Awesome npm resources and tips
npm is a package manager for the JavaScript programming language and comes bundled in the Node.js runtime.
Please read the contribution guidelines before contributing.
npm publish
.$ npm install --global npm
npm i
→ npm install
npm i -D
→ npm install --save-dev
npm t
→ npm test
npm it
→ npm install && npm test
npm r
→ npm uninstall
npm un
→ npm uninstall
npm up
→ npm update
Speed up your common npm tasks.
In your .zshrc
/.bashrc
:
alias ni='npm install'
alias nid='npm install --save-dev'
alias nig='npm install --global'
alias nt='npm test'
alias nit='npm install && npm test'
alias nk='npm link'
alias nr='npm run'
alias ns='npm start'
alias nf='npm cache clean && rm -rf node_modules && npm install'
alias nlg='npm list --global --depth=0'
By default npm adds packages you install to the dependencies
field in package.json (since v5). You can prevent this by specifying the --no-save
flag. You can add a package to devDependencies
with --save-dev
/-D
:
$ npm install --save-dev ava
You can easily run scripts using npm by adding them to the "scripts"
field in package.json and run them with npm run <script-name>
. Run npm run
to see available scripts. Binaries of locally install packages are made available in the PATH, so you can run them by name.
{
"name": "awesome-package",
"scripts": {
"cat": "cat-names"
},
"dependencies": {
"cat-names": "^1.0.0"
}
}
$ npm run cat
Max
All package.json properties are exposed as environment variables:
{
"name": "awesome-package",
"scripts": {
"name": "echo $npm_package_name"
}
}
$ npm run name
awesome-package
You can pass options to the command you are using in your npm script by adding -- --flag
like in the example below. The --
marks the end of options parsing, so npm run
will just ignore it and pass it to the command.
{
"name": "awesome-package",
"scripts": {
"xo": "xo",
"xo:fix": "npm run xo -- --fix",
}
}
Adding the -- --fix
option is like executing xo --fix
.
npm run
has a --silent
option which is especially useful when combining npm scripts.
Imagine you have a setup for linting your JavaScript files like the following:
{
"name": "awesome-package",
"scripts": {
"xo": "xo",
"xo:fix": "npm run xo --silent -- --fix",
}
}
Using the --silent
option reduces the output in the terminal. See this comparison.
npm comes with predefined lifecyle scripts which are excuted under specific conditions if they are defined in your package.json.
{
"name": "awesome-package",
"scripts": {
"prepublishOnly": "nsp check"
},
"devDependencies": {
"nsp": "^3.0.0"
}
}
This will be executed automatically before your npm package is published to the registry via npm publish
to check for known vulnerabilties in your dependencies.
Note: prepublishOnly is available since npm v4.0.0. See npm docs.
npm start
and npm test
npm start
and npm test
are also lifecycle scripts but are not executed automatically.
{
"name": "awesome-package",
"scripts": {
"start": "node server.js",
"test": "ava"
},
"devDependencies": {
"ava": "^1.0.0"
}
}
Therefore they can be executed simply with:
$ npm test
$ npm start
pre
and post
scriptsThese are special lifecycle scripts which can be used to run scripts automatically in sequence.
{
"name": "awesome-package",
"scripts": {
"pretest": "eslint .",
"test": "ava"
},
"devDependencies": {
"eslint": "^4.19.0",
"ava": "^1.0.0"
}
}
$ npm test
This will lint your files before running your tests. The tests will not run if linting fails. Or more generally spoken: the following script won’t be executed if one of the scripts running in sequence exits with an exit code other than 0.
Note: pre
and post
scripts can also be used for your custom npm scripts. So npm run foo
will also run prefoo
and postfoo
if defined.
npx
npm
comes bundled with npx
(Since v5.2.0) — a tool to execute package binaries. Each command is executed either from the local node_modules/.bin
directory, or from a central cache, installing any packages needed in order for <command>
to run.
{
"name": "awesome-package",
"dependencies": {
"cat-names": "^1.0.0"
}
}
If the binary is already installed, it will be executed from node_modules/.bin
.
$ npx cat-names
Max
But if the binary is missing, it will be installed first.
$ npx dog-names
npx: installed 46 in 3.136s
Bentley
With npx
(Comes bundled with npm v5.2.0 or newer) and the node-bin
package, you can easily try out code in different Node.js versions without having to use a version manager like nvm
, nave
, or n
.
$ npx --package=node-bin@6.11.0 -- node --version
v6.11.0
Sometimes it can be useful to have a local version of a package as a dependency. You can use npm link
to link one local package into another. Run npm link
in the package you want to use. This creates a global reference. Then go into your original package and run npm link <package-name>
to link in the other package.
$ cd rainbow
$ npm link
$ cd ../unicorn
$ npm link rainbow
You can now use rainbow
as a dependency in the unicorn
package.
npm supports using a shorthand for installing a package directly from a GitHub repo:
$ npm install sindresorhus/chalk
Let’s target a specific commit as the main branch is a moving target:
$ npm install 'sindresorhus/chalk#51b8f32'
Specify either a commit SHA, branch, tag, or nothing.
You can also install Git dependencies with semver: (Requires npm v5 or newer)
$ npm install 'sindresorhus/chalk#semver:^2.0.0'
$ npm install chalk@1.0.0
$ npm ls --depth=0
Get help docs for a command:
$ npm help <command>
Example:
$ npm help install
Quickly get a standalone version of a package that is browserified and usable in the browser.
https://wzrd.in/standalone/<package-name>[@<version>]
Examples:
Great for prototyping, but download the file or use Browserify yourself for production.
^
mean in package.json versioning?