I'm writing a web app in Node. If I've got some JS file db.js
with a function init
in it how could I call that function from the command line?
Run function in script from command line (Node JS)
334.2k Views Asked by winhowes AtThere are 16 best solutions below

If you turn db.js
into a module you can require it from db_init.js
and just: node db_init.js
.
db.js:
module.exports = {
method1: function () { ... },
method2: function () { ... }
}
db_init.js:
var db = require('./db');
db.method1();
db.method2();

You can also run TypeScript with ts-node
similar to @LeeGoddard answer.
In my case, I wanted to use app
and init
separately for testing purposes.
// app.ts
export const app = express();
export async function init(): Promise<void> {
// app init logic...
}
// commonjs
npx ts-node -e 'require("./src/app").init();'
// esmodule
npx ts-node -e 'import("./src/app").then(a => a.init());'

Updated for 2022 - If you've switched to ES Modules, you can't use the require tricks, you'd need to use dynamic imports:
node -e 'import("./db.js").then(dbMod => dbMod.init());'
or with the --experimental-specifier-resolution=node flag:
node --experimental-specifier-resolution=node -e 'import("./db").then(dbMod => dbMod.init());'

If your file just contains your function, for example:
myFile.js:
function myMethod(someVariable) {
console.log(someVariable)
}
Calling it from the command line like this nothing will happen:
node myFile.js
But if you change your file:
myFile.js:
myMethod("Hello World");
function myMethod(someVariable) {
console.log(someVariable)
}
Now this will work from the command line:
node myFile.js

simple way:
let's say you have db.js file in a helpers directory in project structure.
now go inside helpers directory and go to node console
helpers $ node
2) require db.js file
> var db = require("./db")
3) call your function (in your case its init())
> db.init()
hope this helps

As per the other answers, add the following to someFile.js
module.exports.someFunction = function () {
console.log('hi');
};
You can then add the following to package.json
"scripts": {
"myScript": "node -e 'require(\"./someFile\").someFunction()'"
}
From the terminal, you can then call
npm run myScript
I find this a much easier way to remember the commands and use them

Inspired by https://github.com/DVLP/run-func/blob/master/index.js
I create https://github.com/JiangWeixian/esrua
if file index.ts
export const welcome = (msg: string) => {
console.log(`hello ${msg}`)
}
just run
esrua ./index.ts welcome -p world
will output hello world

Try make-runnable.
In db.js, add require('make-runnable');
to the end.
Now you can do:
node db.js init
Any further args would get passed to the init
method, in the form of a list or key-value pairs.

I do a IIFE, something like that:
(() => init())();
this code will be executed immediately and invoke the init function.

Sometimes you want to run a function via CLI, sometimes you want to require
it from another module. Here's how to do both.
// file to run
const runMe = () => {}
if (require.main === module) {
runMe()
}
module.exports = runMe

maybe this method is not what you mean, but who knows it can help
index.js
const arg = process.argv.splice(2);
function printToCli(text){
console.log(text)
}
switch(arg[0]){
case "--run":
printToCli("how are you")
break;
default: console.log("use --run flag");
}
and run command node . --run
command line
probuss-MacBook-Air:fb_v8 probus$ node . --run
how are you
probuss-MacBook-Air:fb_v8 probus$
and you can add more arg[0] , arg[1], arg[2] ... and more
for node . --run -myarg1 -myarg2

This one is dirty but works :)
I will be calling main()
function from my script. Previously I just put calls to main at the end of script. However I did add some other functions and exported them from script (to use functions in some other parts of code) - but I dont want to execute main() function every time I import other functions in other scripts.
So I did this, in my script i removed call to main(), and instead at the end of script I put this check:
if (process.argv.includes('main')) {
main();
}
So when I want to call that function in CLI: node src/myScript.js main

If you want to include environment variables from your .env files, you can use env-cmd
:
npx env-cmd node -e 'require("./db").init()'
If you want run a specific function in the file too, use run-func
:
npx env-cmd npx run-func db.js init someArg
Or, to provide an argument for the accepted answer you'd have to do something like:
npx env-cmd node -e 'require("./db").init(someArg)'
Writing/updating an expression here is less explicit (so easier to miss when you're checking back, for example) than providing different arguments to the commands, so I recommend using env-cmd
with run-func
.
Note: I also usually add --experimental-modules
on the end when necessary.

Update 2020 - CLI
As @mix3d pointed out you can just run a command where file.js
is your file and someFunction
is your function optionally followed by parameters separated with spaces
npx run-func file.js someFunction "just some parameter"
That's it.
file.js
called in the example above
const someFunction = (param) => console.log('Welcome, your param is', param)
// exporting is crucial
module.exports = { someFunction }
More detailed description
Run directly from CLI (global)
Install
npm i -g run-func
Usage i.e. run function "init", it must be exported, see the bottom
run-func db.js init
or
Run from package.json script (local)
Install
npm i -S run-func
Setup
"scripts": {
"init": "run-func db.js init"
}
Usage
npm run init
Params
Any following arguments will be passed as function parameters init(param1, param2)
run-func db.js init param1 param2
Important
the function (in this example init
) must be exported in the file containing it
module.exports = { init };
or ES6 export
export { init };

Following on from the other answers here, if you wanted to make this reusable you could create a script as follows:
// rn-fn.js
const [, , filePath, fn, ...args] = process.argv;
import(filePath).then((mod) => mod[fn](...args));
Then as an example:
// hello.js
export function hello(str) {
console.log(`hello ${str}`)
}
Running:
node ./rn-fn.js ./hello.js hello world
at the command line should then return
hello world
No comment on why you want to do this, or what might be a more standard practice: here is a solution to your question.... Keep in mind that the type of quotes required by your command line may vary.
In your
db.js
, export theinit
function. There are many ways, but for example:Then call it like this, assuming your
db.js
is in the same directory as your command prompt:If your
db.js
were a moduledb.mjs
, use a dynamic import to load the module:To other readers, the OP's
init
function could have been called anything, it is not important, it is just the specific name used in the question.