▲ | Izkata 3 days ago | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Lockfiles use exact hashes, not versions/version ranges. Javascript projects use two files, a package file with version ranges (used when upgrading) and a lockfile with the exact version (used in general when installing in an existing project). | |||||||||||||||||||||||
▲ | chatmasta 3 days ago | parent | next [-] | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Sure, but a lockfile with a hash doesn’t mean that next time it will fail if it tries to install a version of the package without that hash. If your package.json specifies a semver range then it’ll pull the latest minor or patch version (which is what happened in this case with e.g. duckdb@1.3.3) and ignore any hash differences if the version has changed. Hence why I say you need to go out of your way to specify an exact version in package.json and then the lock file will work as you might expect a “lock” file to work. (Back when I was an engineer and not a PM with deteriorating coding ability, I had to make a yarn plugin to pin each of our dependencies.) The best way to manage JS dependencies is to pin them to exact versions and rely on renovate bot to update them. Then at least it’s your choice when your code changes. Ideally you can rebuild your project in a decade from now. But if that’s not possible then at least you should have a choice to accept or decline code changes in your dependencies. This is very hard to achieve by default in the JS ecosystem. | |||||||||||||||||||||||
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▲ | zdragnar 3 days ago | parent | prev [-] | ||||||||||||||||||||||
NPM is rather infamous for not exactly respecting the lockfile, however. |