The import.meta
object is a way for a module to access information about itself. It's part of the JavaScript language, but its contents are not standardized. Each "host" (browser, runtime, etc) is free to implement any properties it wishes on the import.meta
object.
Bun implements the following properties.
import.meta.dir; // => "/path/to/project"
import.meta.file; // => "file.ts"
import.meta.path; // => "/path/to/project/file.ts"
import.meta.url; // => "file:https:///path/to/project/file.ts"
import.meta.main; // `true` if this file is directly executed by `bun run`
// `false` otherwise
import.meta.resolve("zod"); // => "file:https:///path/to/project/node_modules/zod/index.js"
import.meta.dir | Absolute path to the directory containing the current file, e.g. /path/to/project . Equivalent to __dirname in CommonJS modules (and Node.js) |
import.meta.dirname | An alias to import.meta.dir , for Node.js compatibility |
import.meta.env | An alias to process.env . |
import.meta.file | The name of the current file, e.g. index.tsx |
import.meta.path | Absolute path to the current file, e.g. /path/to/project/index.ts . Equivalent to __filename in CommonJS modules (and Node.js) |
import.meta.filename | An alias to import.meta.path , for Node.js compatibility |
import.meta.main | Indicates whether the current file is the entrypoint to the current bun process. Is the file being directly executed by bun run or is it being imported? |
| Resolve a module specifier (e.g.
|
import.meta.url | A string url to the current file, e.g. file:https:///path/to/project/index.ts . Equivalent to import.meta.url in browsers |