Hi all! Long time no see! We've been heads-down working through getting
our test suite passing on Windows.
Did you know that we have
Windows CI now running over at
Appveyor? In the meantime, we've got a bunch of dependency updates, some
nice documentation improvements and error messages when your package.json
contains invalid JSON. (Yeah, I thought we did that last one before too!)
7d64301
#12415 Clarify that when configuring client-side certificates for authenticating to non-npm registries thatcert
andkey
are not filesystem paths and should actually include the certificate and key data. (@rvedotrc)f8539b8
#12324 Describe hownpm run
setsNODE
andPATH
in more detail. Note thatnpm run
changesPATH
to include the current node interpreter’s directory. (@addaleax)2b57606
#11461 Clarify the documentation for the package.json homepage field. (@stevemao)
b5a0fbb
#12329 Fix progress config testing to ignore local user configs. Previously, any local setting would cause the tests to fail as they were trying to test what the default values for the progress bar would be in different environments and any explicit setting overrides those defaults. (@iarna)3d195bc
The lifecycle-signal test could crash on v0.8 due to its use ofNumber.parseInt
, which isn't available in that version of node. Fortunatelyglobal.parseInt
is, so we just use that instead. (@iarna)
-
05a28e3
[email protected]
: Under some circumstancesfile://
URLs on Windows were not handled correctly.Also, stop converting local module/tarballs into full paths in this module. We do already do that in
realize-package-specifier
, which is more appropriate as it knows what package we're installing relative to. (@zkat) -
ada2e93
[email protected]
: Require the newnpm-package-arg
, plus fix a case where specifiers that were maybe a tag, maybe a local filename were resolved differently than those that were definitely a local filename. (@zkat) (@iarna) -
adc515b
[email protected]
: A fix for AIX where a non-empty directory can causefs.rmDir
to fail withEEXIST
instead ofENOTEMPTY
and three new tests (@richardlau)Code cleanup, CI & dependency updates. (@othiym23)
-
df1f2e4
[email protected]
: Fix crashes when response headers indicate gzipped content but the body is empty. Add support for the deflate content encoding. (@simov) -
776c599
[email protected]
: Adds READABLE_STREAM env var that, if set todisable
, will makereadable-stream
use the local native node streams instead. (@calvinmetcalf) -
10d6d55
[email protected]
: Add supportgit+file://
type URLs. (@zkat)
38cf79f
#12083 If youignore-scripts
to disable lifecycles, this makes npm report when it skips running a script. (@bfred-it)
-
c615182
#11995 There were bugs where modules whose names matched the special files that npm always includes would be included, for example, thehistory
package was always included.With
npm@3
such extraneously bundled modules would not be ordinarily used, as things innode_modules
in packages are ignored entirely if the package isn't marked as bundling modules.Because of this
npm@3
behavior, thefiles-and-ignores
test failed to catch this as it was testing install output not what got packed. That has also been fixed. (@glenjamin)
823d9df
#12107 In the command summary foradduser
mention thatlogin
is an alias. (@gnerkus)7aaf47e
#12244 Update the README to suggest npm@3 for Windows users. Also add a reference to Microsoft's npm upgrade tool. (@felixrieseberg)
Heeeeeey y'all.
Kat here! Rebecca's been schmoozing with folks at Microsoft
Build, so I'm doing the npm@3
release this
week.
Speaking of Build, it looks like Microsoft is doing some bash thing. This might be really good news for our Windows users once it rolls around. We're keeping an eye out and feeling hopeful. 🙆
As far as the release goes: We're really happy to be getting more and more community contributions! Keep it up! We really appreciate folks trying to help us, and we'll do our best to help point you in the right direction. Even things like documentation are a huge help. And remember -- you get socks for it, too!
f8fb4d8
#12079 Back in[email protected]
we included a patch that made it sonpm install pkg
was basicallynpm install pkg@latest
instead ofpkg@*
This is probably what most users expected, but it also ended up breakingnpm deprecate
when no version was provided for a package. In that case, we were using*
to mean "deprecate all versions" and relying on thepkg
->pkg@*
conversion. This patch fixesnpm deprecate pkg
to work as it used to by special casing that particular command's behavior. (@polm)458f773
#12146 Addsmake doc-clean
toprepublish
script, to clear out previously built docs before publishing a new npm version (@watilde)f0d1521
#12146 Addsdoc-clean
phony target tomake publish
. (@watilde)
ea92ffc
#12147 Document that the current behavior ofengines
is just to warn if the node platform is incompatible. (@reconbot)cd1ba44
#12143 Removenpm faq
command, since the FAQ was removed. (@watilde)50a12cb
#12143 Remove references to the FAQ from the docs, since it was removed. (@watilde)60051c2
#12093 Updatebugs
url inpackage.json
to use thehttps
URL for Github. (@watilde)af30c37
#12075 Add the--ignore-scripts
flag to thenpm install
docs. (@paulirish)632b214
#12063 Various minor fixes to the html docs homepage. (@watilde)
3da0171
[email protected]
(@jdalton)69ccf6d
[email protected]
(@jdalton)b50c41a
[email protected]
(@jdalton)59c1ad7
[email protected]
(@jdalton)2b4f797
[email protected]
(@jdalton)
Like my esteemed colleague @zkat said in this week's LTS release notes, this week is another small release but we are continuing to work on our Windows efforts.
You may also be interested in reading the LTS process and policy that @othiym23 put together recently. If you have any feedback, we would love to hear.
Well then, don't do that.
0d4a0b1
#11442 Fail if the user asks us to make a link from a module back on to itself. (@antialias)
b271ed2
#11983 Exit early if no arguments were provided to search instead of trying to display all the modules, running out of memory, and then crashing. (@SimenB)
b8c7cd7
#12000 Stop depending onasync-some
as it's no longer used in npm. (@watilde)
fdd6b28
#11884 Includenode_modules
in the list of files and directories that npm won't include in packages ordinarily. (Modules listed inbundledDependencies
and things that those modules rely on, ARE included of course.) (@Jameskmonger)aac15eb
#12006 Fix typo in npm-orgs documentation, where teams docs went to access docs and vice versa. (@yaelz)
Was erroneously released with just a changelog typo correction and was otherwise the same as 3.8.3.
This release includes the fix for a vulnerability that could cause the unintentional leakage of bearer tokens.
Here are details on this vulnerability and how it affects you.
Since 2014, npm’s registry has used HTTP bearer tokens to authenticate requests from the npm’s command-line interface. A design flaw meant that the CLI was sending these bearer tokens with every request made by logged-in users, regardless of the destination of their request. (The bearers only should have been included for requests made against a registry or registries used for the current install.)
An attacker could exploit this flaw by setting up an HTTP server that could collect authentication information, then use this authentication information to impersonate the users whose tokens they collected. This impersonation would allow them to do anything the compromised users could do, including publishing new versions of packages.
With the fixes we’ve released, the CLI will only send bearer tokens with requests made against a registry.
If you believe that your bearer token may have been leaked, invalidate your
current npm bearer tokens and rerun
npm login
to generate new tokens. Keep in mind that this may cause continuous
integration builds in services like Travis to break, in which case you’ll need
to update the tokens in your CI server’s configuration.
Maybe.
npm’s CLI team believes that the fix won’t break any existing registry setups. Due to the large number of registry software suites out in the wild, though, it’s possible our change will be breaking in some cases.
If so, please file an issue describing the software you’re using and how it broke. Our team will work with you to mitigate the breakage.
Thanks to Mitar, Will White & the team at Mapbox, Max Motovilov, and James Taylor for reporting this vulnerability to npm.
The updated are-we-there-yet
changes how it tracks how complete things are to be much more efficient.
The summary is that are-we-there-yet
was refactored to remove an expensive
tree walk.
The result for you should be faster installs when working with very large trees.
Previously are-we-there-yet
computed this when you asked by passing the request down
its tree of progress indicators, totaling up the results. In doing so, it had to walk the
entire tree of progress indicators.
By contrast, are-we-there-yet
now updates a running total when a change
is made, bubbling that up the tree from whatever branch made progress. This
bubbling was already going on so there was nearly no cost associated with taking advantage of it.
32f2bd0
[email protected]
: Bring in substantial performance improvements fromare-we-there-yet
. (@iarna)
-
473d324
#11947 Guard against bugs that could cause the installer to crash with errors like:TypeError: Cannot read property 'target' of null
This doesn't fix the bugs, but it does at least make the installer less likely to explode. (@thefourtheye)
7537fe1
[email protected]
: Create objects with{}
instead ofObject.create(null)
to make the results strictly equal to what, say, parsed JSON would provide. (@domenic)8defb0f
[email protected]
: Fix sync write issue on 0.10. (@calvinmetcalf)
c3edeab
#11912 Change the self installation test to do its work in/tmp
. Previously this was installing into a temp subdir intest/tap
, which wouldn't catch the case where a module was installed in the localnode_modules
folder but not in dependencies, as node would look up the tree and use the copy from the version of npm being tested. (@iarna)
This release includes an updated node-gyp
with fixes for Android.
634ecba
[email protected]
: Fix bug in builds for Android. (@bnoordhuis)
460ed21
#10529 If you rannpm logout
with a scope, while we did invalidate your auth token, we weren't removing the auth token from your config file. This patch causes the auth token to be removed. (@wyze)
d1d0233
#11003 Update help to only show command names and their shortcuts. Previously some typo corrections were shown, along with various alternate spellings. (@watilde)47928cd
#11003 Remove "verison" typo from the help listing. (@doug-wade)
24ab70a
#11808 Makenpm view
produce valid JSON when requested with--json
. Previouslynpm view
produced some sort of weird hybrid output, with multiple JSON docs. (@doug-wade)
6fb0499
#11726 Previously we patched thenpm update
docs to suggest using--depth Infinity
instead of--depth 9999
, but that was a mistake. We forgot thatnpm outdated
(on whichnpm update
is built) has a special case where it treatsInfinity
as0
. This reverts that patch. (@GriffinSchneider)f0bf684
#11748 Document all of the various aliases for commands in the documentation for those commands. (@watilde)fe04443
#10968 Thenpm-scope
document notes that scopes have been available on the public registry for a while. This adds that you'll neednpm@2
or later to use them. (@doug-wade)3db37a5
#11820 The commandnpm link
should be linking package from local folder to global, andnpm link package-name
should be from global to local. The description in the documentation was reversed and this fixes that. (@rhgb)
be55882
[email protected]
: Fix a race condition and some windows edge cases. (@isaacs)
This week the install summary got better, killing your npm process now also kills the scripts it was running and a rarely used search flag got documented.
Our improvements on the test suite on Windows are beginning to pick up steam, you can follow along by watching the PR.
