Edmondo
Edmondo

Reputation: 20080

Installing a dependency with Bower from URL and specify version

I am trying to install a dependency with Bower using a URL. As of Bower documentation:

Bower offers several ways to install packages:

    # Using the dependencies listed in the current directory's bower.json 
    bower install
    # Using a local or remote package 
    bower install <package>
    # Using a specific version of a package 
    bower install <package>#<version>
    # Using a different name and a specific version of a package 
    bower install <name>=<package>#<version> 

Where <package> can be any one of the following:

However, then it says, that all the types except the URL allow to specify a version.

How do I specify a version for a URL downloaded dependency?

Upvotes: 155

Views: 115621

Answers (10)

Shafeeq Diaz
Shafeeq Diaz

Reputation: 1

Installs package from git and save to your bower.json dependency block.

  1. bower register package-name git-endpoint#version
  2. install package-name --save

(--save will save the package name version in the bower.json file inside the dependency block).

Reference

Upvotes: 0

SACn
SACn

Reputation: 1924

Try bower install git://github.com/urin/jquery.balloon.js.git#1.0.3 --save where 1.0.3 is the tag number which you can get by reading tag under releases. Also for URL replace by git:// in order for system to connect.

Upvotes: 3

le0diaz
le0diaz

Reputation: 2508

If you use bower.json file to specify your dependencies:

{
     "dependencies": {
         ...
         "photo-swipe": "[email protected]:dimsemenov/PhotoSwipe.git#v3.0.x",

#bower 1.4 (tested with that version) can read repositorios with uri format

         "photo-swipe": "git://github.com/dimsemenov/PhotoSwipe.git#v3.0.x",

     }
}

Just remember bower also searches for released versions and tags so you can point to almost everything, and can interprate basic query patterns like previous example. that will fetch latest minor update of version 3.0 (tested from bower 1.3.5)

Update, as the question description also mention using only a URL and no mention of a github repository.

Another example is to execute this command using the desired url, like:

bower install gmap3MarkerWithLabel=http://google-maps-utility-library-v3.googlecode.com/svn/tags/markerwithlabel/1.0/src/markerwithlabel.js -S

that command downloads your js library puts in {your destination path}/gmap3MarkerWithLabel/index.js and automatically creates an entry in your bower.json file called gmap3MarkerWithLabel: "..." After that, you can only execute bower update gmap3MarkerWithLabel if needed.

Funny thing if you do the process backwars (add manually the entry in bower.json, an then bower install entryName) it doesn't work, you get a

bower ENOTFOUND Package gmapV3MarkerWithLabel not found

Upvotes: 56

random-forest-cat
random-forest-cat

Reputation: 35934

Just specifying the uri endpoint worked for me, bower 1.3.9

  "dependencies": {
    "jquery.cookie": "latest",
    "everestjs": "http://www.everestjs.net/static/st.v2.js"
  }

Running bower install, I received following output:

bower new           version for http://www.everestjs.net/static/st.v2.js#*
bower resolve       http://www.everestjs.net/static/st.v2.js#*
bower download      http://www.everestjs.net/static/st.v2.js

You could also try updating bower

  • npm update -g bower

According to documentation: the following types of urls are supported:

http://example.com/script.js
http://example.com/style.css
http://example.com/package.zip (contents will be extracted)
http://example.com/package.tar (contents will be extracted)

Upvotes: 7

JcT
JcT

Reputation: 3569

Targeting a specific commit

Remote (github)

When using github, note that you can also target a specific commit (for example, of a fork you've made and updated) by appending its commit hash to the end of its clone url. For example:

"dependencies": {
  "example": "https://github.com/owner_name/repo_name.git#9203e6166b343d7d8b3bb638775b41fe5de3524c"
}

Locally (filesystem)

Or you can target a git commit in your local file system if you use your project's .git directory, like so (on Windows; note the forward slashes):

"dependencies": {
  "example": "file://C:/Projects/my-project/.git#9203e6166b343d7d8b3bb638775b41fe5de3524c"
}

This is one way of testing library code you've committed locally but not yet pushed to the repo.

Upvotes: 22

Darlan Mendon&#231;a
Darlan Mendon&#231;a

Reputation: 483

Use the following:

bower install --save git://github.com/USER/REPOS_NAME.git

More here: http://bower.io/#getting-started

Upvotes: 21

F Lekschas
F Lekschas

Reputation: 12790

Here's a handy short-hand way to install a specific tag or commit from GitHub via bower.json.

{
  "dependencies": {
    "your-library-name": "<GITHUB-USERNAME>/<REPOSITORY-NAME>#<TAG-OR-COMMIT>"
  }
}

For example:

{
  "dependencies": {
    "custom-jquery": "jquery/jquery#2.0.3"
  }
}

Upvotes: 8

Turdaliev Nursultan
Turdaliev Nursultan

Reputation: 2576

Just an update.

Now if it's a github repository then using just a github shorthand is enough if you do not mind the version of course.

GitHub shorthand

$ bower install desandro/masonry

Upvotes: 9

Shrike
Shrike

Reputation: 9500

I believe that specifying version works only for git-endpoints. And not for folder/zip ones. As when you point bower to a js-file/folder/zip you already specified package and version (except for js indeed). Because a package has bower.json with version in it. Specifying a version in 'bower install' makes sense when you're pointing bower to a repository which can have many versions of a package. It can be only git I think.

Upvotes: 3

Sindre Sorhus
Sindre Sorhus

Reputation: 63487

Use a git endpoint instead of a package name:

bower install https://github.com/jquery/jquery.git#2.0.3

Upvotes: 197

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