setup-node/node_modules/which
Danny McCormick 78148dae50
Add auth support (#21)
* Updates

* Update

* Update

* Update

* Update

* Yarn sometimes prefers npmrc, so use same token

* Description

* Update readme

* Feedback

* Add type

* new toolkit and scoped registries

* npmrc in RUNNER_TEMP

* Dont always auth

* Try exporting blank token

* Get auth working for now pending runner changes

* Fix string interpolation for auth token.

* Don't export both userconfigs

* Update authutil.js

* Add single quotes for authString

* Fix the registry string.

* Use userconfig and append trailing slash

* Keep in root of repo

* Try just adding auth token

* Remove auth token

* Try changes again

* Add tests

* Npm and GPR samples

* Add types
2019-08-06 18:26:04 -04:00
..
bin Add auth support (#21) 2019-08-06 18:26:04 -04:00
CHANGELOG.md Add auth support (#21) 2019-08-06 18:26:04 -04:00
LICENSE Add auth support (#21) 2019-08-06 18:26:04 -04:00
package.json Add auth support (#21) 2019-08-06 18:26:04 -04:00
README.md Add auth support (#21) 2019-08-06 18:26:04 -04:00
which.js Add auth support (#21) 2019-08-06 18:26:04 -04:00

which

Like the unix which utility.

Finds the first instance of a specified executable in the PATH environment variable. Does not cache the results, so hash -r is not needed when the PATH changes.

USAGE

var which = require('which')

// async usage
which('node', function (er, resolvedPath) {
  // er is returned if no "node" is found on the PATH
  // if it is found, then the absolute path to the exec is returned
})

// sync usage
// throws if not found
var resolved = which.sync('node')

// if nothrow option is used, returns null if not found
resolved = which.sync('node', {nothrow: true})

// Pass options to override the PATH and PATHEXT environment vars.
which('node', { path: someOtherPath }, function (er, resolved) {
  if (er)
    throw er
  console.log('found at %j', resolved)
})

CLI USAGE

Same as the BSD which(1) binary.

usage: which [-as] program ...

OPTIONS

You may pass an options object as the second argument.

  • path: Use instead of the PATH environment variable.
  • pathExt: Use instead of the PATHEXT environment variable.
  • all: Return all matches, instead of just the first one. Note that this means the function returns an array of strings instead of a single string.