-
e40d457
#11699 Ensure that flags like--production
passed to install don't result in the summary at the end being incorrectly filtered. That summary is produced by the same code asnpm ls
and therefore responds to flags the same way it does. This is undesirable when it's an install summary, however, as we don't want it to filter anything.This fixes an issue where
npm install --production <module>
would result in npm exiting with an error code. The--production
flag would makenpm ls
filter out<module>
as it wasn't saved to thepackage.json
and thus wasn't a production dependency. The install report is limited to show just the modules installed, so with that filtered out nothing is available. With nothing availablenpm ls
would setnpm
to exit with an error code. (@ixalon) -
99337b4
#11600 Make the report of installed modules really only show those modules that were installed. Previously it selected which modules from your tree to display based onname@version
which worked great when your tree was deduped but would list things it hadn't touched when there were duplicates. (@iarna)
5454347
#10868 When running a lifecycle script, say throughnpm start
, killing npm wouldn't forward that on to the children. It does now. (@daniel-pedersen)
bb14204
[email protected]
(@jdalton)0089059
[email protected]
(@jdalton)6ee1de4
[email protected]
(@jdalton)
This week brings a quality of life improvement for some Windows users, and an important knob to be tuned for folks experiencing network problems.
We've long known that npm
's tendency to try to request all your
dependencies simultaneously upset some network hardware (particular,
consumer grade routers & proxies of all sorts). One of the reasons that we're
planning to write our own npm specific version of request
is to be able to
more easily control this sort of thing.
But fortunately, you don't have to wait for that.
@misterbyrne took a look at our existing
code and realized it could be added painlessly TODAY. The new default
maximum is 50
, instead of Infinity
. If you're having network issues you
can try setting that value down to something lower (if you do, please let us
know... the default is subject to tuning).
910f9ac
f7be667
Add a new config option,maxsockets
and[email protected]
to take advantage of it. (@misterbyrne)
We think it's pretty keen too, we were making it really hard to actually upgrade if you were using it. NO MORE!
d60351c
#11524 Prefer locally installed npm in Git Bash -- previous behavior was to use the global one. This was done previously for other shells, but not for Git Bash. (@destroyerofbuilds)
b63de3c
#11636 Document--save-bundle
option in main install page. (@datyayu)3d26453
#11644 Adddirectories.test
to thepackage.json
documentation. (@lewiscowper)b64d124
#11441 Add a link in documentation to the contribution guidelines. (@watilde)82fc548
#11441 Remove mentions of the long defunct Google group. (@watilde)c6ad091
#11474 Correct invalid JSON in npm-update docs. (@robludwig)4906c90
Expand on the documentation forbundlededDependencies
, explaining what they are and when you might want to use them. (@gnerkus)
93cdc25
[email protected]
: Non-user visible tests & maintainer doc updates. (@jbnicolai)3b2ccef
[email protected]
(@jdalton)30e9eb9
[email protected]
(@jdalton)
A quick fixup release because when I updated glob, I missed the subdep copies of itself that it installed deeper in the tree. =/
This only effected people trying to update to 3.7.4
from npm@2
or npm@1
. Updates from
npm@3
worked fine (as it fixes up the missing subdeps during installation).
63fa704
#11633 When updating the top levelnpm
toglob@7
, the subdeps that still depended onglob@6
got new versions installed but they weren't added to the commit. This adds them back in. (@iarna)
I'm (@iarna) back from vacation in the frozen wastes of Maine! This release sees a couple of bug fixes, some documentation updates, a bunch of dependency updates and improvements to our test suite.
53cdb96
#11362 Makenpm update
stop trying to update linked packages. (@rhendric)8d90d25
#11559 Only list runtime dependencies when doingnpm ls --production
. (@yibn2008)
b78b301
#11416 Logout docs were using a section copy-pasted from the adduser docs. (@wyze)649e28f
#11414 Add colon for consistency. (@wyze)
So for all of you who don't know -- Node.js does, in fact, support long Windows paths. Unfortunately, depending on the tool and the Windows version, a lot of external tooling does not. This means, for example, that some (all?) versions of Windows Explorer can literally never delete npm from their system entirely because of deeply-nested npm dependencies. Which is pretty gnarly.
Incidentally, if you run into that in particularly, you can use rimraf to remove such files 💁.
The latest victim of this issue was the Node.js CI setup for testing on Windows, which uses some tooling or another that croaks on the usual path length limit for that OS: 255 characters.
This isn't ordinarily an issue with npm@3
as it produces mostly flat
trees, but you may be surprised to learn that npm
's own distribution isn't
flat, due to needing to be compatible with [email protected]
, which ships with
[email protected]
!
We've taken another baby step towards alleviating this in this release by
updating a couple of dependencies that were preventing npmlog
from deduping,
and then doing a dedupe on that and gauge
. Hopefully it helps.
f3c32bc
#11528[email protected]
: Update to a more recent version that uses a version of npmlog compatible with npm itself. Also adds: AIX support, newgyp
,--cafile
command line option, and allows configuration of Node.js and io.js mirrors. (@rvagg)
The npm
core team's time recently has been sunk into npm
's many years of
tech debt. Specifically, we've been working on improving the test suite.
This isn't user visible, but in future should mean a more stable, easier to
contribute to npm
. Ordinarily we don't report these kinds of changes in
the change log, but I thought I might share this week as this chunk is
bigger than usual.
07f020a
#11292[email protected]
: Add a package that provides a tool to generate fixtures from folders and, relatedly, a module that an create and tear down filesystem fixtures easily. (@iarna)0837346
#11292 Remove all the relatively cryptic legacy tests and creates new tap tests that check the same functionality. The legacy tests were tests that were originally a shell script that was ported to javascript early innpm
's history. (@iarna) (@zkat)5a701e7
#11292 Test that we don't leak auth info into the environment. (@zkat)502d7d0
#11292 Test that env vars properly passed into scripts. (@zkat)420f267
#11292 Test that npm's distribution binary is complete and can be installed and used. (@iarna)b7e99be
#11292 Test that thepackage.json
files
section and.npmignore
do what they're supposed to. (@zkat)
4611098
[email protected]
: Use[email protected]
. (@isaacs)41b2772
[email protected]
: Raise error ifoptions.cwd
is specified, and not a directory. (@isaacs)c14e74a
[email protected]
: Update to newer lodash versions, for a smaller tree. (@iarna)d629363
[email protected]
(@jdalton)3ea4c80
[email protected]
(@jdalton)8ddcc8d
[email protected]
(@jdalton)2b656a6
[email protected]
(@jdalton)ac171f8
[email protected]
(@jdalton)bcccd90
[email protected]
(@jdalton)8165bca
[email protected]
(@jdalton)
Hey all! We've got a pretty small release this week -- just documentation
updates and a couple of dependencies. This release also includes a particular
dependency upgrade that makes it so we're exclusively using the latest version
of graceful-fs
, which'll make it so things keep working with future Node.js
releases.
A certain internal Node.js API was deprecated and slated for future removal from
Node Core. This API was critical for versions of graceful-fs@<4
, before a
different approach was used to achieve similar ends. By upgrading this library,
and making sure all our dependencies are also updated, we've ensured npm will
continue to work once the API is finally removed. Older versions of npm, on the
other hand, will simply not work on future versions of Node.js.
29536f4
[email protected]
: Final straggler usinggraceful-fs@<4
. (@ForbesLindesay)5f59e74
[email protected]
(@jdalton)987cabe
[email protected]
(@jdalton)5c641f0
[email protected]
(@jdalton)
9ea5658
#11410 Fixed a small spelling error innpm-config.md
. (@pra85)2a11e56
#11403 Removes--depth Infinity
warning from documentation -- this operation should actually be totally safe as ofnpm@3
. (The warning remains fornpm@2
.) (@Aourin)42a4727
#11391 Fixed versions ofshrinkwrap.json
in examples in documentation fornpm shrinkwrap
, which did not quite match up. (@xcatliu)
This week, the CLI team has been busy working on rewriting tests to support getting coverage reports going and running all of our tests on Windows. Meanwhile, we've got a bunch of dependency updates and one or two other things.
Last week we took a patch from @substack to
stop the installer from reordering arrays in an installed module's
package.json
... but somehow I dropped the test when I was rebasing.
21b9271
#10063 Restore test that verifies that we don't re-order arrays in a module'spackage.json
on install. (@substack)
c67521d
#11348 Improve the documentation around which files are ALWAYS included in published packages and which are ALWAYS excluded. (@jscissr)7ef6793
#11348 The release date on the 3.7.0 changelog entry was wrong. I honestly don't know how I keep doing this. =D (@rafek)
8a3c80c
[email protected]
: Fix a bug where close wasn't getting made graceful. (@isaacs)
lodash
saw updates across most of its modules this week with browser
campatibility fixes that don't really impact us.
2df342b
[email protected]
(@jdalton)86aa91d
[email protected]
(@jdalton)0a94bf6
[email protected]
(@jdalton)b4c9582
[email protected]
(@jdalton)efe766c
[email protected]
: Minor code cleanup and the above. (@jdalton)36abb24
[email protected]
: Add support for cloning prototype objects and the above. (@jdalton)
Super quick Monday patch on last week's release.
If you ever wondered why we release things to the npm@next
tag for a week
before promoting them to npm@latest
, this is it!
Hi all! This week brings us some important performance improvements, support for git submodules(!) and a bunch of bug fixes.
gauge
, the module responsible for drawing npm
's progress bars, had an
embarrassing bug in its debounce implementation that resulted in it, on many
systems, actually being slower than if it hadn't been debouncing. This was
due to it destroying and then creating a timer object any time it got an
update while waiting on its minimum update period to elapse. This only was
a measurable slowdown when sending thousands of updates a second, but
unfortunately parts of npm
's logging do exactly that. This has been patched
to eliminate that churn, and our testing shows the progress bar as being
eliminated as a source of slow down.
Meanwhile, are-we-there-yet
is the module that tracks just how complete
our big asynchronous install process is. @STRML
spent some time auditing its source and made a few smaller performance
improvements to it. Most impactful was eliminating a bizarre bit of code
that was both binding to AND closing over the current object. I don't have
any explanation for how that crept in. =D
c680fa9
[email protected]
: Neware-we-there-yet
with performance patches from @STRML. Newgauge
with timer churn performance patch. (@iarna)
We were also using lodash
's cloneDeep
on package.json
data which is
definitely overkill, seeing as package.json
data has all the restrictions
of being json
. The fix for this is just swapping that out for something
that does a pair of JSON.stringify
/JSON.parse
, which is distinctly more
speedy.
Long, long requested– the referenced issue is from 2011– we're finally getting rudimentary git submodule support.
