# backfill A JavaScript caching library for reducing build time. **🔌 Easy to install**: Simply wrap your build commands inside `backfill -- [command]` **☁️ Remote cache**: Store your cache on Azure Blob or as an npm package **⚙️ Fully configurable**: Smart defaults with cross-package and per-package configuration and environment variable overrides _backfill is under active development and should probably not be used in production, yet. We will initially focus on stability improvements. We will look into various optimization strategies, adding more customization, and introducing an API for only running scripts in packages that have changed and skipping others altogether._ _Current prerequisites:_ - git (the git ignored files are ignored for hash computation) - yarn.lock and yarn workspaces (for optimized hashing) These prerequisites can easily be loosened to make backfill work with npm, Rush, and Lerna. ## Why When you're working in a multi-package repo you don't want to re-build packages that haven't changed. By wrapping your build scripts inside `backfill` you enable storing and fetching of build output to and from a local or remote cache. Backfill is based on two concepts: 1. **Hashing**: It will hash the files of a package, its dependencies and the build command 2. **Caching**: Using the hash key, it will look for build output from a local or remote cache. If there's a match, it will backfill the package using the cache. Otherwise, it will run the build command and persist the output to the cache. ## Install Install backfill using yarn: ``` $ yarn add --dev backfill ``` ## Usage - CLI ``` backfill -- [command] ``` Typically you would wrap your npm scripts inside `backfill`, like this: ```json { "name": "package", "scripts": { "build": "backfill -- tsc -b" } } ``` ### `--audit` Backfill can only bring back build output from the folders it was asked to cache. A package that modifies or adds files outside of the cached folder will not be brought back to the same state as when it was initially built. To help you debug this you can add `--audit` to your `backfill` command. It will listen to all file changes in your repo (it assumes you're in a git repo) while running the build command and then report on any files that got changed outside of the cache folder. ### Configuration Backfill will look for `backfill.config.js` in the package it was called from and among parent folders recursively and then combine those configs together. To configure backfill, simply export a config object with the properties you wish to override: ```js module.exports = { cacheStorageConfig: { provider: "azure-blob", options: { ... } } }; ``` The default configuration object is: ```js { cacheStorageConfig: { provider: "local" }, clearOutputFolder: false, internalCacheFolder: "node_modules/.cache/backfill", logFolder: "node_modules/.cache/backfill", logLevel: "info", mode: "READ_WRITE", name: "[name-of-package]", outputGlob: ["lib/**"], packageRoot: "path/to/package", producePerformanceLogs: false, validateOutput: false } ``` The `outputGlob` is a list of globs describing the files you want to cache. `outputGlob` should be expressed as a relative path from the root of each package. If you want to cache `package-a/lib`, for instance, you'd write `outputGlob: ["lib/**"]`. If you also want to cache the `pacakge-a/dist/bundles` folder, you'd write `outputGlob: ["lib/**", "dist/bundles/**"]`. The configuration type is: ```ts export type Config = { cacheStorageConfig: CacheStorageConfig; clearOutputFolder: boolean; internalCacheFolder: string; logFolder: string; logLevel: LogLevels; mode: "READ_ONLY" | "WRITE_ONLY" | "READ_WRITE" | "PASS"; name: string; outputGlob: string[]; packageRoot: string; performanceReportName?: string; producePerformanceLogs: boolean; validateOutput: boolean; }; ``` #### Environment variable You can override configuration with environment variables. Backfill will also look for a `.env`-file in the root of your repository, and load those into the environment. This can be useful when you don't want to commit keys and secrets to your remote cache, or if you want to commit a read-only cache access key in the repo and override with a write and read access key in the PR build, for instance. See `getEnvConfig()` in [`./packages/config/src/envConfig.ts`](https://github.com/microsoft/backfill/blob/master/packages/config/src/envConfig.ts#L15). ## Set up remote cache ### Microsoft Azure Blog Storage To cache to a Microsoft Azure Blog Storage you need to provide a connection string and the container name. If you are configuring via `backfill.config.js`, you can use the following syntax: ```js module.exports = { cacheStorageConfig: { provider: "azure-blob", options: { connectionString: "...", container: "..." } } }; ``` You can also configure Microsoft Azure Blog Storage using environment variables. ``` BACKFILL_CACHE_PROVIDER="azure-blob" BACKFILL_CACHE_PROVIDER_OPTIONS='{"connectionString":"...","container":"..."}' ``` ### Npm package To cache to an NPM package you need to provide a package name and the registry URL of your package feed. This feed should probably be private. If you are configuring via `backfill.config.js`, you can use the following syntax: ```js module.exports = { cacheStorageConfig: { provider: "npm", options: { npmPackageName: "...", registryUrl: "..." } } }; ``` You can also provide a path to the `.npmrc` user config file, to provide auth details related to your package feed using the `npmrcUserconfig` field in `options`. You can also configure NPM package cache using environment variables. ``` BACKFILL_CACHE_PROVIDER="npm" BACKFILL_CACHE_PROVIDER_OPTIONS='{"npmPackageName":"...","registryUrl":"..."}' ``` ## API Backfill provides an API, this allows for more complex scenarios, and performance optimizations. ``` const backfill = require("backfill/lib/api"); const packagePath = getPath(packageName); const logger = await backfill.makeLogger("verbose", process.stdout, process.stderr); const packagehash = await backfill.computHash(packagePath, logger); const fetchSuccess = await backfill.fetch(packagePath, packageHash, logger); if (!fetchSuccess) { await runBuildCommand(); await backfill.put(packagePath, packageHash, logger); } ``` ## Performance Logs You can optionally output performance logs to disk. If turned on, backfill will output a log file after each run with performance metrics. Each log file is formatted as a JSON file. You can turn performance logging by setting `producePerformanceLogs: true` in `backfill.config.js`. ## Contributing This project welcomes contributions and suggestions. - [Submit bugs](https://github.com/microsoft/backfill/issues) and help us verify fixes as they are checked in. - Review the [source code changes](https://github.com/microsoft/backfill/pulls). Most contributions require you to agree to a Contributor License Agreement (CLA) declaring that you have the right to, and actually do, grant us the rights to use your contribution. For details, visit https://cla.opensource.microsoft.com. When you submit a pull request, a CLA bot will automatically determine whether you need to provide a CLA and decorate the PR appropriately (e.g., status check, comment). Simply follow the instructions provided by the bot. You will only need to do this once across all repos using our CLA. This project has adopted the [Microsoft Open Source Code of Conduct](https://opensource.microsoft.com/codeofconduct/). For more information see the [Code of Conduct FAQ](https://opensource.microsoft.com/codeofconduct/faq/) or contact [opencode@microsoft.com](mailto:opencode@microsoft.com) with any additional questions or comments.