This is just enough info to get you up and running.
Much more info available via npm help
once it's installed.
You need node v0.4 or higher to run this program.
To install an old and unsupported version of npm that works on node 0.3 and prior, clone the git repo and dig through the old tags and branches.
To install npm with one command, do this:
curl http://npmjs.org/install.sh | sh
To skip the npm 0.x cleanup, do this:
curl http://npmjs.org/install.sh | clean=no sh
To say "yes" to the 0.x cleanup, but skip the prompt:
curl http://npmjs.org/install.sh | clean=yes sh
If you get permission errors, you can either install node someplace that you have permission to write to (recommended!) or you can place a very unsafe amount of trust in me, and in your network, and do this:
curl http://npmjs.org/install.sh | sudo sh
Note: You need to sudo
the sh
, not the curl
. Fetching stuff
from the internet typically doesn't require elevated permissions.
To install the latest unstable development version from git:
git clone https://github.com/isaacs/npm.git
cd npm
sudo make install
If you're sitting in the code folder reading this document in your terminal, then you've already got the code. Just do:
sudo make install
and npm will install itself.
If you don't have make, and don't have curl or git, and ALL you have is this code and node, you can probably do this:
sudo node ./cli.js install -g
However, note that github tarballs do not contain submodules, so those won't work. You'll have to also fetch the appropriate submodules listed in the .gitmodules file.
tl;dr
- Use
sudo
for greater safety. Or don't, if you prefer not to. - npm will downgrade permissions if it's root before running any build scripts that package authors specified.
As of version 0.3, it is recommended to run npm as root.
This allows npm to change the user identifier to the nobody
user prior
to running any package build or test commands.
If you are not the root user, or if you are on a platform that does not support uid switching, then npm will not attempt to change the userid.
If you would like to ensure that npm always runs scripts as the "nobody" user, and have it fail if it cannot downgrade permissions, then set the following configuration param:
npm config set unsafe-perm false
This will prevent running in unsafe mode, even as non-root users.
So sad to see you go.
sudo npm uninstall npm -g
Or, if that fails,
sudo make uninstall
Usually, the above instructions are sufficient. That will remove npm, but leave behind anything you've installed.
If you would like to remove all the packages that you have installed,
then you can use the npm ls
command to find them, and then npm rm
to
remove them.
To remove cruft left behind by npm 0.x, you can use the included
clean-old.sh
script file. You can run it conveniently like this:
npm explore npm -g -- sh scripts/clean-old.sh
npm uses two configuration files, one for per-user configs, and another for global (every-user) configs. You can view them by doing:
npm config get userconfig # defaults to ~/.npmrc
npm config get globalconfig # defaults to /usr/local/etc/npmrc
Uninstalling npm does not remove configuration files by default. You must remove them yourself manually if you want them gone. Note that this means that future npm installs will not remember the settings that you have chosen.
If you would like to use npm programmatically, you can do that. It's not very well documented, but it is rather simple.
var npm = require("npm")
npm.load(myConfigObject, function (er) {
if (er) return handlError(er)
npm.commands.install(["some", "args"], function (er, data) {
if (er) return commandFailed(er)
// command succeeded, and data might have some info
})
npm.on("log", function (message) { .... })
})
The load
function takes an object hash of the command-line configs.
The various npm.commands.<cmd>
functions take an array of
positional argument strings. The last argument to any
npm.commands.<cmd>
function is a callback. Some commands take other
optional arguments. Read the source.
You cannot set configs individually for any single npm function at this
time. Since npm
is a singleton, any call to npm.config.set
will
change the value for all npm commands in that process.
See ./bin/npm.js
for an example of pulling config values off of the
command line arguments using nopt. You may also want to check out npm help config
to learn about all the options you can set there.
Check out the docs, especially the faq.
You can use the npm help
command to read any of them.
If you're a developer, and you want to use npm to publish your program, you should read this
"npm" and "the npm registry" are owned by Isaac Z. Schlueter. All rights not explicitly granted in the MIT license are reserved. See the included LICENSE file for more details.
"Node.js" and "node" are trademarks owned by Joyent, Inc. npm is not officially part of the Node.js project, and is neither owned by nor officially affiliated with Joyent, Inc.
The packages in the npm registry are not part of npm itself, and are the sole property of their respective maintainers. While every effort is made to ensure accountability, there is absolutely no guarantee, warrantee, or assertion made as to the quality, fitness for a specific purpose, or lack of malice in any given npm package. Modules published on the npm registry are not affiliated with or endorsed by Joyent, Inc., Isaac Z. Schlueter, Ryan Dahl, or the Node.js project.
If you have a complaint about a package in the npm registry, and cannot resolve it with the package owner, please express your concerns to Isaac Z. Schlueter at [email protected].
This is mine; not my employer's, not Node's, not Joyent's, not Ryan Dahl's.
If you publish something, it's yours, and you are solely accountable for it. Not me, not Node, not Joyent, not Ryan Dahl.
If other people publish something, it's theirs. Not mine, not Node's, not Joyent's, not Ryan Dahl's.
Yes, you can publish something evil. It will be removed promptly if reported, and we'll lose respect for you. But there is no vetting process for published modules.
If this concerns you, inspect the source before using packages.
- npm(1)
- npm-faq(1)
- npm-help(1)