39dea9c
#1876 Add support for git submodules in git remotes. This is a fairly simple approach, which does not leverage the git caching mechanism to cache submodules. It also doesn't provide a means to disable automatic initialization, e.g. via a setting in the.gitmodules
file. (@gagern)
5dec02a
#10347 There is an obscure feature that lets you monkey-patch npm when it starts up. If the module being required with this feature failed, it would previously just makenpm
error out– this reduces that to a warning. (@evanlucas)
9ab8b8d
#10820 Fix a bug withnpm ls
where if you asked for ONLY production dependencies in output it would exclude dependencies that were BOTH production AND development dependencies. (@davidvgalbraith)6803fed
#8982 Fix a bug where, under some circumstances, if you had a path that contained the name of a package being installed somewhere in it,npm
would incorrectly refuse to run lifecycle scripts. (@elvanja)3eae40b
#9253 Fix a bug where, when running lifecycle scripts, if the Node.js binary you rannpm
with wasn't in yourPATH
,npm
wouldn't use it to run your scripts. (@segrey)61daa6a
#11014 Fix a bug where runningrimraf node_modules/<package>
followed bynpm rm --save <package>
would fail.npm
now correctly removes the module from yourpackage.json
even though it doesn't exist on disk. (@davidvgalbraith)a605586
#9679 Fix a bug wherenpm install --save git+https://…
would save ahttps://
url to yourpackage.json
which was a problem becausenpm
wouldn't then know that it was a git repo. (@gagern)bbdc700
#10063 Fix a bug wherenpm
would change the order of array properties in thepackage.json
files of dependencies.npm
adds a bunch of stuff topackage.json
files in yournode_modules
folder for debugging and bookkeeping purposes. As a part of this process it sorts the object to reduce file churn when it does updates. This fixes a bug where the arrays in the object were also getting sorted. This wasn't a problem for properties thatnpm
itself maintains, but is a problem for properties used by other packages. (@substack)
2609a29
#11273 Include an example of viewing package version history in thenpm view
documentation. (@vedatmahir)719ea9c
#11272 Fix typographical issue innpm update
documentation. (@jonathanp)cb9df5a
#11215 Do not callSEE LICENSE IN <filename>
an SPDX expression, as it's not. (@kemitchell)f427934
#11196 Correct thepackage.json
examples in thenpm update
documentation to actually be valid JSON and not just JavaScript object literals. (@s100)
a7b2407
[email protected]
: New features and interface agnostic refactoring. (@tim-kos)220fc77
[email protected]
: A bunch of small bug fixes and module updates. (@simov)9e5c84f
[email protected]
: Updateisexe
and fix bug inpathExt
, in which files without extensions would sometimes be preferred to files with extensions on Windows, even though those without extensions aren't executable.pathExt
is a list of extensions that are considered executable (exe, cmd, bat, com on Windows). (@isaacs)375b9c4
[email protected]
: Minor doc formatting fixes. (@isaacs)ef1971e
[email protected]
: Misc minor code cleanup. No functional changes. (@jdalton)
Hi all! This is a bigger release, in part 'cause we didn't have one last
week. The most important thing you need to know is that when [email protected]
replaces
[email protected]
as next
, [email protected]
WILL NOT be moved on to latest
. This is due to
a packaging error that tickles bugs in some earlier releases and makes upgrades to it
from those versions break the install.
-
ff504d4
#8752 Innpm outdated
, report symlinked packages as having a wanted & latest version oflinked
. (@halhenke) -
f44d8c9
#10775 Add a success message toadduser
/login
. (@ekmartin) -
3109303
#10043 Warn if you try to usenpm run x
if you don't have anode_modules
folder, since whatever you're trying to do probably won't work. (@timkrins) -
9ed2849
e9f1ad8
f10d300
8b593d8
#10717npm version
can now take afrom-git
argument, which instructsnpm
to read the version from git and update yourpackage.json
to what it finds. This is in contrast to its normal use wherenpm
tells git about your new version. (@ekmartin)
The [email protected]
package was missing some dependencies. Specifically, glob
and has-unicode
had major release updates which meant that subdeps that
relied on older major versions couldn't use the npm supplied versions any
more, and so they needed their own copies.
This went undetected because the actions necessary to run the tests (which check for this sort of thing) resolved the missing modules.
Further, it didn't have symptoms when upgrading from most versions of npm.
Unfortunately, some versions had bugs that were tickled by this and resulted
in broken upgrades, most notably, [email protected]
, the version that's been in
Node.js 5.
1d3325c
02611c6
39d5fea
7d0e830
#11129 Update the underlying dependencies to allow use for the new versions ofglob
andhas-unicode
. (@iarna)
-
bb638fa
#11212 When trying to determine if a file was controlled by npm before going to remove it, we check to see if it is inside any of a list of paths that npm considers to be under its control. Not all of those paths always exist (and that's ok!) Previously we were calling it a failure to match if ANY of them didn't exist. We now only do so if NONE of them exist. If some do, then we do our usual checks on them.This showed up as an error where you would see something like:
npm warn gentlyRm not removing /path/to/thing as it wasn't installed by /path/to/other/thing
But it totally was installed by it. (@iarna)
Historically, if you used a pre-release version of Node.js, you would get
dozens and dozens of warnings when EVERY engine check failed across all of
your modules, because >= 0.10.0
doesn't match prereleases.
You might find this stream of redundent warnings undesirable. I do.
We've moved this into a SINGLE warning you'll get about using a pre-release version of Node.js and now suppress those other warnings.
6952f79
#11212 Engine check warnings are now issued along with any other warnings about your tree, instead of emitting in the middle of your install (and then disappearing behind the giant tree of stuff installed). (@iarna)ee2ebe9
#11212 Suppress engine verification warnings about pre-release versions of Node.js. (@iarna)135b7e0
#11212 Explicitly warn, in only one place, if you are using a pre-release version of Node.js. (@iarna)
ea331c8
#10938 When removing a package, sometimes thenode_modules/.bin
wouldn't be cleaned up entirely. This would result in package folders that contained only anode_modules/.bin
directory. In turn, this would result innpm ls
and other tools complaining about these broken directories. To fix this, theunbuild
step now explicitly deletes thenode_modules/.bin
folder as its final step. (@chrisirhc)00720db
#11158 On Windows, thenode-gyp
wrapper would fail if your path tonode-gyp
contained spaces. This fixes that problem by quoting use of that path. (@orangemocha)69ac933
#11142 Fix a race condition when making directories in the cache, which could lead toENOENT
failures. (@Jimbly)e982858
#9696 When replacing thepackage.json
in the cache you sometimes seeEPERM
errors on Windows that you wouldn't on Unix-like operating systems. This ignores those errors and allows Windows to continue. Longer term, we'll be adding something to retry these errors, but ultimately fail if there really is an ongoing permissions issue. (@orangemocha)
3666081
#11188 Add brief description to publish documentation of what's included in published tarballs. (@beaugunderson)b463e34
#11150 In npm update docs, advise use of--depth Infinity
instead of--depth 9999
. (@halhenke)382e71a
#11128 In thepackage.json
docs, make the reference to the "Local Paths" section a link to it as well. (@orangejulius)5277e7f
#11090 Fix the 3.5.4 release date in CHANGELOG.md. (@ashleygwilliams)e6d238a
#11130 Eliminate the "using npm programmatically" section from the README. The documentation for this was removed a while ago and is unsupported. (@ljharb)
b0dde5c
[email protected]
: Update tests for most recent version ofini
. (@dominictarr)c62f414
[email protected]
: Eliminated use ofutil._extend
. (@isaacs)98a6779
[email protected]
: Bug fixes, including the non-linear performance that was biting npm a while back. (@jdalton)0e8c4ce
[email protected]
(@jdalton)1fd19f5
[email protected]
(@jdalton)b7486c5
[email protected]
(@jdalton)54bb591
[email protected]
(@jdalton)26f7a7a
[email protected]
(@jdalton)ed38bd3
[email protected]
(@jdalton)
I hope you all had fantastic winter holidays, if it's winter where you are and if there are holidays‼ We went a few weeks without releases because staff was taking time away from work here and there. A new year has come and we're back now, and refreshed and ready to dig in!
This week brings us a bunch of documentation improvements and some module updates. The core team's focus continues to be on improving tests, particularly with Windows, so there's not too much to call out here.
6b0031e
#11044 Correct documentation regarding the defaults for thecolor
config option. (@scottaddie)c6ce69e
#10990 Drop mentions in documentation ofprocess.installPrefix
, as it hasn't been a thing since Node.js 0.6 and we don't support that. (@jeffmcmahan)dee92d1
#11037 Clarify the documentation on the max length of thename
property inpackage.json
files. (@scottaddie)4b9d7bb
#10787 Make the formatting in the documentation fornpm dist-tag
more consistent with other docs. (@cvrebert)7f77a80
#10787 Add documentation to thenpm dist-tag
docs that explains in greater detail howlatest
is different than other tags. Further, improve the documentation with better examples. Add a discussion of common practice for using dist tags to manage alpha's and beta's. (@cvrebert)6db58dd
2ee6371
#10788 #10789 Improve documentation cross referencing. (@cvrebert)7ba629a
#10790 Document more clearly thatnpm install foo
meansnpm install foo@latest
. (@cvrebert)
fc2e8d5
[email protected]
: Remove deprecated features and fix a bunch of bugs. (@isaacs)5b820c4
[email protected]
: Change the default on Windows to be false, as international Windows installs often install to non-unicode codepages and there's no way to detect this short of a system call or a call to a command line program. (@iarna)238fe84
[email protected]
: Fixed bugs with uid/gid checks and with quoted Windows PATH parts. (@isaacs)5e510e1
[email protected]
: Add ability to disable glob support / pass in options. (@isaacs)7558215
[email protected]
: Minor performance improvements. (@calvinmetcalf)64e8499
[email protected]
: Rewrite to use modern streams even on 0.8 plus a bunch of tests. (@iarna)74d92a0
[email protected]
: Some bug fixes around large inputs. (@timoxley)
This doesn't impact you as a user of npm, and ordinarily that means we wouldn't call it out here, but if you've ever wanted to contribute, having that green travis badge makes it a lot easier to do so with confidence!
-
b14cdbb
#10872 Rewrite tests using nock to use other alternatives. (@zkat) -
59ed01a
#10872 Work around Node.js 0.8 http back-pressure bug.0.8 http streams have a bug, where if they're paused with data in their buffers when the socket closes, they call
end
before emptying those buffers, which results in the entire pipeline ending and thus the point that applied backpressure never being able to trigger aresume
.We work around this by piping into a pass through stream that has unlimited buffering. The pass through stream is from readable-stream and is thus a current streams3 implementation that is free of these bugs even on 0.8. (@iarna)
Did you know that Bob Ross reached the rank of master sergeant in the US Air Force before becoming perhaps the most soothing painter of all time?
