A workspace is a collection of one or more packages, namely workspace members, that are managed together.
The key points for workspaces are:
forc commands available for a single package can also be used for a workspace, like forc build or forc deploy. Forc.lock file which resides in the root directory of the workspace. Workspace manifests are declared within Forc.toml files and support the following fields:
An empty workspace can be created with forc new --workspace or forc init --workspace.
members field The members field defines which packages are members of the workspace:
[workspace]
members = ["member1", "path/to/member2"] The members field accepts entries to be given in relative path with respect to the workspace root.
Packages that are located within a workspace directory but are not contained within the members set are ignored.
[patch] section The [patch] section can be used to override any dependency in the workspace dependency graph. The usage is the same with package level [patch] section and details can be seen here .
It is not allowed to declare patch table in member of a workspace if the workspace manifest file contains a patch table.
Example:
[workspace]
members = ["member1", "path/to/member2"]
[patch.'https://github.com/fuellabs/sway']
std = { git = "https://github.com/fuellabs/sway", branch = "test" } In the above example each occurrence of std as a dependency in the workspace will be changed with std from test branch of sway repo.
forc commands that support workspaces forc build - Builds an entire workspace. forc deploy - Builds and deploys all deployable members (i.e, contracts) of the workspace in the correct order. forc run - Builds and runs all scripts of the workspace. forc check - Checks all members of the workspace. forc update - Checks and updates workspace level Forc.lock file that is shared between workspace members. forc clean - Cleans all output artifacts for each member of the workspace. forc fmt - Formats all members of a workspace.