2.3 KiB
2.3 KiB
pnpm-check usage
Overview
The pnpm-check script inspects and analyzes pnpm disk usage. It supports multiple environment configurations.
How to run
Option 1: npm scripts (recommended)
The script reads the project directory from the current NODE_ENV configuration.
# Auto-detect current environment (defaults to development)
npm run pnpm:check
# Development
npm run pnpm:check:dev
# Production
npm run pnpm:check:prod
# Test
npm run pnpm:check:test
Option 2: Wrapper script
# Use current environment variables
node scripts/pnpm-check-wrapper.js
# Pin environment
NODE_ENV=production node scripts/pnpm-check-wrapper.js
Option 3: Bash script directly
# Pass project directory explicitly
bash scripts/pnpm-check.sh /path/to/projects
# Via environment variable
PROJECT_SOURCE_DIR=/path/to/projects bash scripts/pnpm-check.sh
Output
1. pnpm version
✅ pnpm version: 10.18.2
Shows the installed pnpm version.
2. pnpm store
📁 pnpm Store path:
/Users/xxx/.pnpm-store
Store size: 2.5G
- Store path: Global content-addressable store location
- Store size: Actual disk usage; all projects share this store
3. Store status
📊 pnpm Store status:
Packages in the store are untouched
Shows how packages in the store are used (pnpm store status).
4. Per-project node_modules size
📦 Per-project node_modules (apparent size):
⚠️ Note: du double-counts hard links; real usage is much lower
[project-a] 500MB (includes hard-link double counting)
[project-b] 500MB (includes hard-link double counting)
⚠️ Important: Figures come from du and double-count hard links; real usage is usually much lower.
5. .pnpm folder size
🗂️ Per-project .pnpm folders (apparent size):
⚠️ Note: entries in .pnpm are hard links; little extra space per project
[project-a] 400MB (hard links, shared in store)
[project-b] 400MB (hard links, shared in store)
⚠️ Important: Files under .pnpm are hard links; they do not each consume separate space on disk.
6. Real disk usage
💾 Filesystem usage (df):
Filesystem: /dev/disk1 | Used: 150GB | Avail: 200GB | Use%: 43%
Using df on the filesystem is the most reliable way to see actual free space.