71c9590
#10505npm ls --json --depth=0
now respects the depth parameter, when it is zero and when it is not zero. (@MarkReeder)954fa67
#9099 I had always thought you could runnpm version
from subdirectories in your project, which is great, because now you can. I guess I was just ahead of my time. (@ekmartin)
b88c37c
#10546 Goodbye, FAQ! You were cheeky and fun until you weren't! Don't worry: npm still loves everyone, especially you! (@ashleygwilliams)2d3afe9
#10570 Update documentation URLs to be HTTPS everywhere sensible. No HTTP shall be spared! (@rsp)6abd0e0
#10650 Correctly note that there are two lifecycle scripts run by an install phase in an example, instead of three. (@eymengunay)a5e8df5
#10687npm outdated
's output can be a little puzzling sometimes. I've attempted to make it clearer, with some examples, of what's going on with "wanted" and "latest" in more cases. (@othiym23)8f52833
#10700 Hey, do you remember whensearch.npmjs.org
was a thing? I think I do? The last time I used it was in like 2012, and it's gone now, so remove it from the docs. (@gagern)b6a53b8
npm/docs#477 Continue to airbrush the CLI API docs out of history. (@verpixelt)b835b72
[email protected]
: Include BNF for SemVer expression grammar (which is also now included innpm help semver
). (@isaacs)
95e99fa
[email protected]
(@simov)b49199a
isaacs/rimraf#89[email protected]
(@zerok)6632418
npm/nopt#51[email protected]
(@wbecker)f0a3b3e
isaacs/once#7[email protected]
(@floatdrop)
Weeeelcome to another npm release! The short version is that we fixed
some ENOENT
and some modules that resulted in modules going missing. We
also eliminated the use of MD5 in our code base to help folks using
Node.js in FIPS mode. And we fixed a bad URL in our license file.
The license incorrectly identified the registry URL as
registry.npmjs.com
and this has been corrected to registry.npmjs.org
.
cb6d81b
#10685 Fix npm public registry URL in notices. (@kemitchell)
The headliner this week was uncovered by the fixes to bundled dependency
handling over the past few releases. What had been a frustratingly
intermittent and hard to reproduce bug became something that happened
every time in Travis. This fixes another whole bunch of errors where you
would, while running an install have it crash with an ENOENT
on
rename
, or the install would finish but some modules would be
mysteriously missing and you'd have to install a second time.
What's going on was a bit involved, so bear with me:
npm@3
generates a list of actions to take against the tree on disk.
With the exception of lifecycle scripts, it expects these all to be able
to act independently without interfering with each other.
This means, for instance, that one should be able to upgrade b
in
a→b→c
without having npm reinstall c
.
That works fine by the way.
But it also means that the move action should be able to move b
in
a→b→[email protected]
to a→d→b→[email protected]
without moving or removing [email protected]
and
while leaving [email protected]
in place if it was already installed.
That is, the move
action moves an individual node, replacing itself
with an empty spot if it had children. This is not, as it might first
appear, something where you move an entire branch to another location on
the tree.
When moving b
we already took care to leave [email protected]
in place so that
other moves (or removes) could handle it, but we were stomping on the
destination and so [email protected]
was being removed.
There was also a bug with remove
where it was pruning the entire tree
at the remove point, prior to running moves and adds.
This was fine most of the time, but if we were moving one of the deps out from inside it, kaboom.
19c626d
#10655 Get rid of the remove commit phase– we could have it prune just the module being removed, but that isn't gaining us anything. (@iarna)
After all that, we shouldn't be upgrading the add
of a bundled package
to a move
. Moves save us from having to extract the package, but with a
bundled dependency it's included in another package already so that
doesn't gain us anything.
While I was in there, I also took some time to improve diagnostics to make this sort of thing easier to track down in the future:
a04ec04
[#10655](https://github.com/npm/ npm/pull/10655) Wrap rename so errors have stack traces. (@iarna)8ea142f
#10655 Add silly logging so function is debuggable (@iarna)
We updated modules that had been using MD5 for non-security purposes. While this is perfectly safe, if you compile Node in FIPS-compliance mode it will explode if you try to use MD5. We've replaced MD5 with Murmur, which conveys our intent better and is faster to boot.
f068b26
#10629[email protected]
(@iarna)dba1b24
#10629[email protected]
(@othiym23)8347a30
#10629[email protected]
(@othiym23)
9e2a2bb
nodejs/node-gyp#831[email protected]
: Improved *BSD support. (@bnoordhuis)
npm-the-CLI is licensed under the terms of the Artistic License 2.0, which is a liberal open-source license that allows you to take this code and do pretty much whatever you like with it (that is, of course, not legal language, and if you're doing anything with npm that leaves you in doubt about your legal rights, please seek the review of qualified counsel, which is to say, not members of the CLI team, none of whom have passed the bar, to my knowledge). At the same time the primary registry the CLI uses when looking up and downloading packages is a commercial service run by npm, Inc., and it has its own Terms of Use.
Aside from clarifying the terms of use (and trying to make sure they're more
widely known), the only recent changes to npm's licenses have been making the
split between the CLI and registry clearer. You are still free to do whatever
you like with the CLI's source, and you are free to view, download, and publish
packages to and from registry.npmjs.org
, but now the existing terms under
which you can do so are more clearly documented. Aside from the two commits
below, see also the release notes for
[email protected]
, which is where
the split between the CLI's code and the terms of use for the registry was
first made more clear.
35a5dd5
#10532 Clarify thatregistry.npmjs.org
is the default, but that you're free to use the npm CLI with whatever registry you wish. (@kemitchell)fa6b013
#10532 Having semi-duplicate release information inREADME.md
was confusing and potentially inaccurate, so remove it. (@kemitchell)
It turns out that a fair number of us use bash on Windows (through MINGW or bundled with Git, plz – Cygwin is still a bridge too far, for both npm and Node.js). @jakub-g did us all a favor and relaxed the check for npm completion to support MINGW bash. Thanks, Jakub!
[email protected]
fixed up a serious issue with how [email protected]
(and potentially
[email protected]
and [email protected]
) handled the case in which dependencies bundled
into a package tarball are handled improperly when one or more of their own
dependencies are older than what's latest on the registry. Unfortunately, in
fixing that (quite severe) regression (see [email protected]
's release notes' for
details), we introduced a new
(small, and fortunately cosmetic) issue where npm superfluously warns you about
bundled dependencies being stale. We have now fixed that, and hope that we
haven't introduced any other regressions in the process. :D
1d14d88
[email protected]
: Support AIX, usewhich
to find Python, updated to a newer version ofgyp
, and more! (@bnoordhuis)
These are great! Keep them coming! Sorry for letting them pile up so deep, everybody. Also, a belated Thanksgiving to our Canadian friends, and a happy Thanksgiving to all our friends in the USA.
4659f1c
#10244 Innpm@3
,npm dedupe
doesn't take any arguments, so update documentation to reflect that. (@bengotow)625a7ee
#10250 Correct order oforg:team
innpm team
documentation. (@louislarry)bea7f87
#10371 Remove broken / duplicate link to tag. (@WickyNilliams)0a25e29
#10419 Remove references to nonexistentnpm-rm(1)
documentation. (@KenanY)19b94e1
#10474 Clarify that install finds dependencies inpackage.json
. (@sleekweasel)b25efc8
#9948 Encourage users to file an issue, rather than emailing authors. (@trodrigues)24f4ced
#10497 Clarify what a package is slightly. (@aredridel)e8168d4
#10539 Remove an extra, spuriously capitalized letter. (@alexlukin-softgrad)
This week heralds the general release of the primary npm registry's new support for private packages for organizations. For many potential users, it's the missing piece needed to make it easy for you to move your organization's private work onto npm. And now it's here! The functionality to support it has been in place in the CLI for a while now, thanks to @zkat's hard work.
During our final testing before the release, our ace support team member @snopeks noticed that there had been some drift between the CLI team's implementation and what npm was actually preparing to ship. In the interests of everyone having a smooth experience with this extremely useful new feature, we quickly made a few changes to square up the CLI and the web site experiences.
d7fb92d
#9327npm access
no longer has problems when run in a directory that doesn't contain apackage.json
. (@othiym23)17df3b5
npm/npm-registry-client#126[email protected]
: Allow the CLI to grant, revoke, and list permissions on unscoped (public) packages on the primary registry. (@othiym23)
-
180263b
#10465 When a non-optional dep fails, we check to see if it's only required by ONLY optional dependencies. If it is, we make it fail all the deps in that chain (and roll them back). If it isn't then we give an error.We do this by walking up through all of our ancestors until we either hit an optional dependency or the top of the tree. If we hit the top, we know to give the error.
If you installed a module by hand but didn't
--save
it, your module won't have the top of the tree as an anscestor and so this code was failing to abort the install with an errorThis updates the logic so that hitting the top OR a module that was requested by the user will trigger the error message. (@iarna)
-
b726a0e
#9204 Ideally we would like warnings about your install to come AFTER the output from your compile steps or the giant tree of installed modules.To that end, we've moved warnings about failed optional deps to the show after your install completes. (@iarna)
-
aed71fb
#10482 We've been in our bundled modules code a lot lately, and our last go at this introduced a new bug, where if you had a modulea
that bundled a moduleb
, which in turn requiredc
, and the version ofc
that got bundled wasn't compatible withb
'spackage.json
, we would then install a compatible version ofc
, but also eraseb
at the same time.This fixes that. It also reworks our bundled module support to be much closer to being in line with how we handle non-bundled modules and we're hopeful this will reduce any future errors around them. The new structure is hopefully much easier to reason about anyway. (@iarna)
We don't often have much to say about the changes we make to our internal testing and tooling, but I'm going to take this opportunity to reiterate that npm tries hard to maintain compatibility with a wide variety of Node versions. As this change shows, we want to ensure that npm works the same across:
- Node.js 0.8
- Node.js 0.10
- Node.js 0.12
- the latest io.js release
- Node.js 4 LTS
- Node.js 5
Contributors who send us pull requests often notice that it's very rare that our tests pass across all of those versions (ironically, almost entirely due to the packages we use for testing instead of any issues within npm itself). We're currently beginning an effort, lasting the rest of 2015, to clean up our test suite, and not only get it passing on all of the above versions of Node.js, but working solidly on Windows as well. This is a compounding form of technical debt that we're finally paying down, and our hope is that cleaning up the tests will produce a more robust CLI that's a lot easier to write patches for.
Hey, you found the feature we added!
-
231c58a
#10337 Add two new flags, first--legacy-bundling
which installs your dependencies such that if you bundle those dependencies, npm versions prior to1.4
can still install them. This eliminates all automatic deduping.Second,
--global-style
which will install modules in yournode_modules
folder with the same layout as global modules. Only your direct dependencies will show innode_modules
and everything they depend on will be flattened in theirnode_modules
folders. This obviously will elminate some deduping. (@iarna)
When you run npm install foo
, you probably expect that you'll get the
latest
version of foo
, whatever that is. And good news! That's what
this change makes it do.
We think this is what everyone wants, but if this causes problems for
you, we want to know! If it proves problematic for people we will consider
reverting it (preferrably before this becomes npm@latest
).
Previously, when you ran npm install foo
we would act as if you typed
npm install foo@*
. Now, like any range-type specifier, in addition to
matching the range, it would also have to be <=
the value of the
latest
dist-tag. Further, it would exclude prerelease versions from the
list of versions considered for a match.
