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Showing content from https://github.com/nodejs/Gzemnid below:

nodejs/Gzemnid: An npm beholder that deceives you

Notice: some commands might require --max-old-space-size=2000 or above.

See documentation on Using pre-built datasets page.

All data files are stored inside the ./pool/ dir by default.

See documentation on Data structures page.

The main script is invoked as gzemnid command [subcommand] (or ./gzemnid.js command [subcommand]), where [subcommand] is optional.

Here is the list of the current commands:

Times are given for reference, could depend significantly on the internet connection speed and/or CPU speed, and increase over time with npm registry growth.

TODO: document server.

Started via gzemnid server.

Note: think twice before relying on the data obtained from Gzemnid or using it to decide on something.

Code search has both false negatives and false positives — some files are ignored, some files are unused, and some lines could be in a middle of a comment block. Also, your regexps are never ideal.

AST tree also ignores a list of excluded files and directories and minified code and includes unused code and files if those are present in the package for some reason.

Downloads/month are not equal to popularity, and you can't see which version is being used.

Code and AST search, among other things, takes only latest released package versions into an account. That could be significantly different from master, beta branches, also older versions could be much more popular that latest.

All datasets get out of date the moment you build them.

Scoped packages are ignored completely.

Gzemnid deceives you, keep that in mind. But it's still better than nothing.


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