CommonJS is only a standard that specifies a way to modularize JavaScript, so CommonJS itself does not provide any JavaScript libraries.
CommonJS specifies a require() function which lets one import the modules and then use them, the modules have a special global variable named exports which is an object which holds the things that will get exported.
// foo.js ---------------- Example Foo module
function Foo() {
this.bla = function() {
console.log('Hello World');
}
}
exports.foo = Foo;
// myawesomeprogram.js ----------------------
var foo = require('./foo'); // './' will require the module relative
// in this case foo.js is in the same directory as this .js file
var test = new foo.Foo();
test.bla(); // logs 'Hello World'
The Node.js standard library and all 3rd party libraries use CommonJS to modularize their code.
One more example:
// require the http module from the standard library
var http = require('http'); // no './' will look up the require paths to find the module
var express = require('express'); // require the express.js framework (needs to be installed)