This worked as expected most of the time, unless your latest
was a
prerelease version, in which case that version wouldn't be used, to
everyone's surprise. Worse, if all your versions were prerelease versions
it would just refuse to install anything. (We fixed that in
[email protected]
with
e4a38080
.)
1e834c2
#10189[email protected]
Change the default version from*
tolatest
. (@zkat)
bec4a84
#10338 Failed installs could result in more rollback (removal of just installed packages) than we intended. This bug was first introduced by83975520
. (@iarna)06c732f
#10338 Updating a module could result in the module stealing some of its dependencies from the top level, potentially breaking other modules or resulting in many redundent installations. This bug was first introduced by971fd47a
. (@iarna)5653366
#9980 npm, when removing a module, would refuse to remove the symlinked binaries if the module itself was symlinked as well. npm goes to some effort to ensure that it doesn't remove things that aren't is, and this code was being too conservative. This code has been rewritten to be easier to follow and to be unit-testable. (@iarna)
80acf20
#10326 Update npm's licensing to more completely cover all of the various things that are npm. (@kemitchell)
fc12da9
#10232[email protected]
Downgrade nock to a version that doesn't depend on streams2 in core so that more of our tests can pass in 0.8. (@iarna)
This was a group effort, with @isaacs dropping the implementation in back in August. Then, a few days ago, @ashleygwilliams wrote up docs and just today @othiym23 wrote a test.
It's a handy shortcut to update a dependency and then make sure tests still pass.
This new command:
npm install-test x
is the equivalent of running:
npm install x && npm test
1ac3e08
bcb04f6
b6c17dd
#9443 Addnpm install-test
command, aliasnpm it
. (@isaacs, @ashleygwilliams, @othiym23)
31c0080
#8640 npm/normalize-package-data#69[email protected]
: Fix a bug where if you didn't specify the name of a scoped module's binary, it would install it such that it was impossible to call it. (@iarna)02b37bc
npm/fstream-npm#14[email protected]
: Only filterconfig.gypi
when it's in the build directory. (@mscdex)accb9d2
npm/fstream-npm#15[email protected]
: Stop including directories that happened to have names matching whitelisted npm files in npm module tarballs. The most common cause was that if you had a README directory then everything in it would be included if wanted it or not. (@taion)
7cf6366
#10036 Fix typo / over-abbreviation. (@ifdattic)d0ad8f4
#10176 Fix broken link, scopes => scope. (@ashleygwilliams)d623783
#9460 Specifying the default command run by "npm start" and the fact that you can pass it arguments. (@JuanCaicedo)
0a4c29e
npm/npmlog#19[email protected]
: Make it possible to emit log messages witherror
as the prefix. (@bengl)9463ce9
[email protected]
: Minor cleanups. (@KenanY)
Hi, a little hot-fix release for a bug introduced in 3.3.11. The ENOENT fix
last week (f0e2088
) broke
upgrades of modules that have bundled dependencies (like npm
, augh!)
aedf7cf
#10192 If a bundled module is going to be replacing a module that's currently on disk (for instance, when you upgrade a module that includes bundled dependencies) we want to select the version from the bundle in preference over the one that was there previously. (@iarna)
This is a dependency update week, so that means no PRs from our lovely users. Look for those next week. As it happens, the dependencies updated were just devdeps, so nothing for you all to worry about.
But the bug fixes, oh geez, I tracked down some really long standing stuff
this week!! The headliner is those intermittent ENOENT
errors that no one
could reproduce consistently? I think they're nailed! But also pretty
important, the bug where hapi
would install w/ a dep missing? Squashed!
f0e2088
#10026 Eliminate some, if not many, of theENOENT
errorsnpm@3
has seen over the past few months. This was happening when npm would, in its own mind, correct a bundled dependency, due to apackage.json
specifying an incompatible version. Then, when npm extracted the bundled version, what was on disk didn't match its mind and… well, when it tried to act on what was in its mind, we got anENOENT
because it didn't actually exist on disk. (@iarna)
-
712fd9c
#10153 Imagine that you have a module, let's call itfun-time
, and it depends on two dependencies,need-fun@1
andneed-time
. Further,need-time
requiresneed-fun@2
. So after install the logical tree will look like this:fun-time ├── need-fun@1 └── need-time └── need-fun@2
Now, the
fun-time
author also distributes a shrinkwrap, but it only includes theneed-fun@1
in it.Resolving dependencies would look something like this:
- Require
need-fun@1
: Use version from shrinkwrap (ignoring version) - Require
need-time
: User version in package.json - Require
need-fun@2
: Use version from shrinkwrap, which oh hey, is already installed at the top level, so no further action is needed.
Which results in this tree:
fun-time ├── need-fun@1 └── need-time
We're ignoring the version check on things specified in the shrinkwrap so that you can override the version that will be installed. This is because you may want to use a different version than is specified by your dependencies' dependencies'
package.json
files.To fix this, we now only allow overrides of a dependency version when that dependency is a child (in the tree) of the thing that requires it. This means that when we're looking for
need-fun@2
we'll seeneed-fun@1
and reject it because, although it's from a shrinkwrap, it's parent isfun-time
and the package doing the requiring isneed-time
.(@iarna)
- Require
3de1463
#9187 If you were using a module with thebin
field in yourpackage.json
set to a string on a non-npmjs registry then npm would crash, due to the our expectation that thebin
field would be an object. We now pass allpackage.json
data through a routine that normalizes the format, including thebin
field. (This is the same routine that yourpackage.json
is passed through when read off of disk or sent to the registry for publication.) Doing this also ensures that older modules on npm's own registry will be treated exactly the same as new ones. (In the past we weren't always super careful about scrubbingpackage.json
data on publish. And even when we were, those rules have subtly changed over time.) (@iarna)
Hey you all! Welcome to a busy bug fix and PR week. We've got changes
to how npm install
replaces dependencies during updates, improvements
to shrinkwrap behavior, and all sorts of doc updates.
In other news, npm@3
landed in node master in preparation for node@5
with 41923c0
.
971fd47
#9929 Make the tree more consistent by doing updates in place. This means that trees after a dependency version update will more often look the same as after a fresh install. (@iarna)
eb28a8c
#9647 If a shrinkwrap already has dev deps, don't throw them away when someone later runsnpm install --save
. (@iarna)
291162c
#10021 Improve wording in the FAQ to be more empathetic and less jokey. (@TaMe3971)9a28c54
#10020 Document the command to see the list of config defaults in the section on config defaults. (@lady3bean)8770b0a
#7600 Add shortcuts to all command documentation. (@RichardLitt)e9b7d0d
#9950 On errors that can be caused by outdated node & npm, suggest updating as a part of the error message. (@ForbesLindesay)
This week sees a few small changes ready to land:
25a234b
#9668 Installnpm@3
's bundled dependencies withnpm@2
, so that the ancient npm that ships with node 0.8 can installnpm@3
directly. (@othiym23)
a332f61
#9927 Update error messages where we report a list of versions that you could have installed to show this as a comma separated list instead of as JSON. (@iarna)
4cd74b0
[email protected]
(@pgte)9360976
[email protected]
(@isaacs)1ead0a4
[email protected]
(@isaacs)759f88a
[email protected]
(@iarna)
This is a small update release, we're reverting
22a3af0
from last week's
release, as it is resulting in crashes. We'll revisit this PR during this
week.
So, as Kat mentioned in last week's 2.x release, we're now swapping weeks between accepting PRs and doing dependency updates, in an effort to keep release management work from taking over our lives. This week is a PR week, so we've got a bunch of goodies for you.
Relatedly, this week means 3.3.6 is now latest
and it is WAY faster than
previous 3.x releases. Give it or this a look!
2289234
#9643 #9664npm@3
was triggeringnpm@2
's build mechanics when it was linking bin files into the tree. This was originally intended to trigger rebuilds of bundled modules, butnpm@3
's flat module structure confused it. This caused two seemingly unrelated issues. First, failing optional dependencies could under some circumstances (if they were built during this phase) trigger a full build failure. And second, rebuilds were being triggered of already installed modules, again, in some circumstances. Both of these are fixed by disabling thenpm@2
mechanics and adding a special rebuild phase for the initial installation of bundled modules. (@iarna)
b78fec9
#9766 Refactor all attempts to read the module name or package name to go via a single function, with appropriate guards unusual circumstances where they aren't where we expect them. This ultimately will ensure we don't see any more recurrences of thelocaleCompare
error and related crashers. (@iarna)
22a3af0
#9553 Factor the lifecycle code to manage paths out into its own module and use that. (@kentcdodds)6a29fe3
#9677 Start testing our stuff in node 4 on travis (@fscherwi)508c6a4
#9669 MakerecalculateMetadata
more resilient to unexpectedly bogus dependency specifiers. (@tmct)3c44763
#9643 Updateinstall --only
to ignore theNODE_ENV
var and just use the only value, if specified. (@watilde)87336c3
#9879npm@3
's shrinkwrap was refusing to shrinkwrap if an optional dependency was missing– patch it to allow this. (@mantoni)
82659fd
#9208 Correct the npm style guide around quote usage (@aaroncrows)a69c83a
#9645 Fix spelling error in README (@dkoleary88)f2cf054
#9714 Fix typos in our documentation (@reggi)7224bef
#9759 Fix typo in npm-team docs (@zkat)7e6e007
#9820 Correct documentation as tobinding.gyp
(@KenanY)
I have the most exciting news for you this week. YOU HAVE NO IDEA. Well, ok, maybe you do if you follow my twitter.
Performance just got 5 bazillion times better (under some circumstances,
ymmv, etc). So– my test scenario is our very own website. In npm@2
, on my
macbook running npm ls
takes about 5 seconds. Personally it's more than
I'd like, but it's entire workable. In npm@3
it has been taking 50 seconds,
which is appalling. But after doing some work on Monday isolating the performance
issues I've been able to reduce npm@3
's run time back down to 5 seconds.
Other scenarios were even worse, there was one that until now in npm@3
that
took almost 6 minutes, and has been reduced to 14 seconds.
7bc0d4c
cf42217
#8826 Stop using deepclone on super big datastructures. Avoid cloning all-together even when that means mutating things, when possible. Otherwise use a custom written tree-copying function that understands the underlying datastructure well enough to only copy what we absolutely need to. (@iarna)
In other news, look for us this Friday and Saturday at the amazing Open Source and Feelings conference, where something like a third of the company will be attending.
cc5e6a0
[email protected]
(@nlf)912a516
[email protected]
(@arb)63944e9
[email protected]
(@petkaantonov)ef16003
[email protected]
&[email protected]
(@dougwilson)2b8c0dd
[email protected]
(@simov)8139124
[email protected]
(@juliangruber)
Some of you all may not be aware, but npm is ALSO a company. I tell you this 'cause npm-the-company had an all-staff get together this week, flying in our remote folks from around the world. That was great, but it also basically eliminated normal work on Monday and Tuesday.
