8.19.1
npm is the package manager for the Node JavaScript platform. It puts modules in place so that node can find them, and manages dependency conflicts intelligently.
It is extremely configurable to support a variety of use cases. Most commonly, you use it to publish, discover, install, and develop node programs.
Run npm help
to get a list of available commands.
npm comes preconfigured to use npm's public registry at https://registry.npmjs.org by default. Use of the npm public registry is subject to terms of use available at https://docs.npmjs.com/policies/terms.
You can configure npm to use any compatible registry you like, and even run your own registry. Use of someone else's registry is governed by their terms of use.
You probably got npm because you want to install stuff.
The very first thing you will most likely want to run in any node
program is npm install
to install its dependencies.
You can also run npm install blerg
to install the latest version of
"blerg". Check out npm install
for more
info. It can do a lot of stuff.
Use the npm search
command to show everything that's available in the
public registry. Use npm ls
to show everything you've installed.
If a package lists a dependency using a git URL, npm will install that
dependency using the git
command and will generate an error if it is not installed.
If one of the packages npm tries to install is a native node module and requires compiling of C++ Code, npm will use node-gyp for that task. For a Unix system, node-gyp needs Python, make and a buildchain like GCC. On Windows, Python and Microsoft Visual Studio C++ are needed. For more information visit the node-gyp repository and the node-gyp Wiki.
See folders
to learn about where npm puts
stuff.
In particular, npm has two modes of operation:
./node_modules
, and bins to ./node_modules/.bin
.$npm_config_prefix/lib/node_modules
and bins to
$npm_config_prefix/bin
.Local mode is the default. Use -g
or --global
on any command to
run in global mode instead.
If you're using npm to develop and publish your code, check out the following help topics:
package.json
.npm
link
to do this.npm install
npm publish
command to upload your
code to the registry.npm is extremely configurable. It reads its configuration options from 5 places.
--key val
. All keys take a value, even if they
are booleans (the config parser doesn't know what the options are at
the time of parsing). If you do not provide a value (--key
) then
the option is set to boolean true
.npm_config_
. For example, export npm_config_key=val
.$HOME/.npmrc
is an ini-formatted list of configs. If
present, it is parsed. If the userconfig
option is set in the cli
or env, that file will be used instead../etc/npmrc
(relative to the global prefix will be
parsed if it is found. See npm prefix
for
more info on the global prefix. If the globalconfig
option is set
in the cli, env, or user config, then that file is parsed instead.See config
for much much more information.
Patches welcome!
If you would like to help, but don't know what to work on, read the contributing guidelines and check the issues list.
When you find issues, please report them: https://github.com/npm/cli/issues
Please be sure to follow the template and bug reporting guidelines.
Discuss new feature ideas on our discussion forum:
Or suggest formal RFC proposals: