Search the registry for packages matching the search terms. npm search
performs a linear, incremental, lexically-ordered search through package
metadata for all files in the registry. If your terminal has color
support, it will further highlight the matches in the results. This can
be disabled with the config item color
Additionally, using the --searchopts and --searchexclude options
paired with more search terms will include and exclude further patterns.
The main difference between --searchopts and the standard search terms
is that the former does not highlight results in the output and you can
use them more fine-grained filtering. Additionally, you can add both of
these to your config to change default search filtering behavior.
Search also allows targeting of maintainers in search results, by prefixing
their npm username with =.
If a term starts with /, then it's interpreted as a regular expression
and supports standard JavaScript RegExp syntax. In this case search will
ignore a trailing / . (Note you must escape or quote many regular
expression characters in most shells.)
Configuration
long
Default: false
Type: Boolean
Show extended information in ls, search, and help-search.
json
Default: false
Type: Boolean
Whether or not to output JSON data, rather than the normal output.
In npm pkg set it enables parsing set values with JSON.parse() before
saving them to your package.json.
Not supported by all npm commands.
color
Default: true unless the NO_COLOR environ is set to something other than '0'
Type: "always" or Boolean
If false, never shows colors. If "always" then always shows colors. If
true, then only prints color codes for tty file descriptors.
parseable
Default: false
Type: Boolean
Output parseable results from commands that write to standard output. For
npm search, this will be tab-separated table format.
description
Default: true
Type: Boolean
Show the description in npm search
searchopts
Default: ""
Type: String
Space-separated options that are always passed to search.
searchexclude
Default: ""
Type: String
Space-separated options that limit the results from search.
If true, staleness checks for cached data will be forced, making the CLI
look for updates immediately even for fresh package data.
prefer-offline
Default: false
Type: Boolean
If true, staleness checks for cached data will be bypassed, but missing data
will be requested from the server. To force full offline mode, use
--offline.
offline
Default: false
Type: Boolean
Force offline mode: no network requests will be done during install. To
allow the CLI to fill in missing cache data, see --prefer-offline.