Still, we've got a couple of really important bug fixes this week. Plus a lil bit from the now LTS 2.x branch.
If you previously updated to npm 3 and you try to update again, you may get
an error messaging telling you that npm won't install npm into itself. Until you
are at 3.3.5 or greater, you can get around this with npm install -f -g npm
.
bef06f5
#9741 Uh... so... er... it seems that since[email protected]
on Windows with a default configuration, it's been impossible to update npm. Well, that's not actually true, there's a work around (see above), but it shouldn't be complaining in the first place. (@iarna)
-
330b496
#9667 We were keeping track of metadata about your project while packing the tree in a way that resulted in this data being written to packed tar files headers. When this metadata included cycles, it resulted in the the tar file entering an infinite recursive loop and eventually crashing with a stack overflow.I've patched this by keeping track of your metadata by closing over the variables in question instead, and I've further restricted gathering and tracking the metadata to times when it's actually needed. (Which is only if you need bundled modules.) (@iarna)
829921f
#9741 Packages with invalid names or versions were crashing the installer. These are now captured and warned as was originally intended. (@iarna)
This is a relatively quiet release, bringing a few bug fixes and some module updates, plus via the 2.14.5 release some forward compatibility fixes with versions of Node that aren't yet released.
But, EXCITING NEWS FRIENDS, this week marks the exit of npm@3
from beta. This means that the week of this release,
v3.3.3 will
become latest
and this version (v3.3.4) will become next
!!
What I call "cruft", by which I mean, files sitting around in
your node_modules
folder, will no longer produce warnings in
npm ls
nor during npm install
. This brings npm@3
's behavior
in line with npm@2
.
ebb92ca
[email protected]
(@tim-kos)55f1285
[email protected]
(@zkat)6d4ebff
[email protected]
(@ForbesLindesay)09a9c7a
[email protected]
(@isaacs)745000f
[email protected]
(@rvagg)
578ca25
[email protected]
(@simov)1d8996e
[email protected]
(@rlidwka)6da1ba4
[email protected]
(@nlf)
This short week brought us brings us a few small bug fixes, a doc change and a whole lotta dependency updates.
Plus, as usual, this includes a forward port of everything in
[email protected]
.
THIS IS BETA SOFTWARE. npm@3
will remain in beta until
we're confident that it's stable and have assessed the effect of
the breaking changes on the community. During that time we will
still be doing npm@2
releases, with npm@2
tagged as latest
and next
. We'll also be publishing new releases of npm@3
as [email protected]
and [email protected]
alongside those
versions until we're ready to switch everyone over to npm@3
.
We need your help to find and fix its remaining bugs. It's a
significant rewrite, so we are sure there still significant
bugs remaining. So do us a solid and deploy it in non-critical
CI environments and for day-to-day use, but maybe don't use it
for production maintenance or frontline continuous deployment
just yet.
So waaaay back at the start of August, I fixed a bug with
#9198. That fix made it
so that if you had two modules installed that both installed the
same binary (eg gulp
& gulp-cli
), that removing one wouldn't
remove the binary if it was owned by the other.
It did this by doing some hocus-pocus that, turns out, was Unix-specific, so on Windows it just threw up its hands and stopped removing installed binaries at all. Not great.
So today we're fixing that– it let us maintain the same safety that we added in #9198, but ALSO works with Windows.
The documentation of the internal APIs of npm is going away,
because it would lead people into thinking they should integrate
with npm by using it. Please don't do that! In the future, we'd
like to give you a suite of stand alone modules that provide
better, more stand alone APIs for your applications to build on.
But for now, call the npm binary with process.exec
or
process.spawn
instead.
We never meant to have this be a restriction in the first place and it was only just discovered with the recent node 4.0.0 release candidate.
We're updating all of npm's deps to use the most recent
graceful-fs
. This turns out to be important for future not yet
released versions of node, because older versions monkey-patch
fs
in ways that will break in the future. Plus it ALSO makes
use of process.binding
which is an internal API that npm
definitely shouldn't have been using. We're not done yet, but
this is the bulk of them.
e7bc98e
[email protected]
(@iarna)7417600
[email protected]
(@zkat)e4e9d40
[email protected]
(@zkat)481611d
[email protected]
(@zkat)0dabbda
[email protected]
(@zkat)c075a91
[email protected]
(@zkat)2e4341a
[email protected]
(@zkat)18ad16e
[email protected]
(@zkat)
9d6666b
[email protected]
(@rvagg)349c4df
[email protected]
(@tim-kos)f507551
[email protected]
(@isaacs)e5b6743
[email protected]
(@zkat)
316382d
[email protected]
&[email protected]
64b741e
[email protected]
fff62ac
[email protected]
9d6488c
[email protected]
1912012
[email protected]
4d09402
[email protected]
This is a tiny little maintenance release, both to update dependencies and to
keep npm@3
up to date with changes made to npm@2
.
@othiym23 is putting out this release (again) as
his esteemed colleague @iarna finishes relocating
herself, her family, and her sizable anime collection all the way across North
America. It contains all the goodies in
[email protected]
and one other
dependency update.
THIS IS BETA SOFTWARE. npm@3
will remain in beta until we're
confident that it's stable and have assessed the effect of the breaking
changes on the community. During that time we will still be doing npm@2
releases, with npm@2
tagged as latest
and next
. We'll also be
publishing new releases of npm@3
as [email protected]
and [email protected]
alongside those versions until we're ready to switch everyone over to
npm@3
. We need your help to find and fix its remaining bugs. It's a
significant rewrite, so we are sure there still significant bugs
remaining. So do us a solid and deploy it in non-critical CI environments
and for day-to-day use, but maybe don't use it for production maintenance or
frontline continuous deployment just yet.
That said, it's getting there! It will be leaving beta very soon!
bb5de34
[email protected]
: Upgrade to a new, modernized version ofjson-pointer
. (@mafintosh)
Hi all, this npm@3
update brings you another round of bug fixes. The
headliner here is that npm update
works again. We're running down the
clock on blocker 3.x issues! Shortly after that hits zero we'll be
promoting 3.x to latest!!
And of course, we have changes that were brought forward from 2.x. Check out the release notes for 2.14.1 and 2.14.2.
THIS IS BETA SOFTWARE. npm@3
will remain in beta until we're
confident that it's stable and have assessed the effect of the breaking
changes on the community. During that time we will still be doing npm@2
releases, with npm@2
tagged as latest
and next
. We'll also be
publishing new releases of npm@3
as [email protected]
and [email protected]
alongside those versions until we're ready to switch everyone over to
npm@3
. We need your help to find and fix its remaining bugs. It's a
significant rewrite, so we are sure there still significant bugs
remaining. So do us a solid and deploy it in non-critical CI environments
and for day-to-day use, but maybe don't use it for production maintenance or
frontline continuous deployment just yet.
f130a00
#9095npm update
once again works! Previously, after selecting packages to update, it would then pick the wrong location to run the install from. (@iarna)
d088b7d
#9227 Add some additional logging at the verbose and silly levels when running lifecycle scripts. Hopefully this will make debugging issues with them a bit easier! (@saper)
-
f4a5784
#9308 Make fetching metadata for local modules faster! This ALSO means that doing things like runningnpm repo
won't build your module and maybe runprepublish
. (@iarna) -
4468c92
#9205 Fix a bug where local modules would sometimes not resolve relative links using the correct base path. (@iarna) -
d395a6b
#8995 Certain combinations of packages could result in different install orders for their initial installation than for reinstalls run on the same folder. (@iarna) -
d119ea6
#9113 Make extraneous packages always up innpm ls
. Previously, if an extraneous package had a dependency that depended back on the original package this would result in the package not showing up inls
. (@iarna) -
02420dc
#9113 Stop warning about missing top level package.json files. Errors in said files will still be reported. (@iarna)
1ed1364
[email protected]
(@isaacs) Added EPERM to delay/retry loope7b8315
[email protected]
Smaller distribution package, better metadata (@isaacs)
b273bcc
[email protected]
df6e225
[email protected]
785f2ad
[email protected]
88170dd
[email protected]
af5357b
[email protected]
337f96a
[email protected]
3dfd74d
[email protected]
This is a pretty EXCITING week. But I may be a little excitable– or possibly sleep deprived, it's sometimes hard to tell them apart. =D So Kat really went the extra mile this week and got the client side support for teams and orgs out in this week's 2.x release. You can't use that just yet, 'cause we have to turn on some server side stuff too, but this way it'll be there for you all the moment we do! Check out the details over in the 2.14.0 release notes!
But we over here in 3.x ALSO got a new feature this week, check out the new
--only
and --also
flags for better control over when dev and production
dependencies are used by various npm commands.
That, and some important bug fixes round out this week. Enjoy everyone!
THIS IS BETA SOFTWARE. EXCITING NEW BETA WARNING!!! Ok, I fibbed,
EXACTLY THE SAME BETA WARNINGS: npm@3
will remain in beta until we're
confident that it's stable and have assessed the effect of the breaking
changes on the community. During that time we will still be doing npm@2
releases, with npm@2
tagged as latest
and next
. We'll also be
publishing new releases of npm@3
as [email protected]
and [email protected]
alongside those versions until we're ready to switch everyone over to
npm@3
. We need your help to find and fix its remaining bugs. It's a
significant rewrite, so we are sure there still significant bugs
remaining. So do us a solid and deploy it in non-critical CI environments
and for day-to-day use, but maybe don't use it for production maintenance or
frontline continuous deployment just yet.
Hey we've got a SUPER cool new feature for you all, thanks to the fantastic
work of @davglass and
@bengl we have --only=prod
,
--only=dev
, --also=prod
and --also=dev
options. These apply in
various ways to: npm install
, npm ls
, npm outdated
and npm update
.
So for instance:
npm install --only=dev
Only installs dev dependencies. By contrast:
npm install --only=prod
Will only install prod dependencies and is very similar to --production
but differs in that it doesn't set the environment variables that
--production
does.
The related new flag, --also
is most useful with things like:
npm shrinkwrap --also=dev
As shrinkwraps don't include dev deps by default. This replaces passing in
--dev
in that scenario.
And that leads into the fact that this deprecates --dev
as its semantics
across commands were inconsistent and confusing.
b31812e
#8996 When removing a module that has bin files, if one that we're going to remove is a symlink to a DIFFERENT module, leave it alone. This only happens when you have two modules that try to provide the same bin. (@iarna)
d2178a9
#9223 Close a bunch of infinite loops that could show up with symlink cycles in your dependencies. (@iarna)
Well, not just yet. This was scheduled for next week, but it snuck into 2.x this week.
139dd92
#8716npm init
will now only pick up the modules you install, not everything else that got flattened with them. (@iarna)
Lot's of lovely bug fixes for npm@3
. I'm also suuuuper excited that I
think we have a handle on stack explosions that effect a small portion of
our users. We also have some tantalizing clues as to where some low hanging
fruit may be for performance issues.
