Zoltan Kochan 45f682fe46 test: opt version -r changelog test into repository storage (#12984)
The "bare version -r applies the release plan and cleans up the intent" test
asserts the committed-CHANGELOG flow: it reads lib/CHANGELOG.md and expects the
consumed intent to be deleted at version time. Since composing changelogs at
publish time (registry storage) became the default, `pnpm version -r` no longer
commits CHANGELOG.md — it parks the section under .changeset/changelogs/ and
defers intent GC until the registry confirms publication. With no verifyPublished
registry in the test, the changelog file is never written (ENOENT) and the
intent is never collected, so the test failed.

Opt the test into `versioning.changelog.storage: repository` so it keeps
exercising the committed-changelog + intent-cleanup path, matching the pattern
the versioning package's lifecycle tests already use. Registry-storage behavior
(parked section, deferred GC) is covered by those lifecycle tests.

Co-authored-by: Claude Opus 4.8 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
2026-07-13 21:04:01 +02:00
2026-01-16 16:31:31 +01:00
2024-03-21 01:09:22 +01:00

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pnpm

Fast, disk space efficient package manager:

  • Fast. Up to 2x faster than the alternatives (see benchmark).
  • Efficient. Files inside node_modules are linked from a single content-addressable storage.
  • Great for monorepos.
  • Strict. A package can access only dependencies that are specified in its package.json.
  • Deterministic. Has a lockfile called pnpm-lock.yaml.
  • Works as a Node.js version manager. See pnpm runtime.
  • Works everywhere. Supports Windows, Linux, and macOS.
  • Battle-tested. Used in production by teams of all sizes since 2016.
  • Experimental Rust port. Includes pacquet, an experimental port of the CLI written in Rust.
  • See the full feature comparison with npm and Yarn.

To quote the Rush team:

Microsoft uses pnpm in Rush repos with hundreds of projects and hundreds of PRs per day, and weve found it to be very fast and reliable.

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Background

pnpm uses a content-addressable filesystem to store all files from all module directories on a disk. When using npm, if you have 100 projects using lodash, you will have 100 copies of lodash on disk. With pnpm, lodash will be stored in a content-addressable storage, so:

  1. If you depend on different versions of lodash, only the files that differ are added to the store. If lodash has 100 files, and a new version has a change only in one of those files, pnpm update will only add 1 new file to the storage.
  2. All the files are saved in a single place on the disk. When packages are installed, their files are linked from that single place consuming no additional disk space. Linking is performed using either hard-links or reflinks (copy-on-write).

As a result, you save gigabytes of space on your disk and you have a lot faster installations! If you'd like more details about the unique node_modules structure that pnpm creates and why it works fine with the Node.js ecosystem, read this small article: Flat node_modules is not the only way.

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Getting Started

Benchmark

pnpm is up to 2x faster than npm and Yarn classic. See all benchmarks here.

Benchmarks on an app with lots of dependencies:

License

MIT, except the pnpr/ directory, which is source-available under the PolyForm Shield License 1.0.0.

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