Custom generators are a type of plugin for the Sails command line. Through templates, they control which files get generated in your Sails projects when you run sails new
or sails generate
, and also what those files look like.
To make this easier to play with, let's first make a Sails project. If you haven't already created one, go to your terminal and type:
sails new my-project
Then cd
into my-project
and ask Sails to spit out the template for a new generator:
sails generate generator awesome
To enable the generator you need to tell Sails about it via your test project's .sailsrc
file.
If we were using an existing generator, we could just install it from NPM, then specify the name of the package in .sailsrc
. But since we're developing this generator locally, we'll just connect it to the folder directly:
{
"generators": {
"modules": {
"awesome": "./my-project/awesome"
}
}
}
Note: For now, we'll stick with "awesome", but you can mount the generator under any name you want. Whatever you choose for the name of the key in the
.sailsrc
file will be the name you'll use to run this generator from the terminal (e.g.sails generate awesome
).
To run your generator, just tack its name on to sails generate
, followed by any desired arguments or command-line options. For example:
sails generate awesome
If your generator is useful across different projects, you might consider publishing it as an NPM package (note that this doesn't mean that your generator must be open-source: NPM also supports private packages.
First, pop open the package.json
file and verify the package name (e.g. "@my-npm-name/sails-generate-awesome"), author ("My Name"), license, and other information are correct. If you're unsure, a good open source license to use is "MIT". If you're publishing a private generator and want it to remain proprietary to your organization, use "UNLICENSED".
Note: If you don't already have an NPM account, go to npmjs.com and create one. Then use
npm login
to get set up.
When you're ready to pull the trigger and publish your generator on NPM, cd into the generator's folder in the terminal and type:
npm publish
To take your newly-published generator for a spin, cd back into your example Sails project (my-project
), delete the inline generator, and run:
npm install @my-npm-name/sails-generate-awesome
then change the .sailsrc
in your example Sails project (my-project/.sailsrc
):
{
"generators": {
"modules": {
"awesome": "@my-npm-name/sails-generate-awesome"
}
}
}
And, last but not least:
sails generate awesome