And of course, in addition to the npm@3
specific bug fixes, there are some
great one's coming in from npm@2
! @othiym23
put together that release this week– check out its
release notes for the deets.
THIS IS BETA SOFTWARE. Just like the airline safety announcements,
we're not taking this plane off till we finish telling you: npm@3
will
remain in beta until we're confident that it's stable and have assessed the
effect of the breaking changes on the community. During that time we will
still be doing npm@2
releases, with npm@2
tagged as latest
and next
.
We'll also be publishing new releases of npm@3
as [email protected]
and
[email protected]
alongside those versions until we're ready to switch
everyone over to npm@3
. We need your help to find and fix its remaining
bugs. It's a significant rewrite, so we are sure there still significant
bugs remaining. So do us a solid and deploy it in non-critical CI
environments and for day-to-day use, but maybe don't use it for production
maintenance or frontline continuous deployment just yet.
a8c8a13
#9050 Resolve peer deps relative to the parent of the requirer (@iarna)05f0226
#9077 Fix crash when savinggit+ssh
urls (@iarna)e4a3808
#8951 Extend our patch to allow*
to match something when a package only has prerelease versions to everything and not just the cache. (@iarna)d135abf
#8871 Don't warn about a missingpackage.json
or missing fields in the global install directory. (@iarna)
990ee4f
[email protected]
(@domenic)1f71ec0
[email protected]
(@jdalton)a091354
[email protected]
(@chjj)fc51f28
[email protected]
(@isaacs)3569ec0
[email protected]
(@pgte)ad5f6fd
[email protected]
(@isaacs)
A bunch of stuff got deferred for various reasons, which just means more branches to land next week!
Don't forget to check out Kat's 2.x release for other quiet goodies.
THIS IS BETA SOFTWARE. Yes, we're still reminding you of this. No,
you can't be excused. npm@3
will remain in beta until we're confident
that it's stable and have assessed the effect of the breaking changes on the
community. During that time we will still be doing npm@2
releases, with
npm@2
tagged as latest
and next
. We'll also be publishing new
releases of npm@3
as [email protected]
and [email protected]
alongside those
versions until we're ready to switch everyone over to npm@3
. We need your
help to find and fix its remaining bugs. It's a significant rewrite, so we
are sure there still significant bugs remaining. So do us a solid and
deploy it in non-critical CI environments and for day-to-day use, but maybe
don't use it for production maintenance or frontline continuous deployment
just yet.
6e53c3d
#8985 Many thanks to @bengl for noticing that one of our tests wasn't testing what it claimed it was testing! (@bengl)
eb2c7aa
#9068 Stop sorting keys in thepackage.json
that we haven't edited. Many thanks to @Qix- for bringing this up and providing a first pass at a patch for this. (@iarna)
This is a smallish release with a new config option and some bug fixes. And lots of module updates.
THIS IS BETA SOFTWARE. Yes, we're still reminding you of this. No,
you can't be excused. npm@3
will remain in beta until we're confident
that it's stable and have assessed the effect of the breaking changes on the
community. During that time we will still be doing npm@2
releases, with
npm@2
tagged as latest
and next
. We'll also be publishing new
releases of npm@3
as [email protected]
and [email protected]
alongside those
versions until we're ready to switch everyone over to npm@3
. We need your
help to find and fix its remaining bugs. It's a significant rewrite, so we
are sure there still significant bugs remaining. So do us a solid and
deploy it in non-critical CI environments and for day-to-day use, but maybe
don't use it for production maintenance or frontline continuous deployment
just yet.
-
b3ee452
#9038 We previously disabled the use of the newfs.access
API on Windows, but the bug we were seeing is fixed in[email protected]
so we now usefs.access
if you're using that version or greater. (@iarna) -
b181fa3
#8921 #8637 Rejigger how we validate modules for install. This allow is to fix a problem where arch/os checking wasn't being done at all. It also made it easy to add back in a check that declines to install a module in itself unless you force it. (@iarna)
These are all development dependencies and semver-compatible subdep upgrades, so they should not have visible impact on users.
6b3f6d9
[email protected]
f4e22e5
[email protected]
(inside concat-stream)f130bfc
[email protected]
(inside node-gyp's copy of glob)36c6a0d
[email protected]
80df59c
[email protected]
ea935d9
[email protected]
3588a0c
[email protected]
c6a8450
[email protected]
a04925b
[email protected]
ee7c095
[email protected]
944fc34
[email protected]
783dc7b
[email protected]
acef0fe
[email protected]
dfe959a
[email protected]
a03bc76
[email protected]
8a07d50
[email protected]
7785e3f
[email protected]
826fb35
[email protected]
76030b3
[email protected]
1a49ec6
[email protected]
eebe47f
[email protected]
09994d4
[email protected]
b6f8dbf
[email protected]
c67dd6b
[email protected]
4add042
[email protected]
e04993c
[email protected]
2ed7da4
[email protected]
ae08244
[email protected]
e71410e
[email protected]
67c13e0
[email protected]
12ee041
[email protected]
15564a6
[email protected]
8733bff
[email protected]
230943c
[email protected]
26a4653
[email protected]
3d27081
[email protected]
9efa110
[email protected]
- As usual, we've ported all the
npm@2
goodies in this week's v2.13.3 release.
Rebecca: So Kat, I hear this week's other release uses a dialog between us to explain what changed?
Kat: Well, you could say that…
Rebecca: I would! This week I fixed more npm@3
bugs!
Kat: That sounds familiar.
Rebecca: Eheheheh, well, before we look at those, a word from our sponsor…
THIS IS BETA SOFTWARE. Yes, we're still reminding you of this. No,
you can't be excused. npm@3
will remain in beta until we're confident
that it's stable and have assessed the effect of the breaking changes on the
community. During that time we will still be doing npm@2
releases, with
npm@2
tagged as latest
and next
. We'll also be publishing new
releases of npm@3
as [email protected]
and [email protected]
alongside those
versions until we're ready to switch everyone over to npm@3
. We need your
help to find and fix its remaining bugs. It's a significant rewrite, so we
are sure there still significant bugs remaining. So do us a solid and
deploy it in non-critical CI environments and for day-to-day use, but maybe
don't use it for production maintenance or frontline continuous deployment
just yet.
Rebecca: Ok, enough of the dialoguing, that's Kat's schtick. But do remember kids, betas hide in dark hallways waiting to break your stuff, stuff like…
-
6d69ec9
#8967 Removing a module linked into your globals would result in having all of its subdeps removed. Since the npm release process does exactly this, it burned me -every- -single- -week-. =D While we're here, we also removed extraneous warns that used to spill out when you'd remove a symlink. (@iarna) -
fdb360f
#8874 Linking scoped modules was failing outright, but this fixes that and updates our tests so we don't do it again. (@iarna)
9fafb18
#8701npm@3
introduced permissions checks that run before it actually tries to do something. This saves you from having an install fail half way through. We did this using the shiny newfs.access
function available innode 0.12
andio.js
, with fallback options for older nodes. Unfortunately the way we implemented the fallback caused racey problems for Windows systems. This fixes that by ensuring we only ever run any one check on a directory once. BUT it turns out there are bugs infs.access
on Windows. So this ALSO just disables the use offs.access
on Windows entirely until that settles out. (@iarna)
5656baa
[email protected]
: Better handle terminal resizes while printing the progress bar (@iarna)
- Check out Kat's super-fresh release notes for v2.13.2
and see all the changes we ported from
npm@2
.
So, v3.1.1
managed to actually break installing local modules. And then
immediately after I drove to an island for the weekend. 😁 So let's get
this fixed outside the usual release train!
Fortunately it didn't break installing global modules and so you could swap it out for another version at least.
THIS IS BETA SOFTWARE. Yes, we're still reminding you of this. No,
you can't be excused. npm@3
will remain in beta until we're confident
that it's stable and have assessed the effect of the breaking changes on the
community. During that time we will still be doing npm@2
releases, with
npm@2
tagged as latest
and next
. We'll also be publishing new
releases of npm@3
as [email protected]
and [email protected]
alongside those
versions until we're ready to switch everyone over to npm@3
. We need your
help to find and fix its remaining bugs. It's a significant rewrite, so we
are sure there still significant bugs remaining. So do us a solid and
deploy it in non-critical CI environments and for day-to-day use, but maybe
don't use it for production maintenance or frontline continuous deployment
just yet.
Rebecca's up too late writing tests, so you can have npm@3
bug fixes! Lots
of great new issues from you all! ❤️️ Keep it up!
THIS IS BETA SOFTWARE. Yes, we're still reminding you of this. No,
you can't be excused. npm@3
will remain in beta until we're confident
that it's stable and have assessed the effect of the breaking changes on the
community. During that time we will still be doing npm@2
releases, with
npm@2
tagged as latest
and next
. We'll also be publishing new
releases of npm@3
as [email protected]
and [email protected]
alongside those
versions until we're ready to switch everyone over to npm@3
. We need your
help to find and fix its remaining bugs. It's a significant rewrite, so we
are sure there still significant bugs remaining. So do us a solid and
deploy it in non-critical CI environments and for day-to-day use, but maybe
don't use it for production maintenance or frontline continuous deployment
just yet.
9badfd6
#8608 Make global installs and uninstalls MUCH faster by only reading the directories of modules referred to by arguments. (@iarna075a5f0
#8660 Failed optional deps would still result in the optional deps own dependencies being installed. We now find them and fail them out of the tree. (@iarnac9fbbb5
#8863 The "no compatible version found" error message was including only the version requested, not the name of the package we wanted. Ooops! (@iarna32e6bbd
#8806 The "uninstall" lifecycle was being run after all of a module's dependencies has been removed. This reverses that order-- this means "uninstall" lifecycles can make use of the package's dependencies. (@iarna
- Check out the v2.13.1 release notes
and see all the changes we ported from
npm@2
.
This has been a brief week of bug fixes, plus some fun stuff merged forward from this weeks 2.x release. See the 2.13.0 release notes for details on that.
You all have been AWESOME with
all
the
npm@3
bug reports! Thank you and keep up the great work!
Remember how last week we said npm@3
would go to 3.0-next
and latest
tags? Yeaaah, no, please use [email protected]
and [email protected]
going forward.
I dunno why we said "suuure, we'll never do a feature release till we're out
of beta" when we're still forward porting [email protected]
features. ¯\_(ツ)_/¯
If you do accidentally use the old tag names, I'll be maintaining them for a few releases, but they won't be around forever.
