These properties affect how and where the package is installed.
string
The directory, relative to the web root, that the package will be installed to. This will override the convention directory based on the type
property. See package installation for more details on where packages install to.
string
The ForgeBox type of the package. See list of available types with the forgebox types
command. This can determine the directory the package is installed to. For instance, a type of modules
goes in the site's /modules
directory.
array
An array of file/folder globbing patterns that follow the .gitIgnore syntax to NOT be copied when doing a --production
install.
End a pattern with a slash to only match a directory. Start a pattern with a slash to start in the root.
foo
will match any file or folder in the directory tree
/foo
will only match a file or folder in the root
foo/
will only match a directory anywhere in the directory tree
/foo/
will only match a folder in the root
Use a single *
to match zero or more characters INSIDE a file or folder name (won't match a slash).
foo*
will match any file or folder starting with foo
foo*.txt
will match any file or folder starting with foo
and ending with .txt
*foo
will match any file or folder ending with foo
a/*/z
will match a/b/z
but not a/b/c/z
Use a double **
to match zero or more characters including slashes. This allows a pattern to span directories.
a/**/z
will match a/z
and a/b/z
and a/b/c/z
object
This is an object of string values where each key is the slug of an installed package and the value is the path the package is installed to. In most cases, this will be managed automatically by the install
and uninstall
command. If you want to override the directory
property on one of your dependencies, you can configured an install path prior to installing the package and it will be used.
Install paths can be a directory relative to the web root (no leading slash) or a full path starting with a drive root.
boolean
By default when a package is installed, a directory is created in the install path that is named after the package slug. Setting createPackageDirectory
to false
will skip the creation of that folder and dump the contents of the package right into the install path.
An example of this would be a full application that is the entire web root. Another example would be an interceptor that gets put directly in the interceptors
folder.
Note, when this is set to false
, no path will be added to the installpaths
directory and the package cannot be removed by the uninstall
command.
string
By default when a package is installed, a directory is created in the install path that is named after the package slug. If a packageDirectory
property is set, the folder is named after it instead of the slug.
An example would be the coldbox-be
slug that still needs to install into a folder called coldbox
. You shouldn't need to use this setting.