?
If we write the import targeting the `src` directory, it will break in production because it should target the `dist` directory.
## Solution
The solution is to compile everything within the project and mimic the file structure in the build output, not just the `src` directory.
**Here's how the fixed output should look like**
```
dist
├── src
│ ├── modules
│ │ └── hello
│ │ ├── index.js
├── medusa-config.js
├── yarn.lock
├── package.json
```
If you notice carefully, we also have `medusa-config.js`, `yarn.lock`, and `package.json` within the `dist` directory. We do so to create a standalone built application, something you can copy/paste to your server and run without relying on the original source code.
- This results in small containers since you are not copying unnecessary files.
- Clear distinction between the development and the production code. If you want to run the production server, then `cd` into the `dist` directory and run it from there.
## Changes in the PR
- Breaking: Remove the `dist` and `build` folders. Instead, write them production artefacts within the `.medusa` directory as `.medusa/admin` and `.medusa/server`.
- Breaking: Change the output of the `.medusa/server` folder to mimic the root project structure.
- Refactor: Remove `Symbol.for("ts-node.register.instance")]` check to find from where to load the source code.
- Refactor: Use `tsc` for creating the production build. This ensures we respect `tsconfig` settings when creating the build and also perform type-checking.
Co-authored-by: Adrien de Peretti <25098370+adrien2p@users.noreply.github.com>