THIS IS BETA SOFTWARE. npm@3
will remain in beta until we're
confident that it's stable and have assessed the effect of the breaking
changes on the community. During that time we will still be doing npm@2
releases, with npm@2
tagged as latest
and next
. We'll also be
publishing new releases of npm@3
as [email protected]
and [email protected]
alongside those versions until we're ready to switch everyone over to
npm@3
. We need your help to find and fix its remaining bugs. It's a
significant rewrite, so we are sure there still significant bugs
remaining. So do us a solid and deploy it in non-critical CI environments
and for day-to-day use, but maybe don't use it for production maintenance
or frontline continuous deployment just yet.
0030ade
#8685 Windows would hang when trying to clone git repos (@euprogramador)b259bcc
#8786 Windows permissions checks would cause installations to fail under some circumstances. We're disabling the checks entirely for this release. I'm hoping to check back with this next week to get a Windows friendly fix in. (@iarna)
0848698
#8686 Stop leaving progress bar cruft on the screen during publication (@ajcrites)57c3cea
#8695 Remote packages with shrinkwraps made npm cause node + iojs to explode and catch fire. NO MORE. (@iarna)2875ba3
#8723 I uh, told you that engineStrict checking had gone away last week. TURNS OUT I LIED. So this is making that actually be true. (@iarna)28064e5
#3358 Consistently allow Unicode BOMs at the start of package.json files. Previously this was allowed some of time, like when you were installing modules, but not others, like running npm version or installing w/--save
. (@iarna)3cb6ad2
#8736npm@3
wasn't running the "install" lifecycle in your current (toplevel) module. This broke modules that relied on C compilation. BOO. (@iarna)68da583
#8766 To my great shame,npm link package
wasn't working AT ALL if you didn't havepackage
already installed. (@iarna)edd7448
[email protected]
: This update makes read-package-tree not explode when there's bad data in your node_modules folder.npm@2
silently ignores this sort of thing. (@iarna)0bb08c8
#8778 RELATEDLY, we now show any errors from your node_modules folder after your installation completes as warnings. We're also reporting these innpm ls
now. (@iarna)6c248ff
#8779 Hey, you know how we used to complain if yourpackage.json
was missing stuff? Well guess what, we are again. I know, I know, you can thank me later. (@iarna)d6f7c98
So, when we were rolling back after errors we had untested code that tried to undo moves. Being untested it turns out it was very broken. I've removed it until we have time to do this right. (@iarna)
Just the one. Others came in via the 2.x release. Do check out its changelog, immediately following this message.
Wow, it's finally here! This has been a long time coming. We are all delighted and proud to be getting this out into the world, and are looking forward to working with the npm user community to get it production-ready as quickly as possible.
npm@3
constitutes a nearly complete rewrite of npm's installer to be
easier to maintain, and to bring a bunch of valuable new features and
design improvements to you all.
@othiym23 and @isaacs have been talking about the changes in this release for well over a year, and it's been the primary focus of @iarna since she joined the team.
Given that this is a near-total rewrite, all changes listed here are @iarna's work unless otherwise specified.
THIS IS BETA SOFTWARE. npm@3
will remain in beta until we're
confident that it's stable and have assessed the effect of the breaking
changes on the community. During that time we will still be doing npm@2
releases, with npm@2
tagged as latest
and next
. We'll also be
publishing new releases of npm@3
as [email protected]
and [email protected]
alongside those versions until we're ready to switch everyone over to
npm@3
. We need your help to find and fix its remaining bugs. It's a
significant rewrite, so we are sure there still significant bugs
remaining. So do us a solid and deploy it in non-critical CI environments
and for day-to-day use, but maybe don't use it for production maintenance
or frontline continuous deployment just yet.
grunt
, gulp
, and broccoli
plugin maintainers take note! You will be
affected by this change!
- #6930
(#6565)
peerDependencies
no longer cause anything to be implicitly installed. Instead, npm will now warn if a packagespeerDependencies
are missing, but it's up to the consumer of the module (i.e. you) to ensure the peers get installed / are included inpackage.json
as directdependencies
ordevDependencies
of your package. - #3803
npm also no longer checks
peerDependencies
until after it has fully resolved the tree.
This shifts the responsibility for fulfilling peer dependencies from library
/ framework / plugin maintainers to application authors, and is intended to
get users out of the dependency hell caused by conflicting peerDependency
constraints. npm's job is to keep you out of dependency hell, not put you
in it.
- #6931 The rarely-used
package.json
optionengineStrict
has been deprecated for several months, producing warnings when it was used. Starting withnpm@3
, the value of the field is ignored, and engine violations will only produce warnings. If you, as a user, want strictengines
field enforcement, just runnpm config set engine-strict true
.
As with the peer dependencies change, this is about shifting control from
module authors to application authors. It turns out engineStrict
was very
difficult to understand even harder to use correctly, and more often than
not just made modules using it difficult to deploy.
77f1aec
Withnpm view
(akanpm info
), always return arrays for versions, maintainers, etc. Previously npm would return a plain value if there was only one, and multiple values if there were more. (@KenanY)
Again, this is a BETA RELEASE, so not everything is working just yet. Here are the issues that we already know about. If you run into something that isn't on this list, let us know!
- #8575 Circular deps will never be removed by the prune-on-uninstall code.
- #8588 Local deps where the dep name and the name in the package.json differ don't result in an error.
- #8637
Modules can install themselves as direct dependencies.
npm@2
declined to do this. - #8660 Dependencies of failed optional dependencies aren't rolled back when the optional dependency is, and then are reported as extraneous thereafter.
-
#5919 Previously the installer had a set of steps it executed for each package and it would immediately start executing them as soon as it decided to act on a package.
But now it executes each of those steps at the same time for all packages, waiting for all of one stage to complete before moving on. This eliminates many race conditions and makes the code easier to reason about.
This fixes, for instance:
- #6926
(#5001,
#6170)
install
andpostinstall
lifecycle scripts now only executeafter
all the module with the script's dependencies are installed.
You'll now get a tree much like the one produced by npm ls
that
highlights in orange the packages that were installed. Similarly, any
removed packages will have their names prefixed by a -
.
Also, npm outdated
used to include the name of the module in the
Location
field:
Package Current Wanted Latest Location
deep-equal MISSING 1.0.0 1.0.0 deep-equal
glob 4.5.3 4.5.3 5.0.10 rimraf > glob
Now it shows the module that required it as the final point in the
Location
field:
Package Current Wanted Latest Location
deep-equal MISSING 1.0.0 1.0.0 npm
glob 4.5.3 4.5.3 5.0.10 npm > rimraf
Previously the Location
field was telling you where the module was on
disk. Now it tells you what requires the module. When more than one thing
requires the module you'll see it listed once for each thing requiring it.
- #6928
(#2931
#2950)
npm install
when you have annpm-shrinkwrap.json
will ensure you have the modules specified in it are installed in exactly the shape specified no matter what you had when you started. - #6913
(#1341
#3124
#4956
#6349
#5465)
npm install
when some of your dependencies are missing sub-dependencies will result in those sub-dependencies being installed. That is,npm install
now knows how to fix broken installs, most of the time. - #5465
If you directly
npm install
a module that's already a subdep of something else and your new version is incompatible, it will now install the previous version nested in the things that need it. a2b50cf
#5693 When installing a new module, if it's mentioned in yournpm-shrinkwrap.json
or yourpackage.json
use the version specifier from there if you didn't specify one yourself.
Your dependencies will now be installed maximally flat. Insofar as is
possible, all of your dependencies, and their dependencies, and THEIR
dependencies will be installed in your project's node_modules
folder with no
nesting. You'll only see modules nested underneath one another when two (or
more) modules have conflicting dependencies.
- #3697 This will hopefully eliminate most cases where Windows users ended up with paths that were too long for Explorer and other standard tools to deal with.
- #6912 (#4761 #4037) This also means that your installs will be deduped from the start.
- #5827 This deduping even extends to git deps.
- #6936 (#5698) Various commands are dedupe aware now.
This has some implications for the behavior of other commands:
npm uninstall
removes any dependencies of the module that you specified that aren't required by any other module. Previously, it would only remove those that happened to be installed under it, resulting in left over cruft if you'd ever deduped.npm ls
now shows you your dependency tree organized around what requires what, rather than where those modules are on disk.- #6937
npm dedupe
now flattens the tree in addition to deduping.
And bundling of dependencies when packing or publishing changes too:
- #2442 bundledDependencies no longer requires that you specify deduped sub deps. npm can now see that a dependency is required by something bundled and automatically include it. To put that another way, bundledDependencies should ONLY include things that you included in dependencies, optionalDependencies or devDependencies.
- #5437
When bundling a dependency that's both a
devDependency
and the child of a regulardependency
, npm bundles the child dependency.
As a demonstration of our confidence in our own work, npm's own
dependencies are now flattened, deduped, and bundled in the npm@3
style.
This means that npm@3
can't be packed or published by npm@2
, which is
something to be aware of if you're hacking on npm.
First of all, they should be idempotent now
(#5779). No more differences
because the first time you install (without npm-shrinkwrap.json
) and the
second time (with npm-shrinkwrap.json
).
- #6781
Second, if you save your changes to
package.json
and you havenpm-shrinkwrap.json
, then it will be updated as well. This applies to all of the commands that update your tree:npm install --save
npm update --save
npm dedupe --save
(#6410)npm uninstall --save
- #4944
(#5161
#5448)
Third, because
node_modules
folders are now deduped and flat, shrinkwrap has to also be smart enough to handle this.
And finally, enjoy this shrinkwrap bug fix:
- #3675
When shrinkwrapping a dependency that's both a
devDependency
and the child of a regulardependency
, npm now correctly includes the child.
- #6911 (#1257 #5340 #6420) The spinner is gone (yay? boo? will you miss it?), and in its place npm has progress bars, so you actually have some sense of how long installs will take. It's provided in Unicode and non-Unicode variants, and Unicode support is automatically detected from your environment.
The bottom is where we usually hide the less interesting bits of each release, but each of these are small but incredibly useful bits of this release, and very much worth checking out:
9ebe312
Build system maintainers, rejoice: npm does a better job of cleaning up after itself in your temporary folder.- #6942 Check for permissions issues prior to actually trying to install anything.
- Emit warnings at the end of the installation when possible, so that they'll be on your screen when npm stops.
- #3505
npm --dry-run
: You can now ask that npm only report what it would have done with the new--dry-run
flag. This can be passed to any of the commands that change yournode_modules
folder:install
,uninstall
,update
anddedupe
. 81b46fb
npm now knows the correct URLs fornpm bugs
andnpm repo
for repositories hosted on Bitbucket and GitLab, just like it does for GitHub (and GitHub support now extends to projects hosted as gists as well as traditional repositories).5be4008a
npm has been cleaned up to pass thestandard
style checker. Forrest and Rebecca both feel this makes it easier to read and understand the code, and should also make it easier for new contributors to put merge-ready patches. (@othiym23)
6401643
Make sure the global install directory exists before installing to it. (@thefourtheye)- #6158 When we remove modules we do so inside-out running unbuild for each one.
960a765
The short usage information for each subcommand has been brought in sync with the documentation. (@smikes)