forge soldeer push
Push a Dependency to the Repository
$ forge soldeer push --help
Usage: forge soldeer push [OPTIONS] <DEPENDENCY>~<VERSION> [PATH]
Arguments:
<DEPENDENCY>~<VERSION>
The dependency name and version, separated by a tilde.
This should always be used when you want to push a dependency to the
central repository: `<https://soldeer.xyz>`.
[PATH]
Use this if the package you want to push is not in the current
directory.
Example: `soldeer push mypkg~0.1.0 /path/to/dep`.
Options:
-d, --dry-run
If set, does not publish the package but generates a zip file that can
be inspected
--skip-warnings
Use this if you want to skip the warnings that can be triggered when
trying to push dotfiles like .env
-h, --help
Print help (see a summary with '-h')
-j, --threads <THREADS>
Number of threads to use. Specifying 0 defaults to the number of
logical cores
[aliases: jobs]
Display options:
--color <COLOR>
The color of the log messages
Possible values:
- auto: Intelligently guess whether to use color output (default)
- always: Force color output
- never: Force disable color output
--json
Format log messages as JSON
-q, --quiet
Do not print log messages
-v, --verbosity...
Verbosity level of the log messages.
Pass multiple times to increase the verbosity (e.g. -v, -vv, -vvv).
Depending on the context the verbosity levels have different meanings.
For example, the verbosity levels of the EVM are:
- 2 (-vv): Print logs for all tests.
- 3 (-vvv): Print execution traces for failing tests.
- 4 (-vvvv): Print execution traces for all tests, and setup traces
for failing tests.
- 5 (-vvvvv): Print execution and setup traces for all tests,
including storage changes.
For more information, read the README.md