Short answer
Don't do it. Let NPM work the way it's designed to. However, to save space, you can delete the node_modules folder on projects that are currently dormant, and recreate it with a single shot of npm install
when you switch back to them.
Justification
Even if you share your node_modules, you'll probably have redundancies in it anyway. What will you do about them next ?
It is the essence of NPM to replicate modules per project. If you dig into the node_modules folder tree, you may notice that it can even contain several replications of a same library under one given dependencies tree. Say you requested two modules explicitely, and both these modules themselves pulled a dependency that takes care of a lot of things, and is therefore called lib_DADDYMUMMY
:
node_modules
+ a_module_you_use v0.5
+ lib_DADDYMUMMY v0.1 (pulled as a dependency of this module)
+ another_module_that_you_requested v0.3
+ lib_DADDYMUMMY v0.1 (again ! pulled as a dependency of this other module)
This comes in handy when your two module start needing different versions of lib_DADDYMUMMY
. This comes in handy when you maintain long-lived projects ! And hell knows that in the JavaScript world, with fast changing APIs, you can consider most any decent project as long-lived. :)
One could imagine having all dependencies being shared by everyone, living in a flat structure, with several versions of a library living next to each other and every one finding what he needs there. That repository could be called, say, .m2
. But that's just not the way NPM works unfortunately.
NPM considers that storage space is cheap. That's its price for helping you manage versions in dependencies, dependencies of dependencies, and dependencies of dependencies of dependencies. I consider that it's an affordable price for taking care of the dirty jobs the day when work
and work2
, as their lives go on, take diverging maintenance paths. I wouldn't try getting in its way by forcing a half-Maven-like folder model.
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