From ecc
Guides using Bun as runtime, package manager, bundler, and test runner for JS/TS projects with Node comparisons, migration steps, and Vercel deployment.
npx claudepluginhub krishnendu409/everything-claude-free-versionThis skill uses the workspace's default tool permissions.
Bun is a fast all-in-one JavaScript runtime and toolkit: runtime, package manager, bundler, and test runner.
Audits UI buttons and touchpoints by tracing state changes in handlers to find canceling side effects, race conditions, and inconsistent final states after refactors or for user-reported bugs.
Provides ClickHouse patterns for MergeTree schemas, query optimization, aggregations, window functions, joins, and data ingestion for high-performance analytics.
Orchestrates multi-agent coding tasks via Claude DevFleet: plans projects into mission DAGs, dispatches parallel agents to isolated git worktrees, monitors progress, and retrieves structured reports.
Bun is a fast all-in-one JavaScript runtime and toolkit: runtime, package manager, bundler, and test runner.
Use when: adopting Bun, migrating from Node, writing or debugging Bun scripts/tests, or configuring Bun on Vercel or other platforms.
bun install is significantly faster than npm/yarn. Lockfile is bun.lock (text) by default in current Bun; older versions used bun.lockb (binary).bun test with Jest-like API.Migration from Node: Replace node script.js with bun run script.js or bun script.js. Run bun install in place of npm install; most packages work. Use bun run for npm scripts; bun x for npx-style one-off runs. Node built-ins are supported; prefer Bun APIs where they exist for better performance.
Vercel: Set runtime to Bun in project settings. Build: bun run build or bun build ./src/index.ts --outdir=dist. Install: bun install --frozen-lockfile for reproducible deploys.
# Install dependencies (creates/updates bun.lock or bun.lockb)
bun install
# Run a script or file
bun run dev
bun run src/index.ts
bun src/index.ts
bun run --env-file=.env dev
FOO=bar bun run script.ts
bun test
bun test --watch
// test/example.test.ts
import { expect, test } from "bun:test";
test("add", () => {
expect(1 + 2).toBe(3);
});
const file = Bun.file("package.json");
const json = await file.json();
Bun.serve({
port: 3000,
fetch(req) {
return new Response("Hello");
},
});
bun.lock or bun.lockb) for reproducible installs.bun run for scripts. For TypeScript, Bun runs .ts natively.