Manage the npm configuration file
npm config set <key> <value> [--global]
npm config get <key>
npm config delete <key>
npm config list
npm config edit
npm get <key>
npm set <key> <value> [--global]
npm gets its configuration values from 6 sources, in this priority:
Putting --foo bar
on the command line sets the
foo
configuration parameter to "bar"
. A --
argument tells the cli
parser to stop reading flags. A --flag
parameter that is at the end of
the command will be given the value of true
.
Any environment variables that start with npm_config_
will be interpreted
as a configuration parameter. For example, putting npm_config_foo=bar
in
your environment will set the foo
configuration parameter to bar
. Any
environment configurations that are not given a value will be given the value
of true
. Config values are case-insensitive, so NPM_CONFIG_FOO=bar
will
work the same.
$HOME/.npmrc
(or the userconfig
param, if set above)
This file is an ini-file formatted list of key = value
parameters.
$PREFIX/etc/npmrc
(or the globalconfig
param, if set above):
This file is an ini-file formatted list of key = value
parameters
path/to/npm/itself/npmrc
This is an unchangeable "builtin"
configuration file that npm keeps consistent across updates. Set
fields in here using the ./configure
script that comes with npm.
This is primarily for distribution maintainers to override default
configs in a standard and consistent manner.
A set of configuration parameters that are internal to npm, and are defaults if nothing else is specified.
Config supports the following sub-commands:
npm config set key value
Sets the config key to the value.
If value is omitted, then it sets it to "true".
npm config get key
Echo the config value to stdout.
npm config list
Show all the config settings.
npm config delete key
Deletes the key from all configuration files.
npm config edit
Opens the config file in an editor. Use the --global
flag to edit the
global config.
The following shorthands are parsed on the command-line:
-v
: --version
-h
, -?
, --help
, -H
: --usage
-s
, --silent
: --loglevel silent
-q
, --quiet
: --loglevel warn
-d
: --loglevel info
-dd
, --verbose
: --loglevel verbose
-ddd
: --loglevel silly
-g
: --global
-l
: --long
-m
: --message
-p
, --porcelain
: --parseable
-reg
: --registry
-v
: --version
-f
: --force
-desc
: --description
-S
: --save
-D
: --save-dev
-O
: --save-optional
-B
: --save-bundle
-y
: --yes
-n
: --yes false
ll
and la
commands: ls --long
If the specified configuration param resolves unambiguously to a known configuration parameter, then it is expanded to that configuration parameter. For example:
npm ls --par
# same as:
npm ls --parseable
If multiple single-character shorthands are strung together, and the resulting combination is unambiguously not some other configuration param, then it is expanded to its various component pieces. For example:
npm ls -gpld
# same as:
npm ls --global --parseable --long --loglevel info
When running scripts (see scripts(1)
)
the package.json "config" keys are overwritten in the environment if
there is a config param of <name>[@<version>]:<key>
. For example, if
the package.json has this:
{ "name" : "foo"
, "config" : { "port" : "8080" }
, "scripts" : { "start" : "node server.js" } }
and the server.js is this:
http.createServer(...).listen(process.env.npm_package_config_port)
then the user could change the behavior by doing:
npm config set foo:port 80
Force npm to always require authentication when accessing the registry,
even for GET
requests.
true
Tells npm to create symlinks (or .cmd
shims on Windows) for package
executables.
Set to false to have it not do this. This can be used to work around the fact that some file systems don't support symlinks, even on ostensibly Unix systems.
"open"
, others: "google-chrome"
The browser that is called by the npm docs
command to open websites.
The Certificate Authority signing certificate that is trusted for SSL connections to the registry.
Set to null
to only allow "known" registrars, or to a specific CA cert
to trust only that specific signing authority.
See also the strict-ssl
config.
%APPDATA%\npm-cache
, Posix: ~/.npm
The location of npm's cache directory. See cache(1)
The number of ms before cache folder lockfiles are considered stale.
Number of times to retry to acquire a lock on cache folder lockfiles.
Number of ms to wait for cache lock files to expire.
The maximum time (in seconds) to keep items in the registry cache before re-checking against the registry.
Note that no purging is done unless the npm cache clean
command is
explicitly used, and that only GET requests use the cache.
The minimum time (in seconds) to keep items in the registry cache before re-checking against the registry.
Note that no purging is done unless the npm cache clean
command is
explicitly used, and that only GET requests use the cache.
"always"
If false, never shows colors. If "always"
then always shows colors.
If true, then only prints color codes for tty file descriptors.
A flag to tell test-harness to run with their coverage options enabled,
if they respond to the npm_config_coverage
environment variable.
The depth to go when recursing directories for npm ls
and
npm cache ls
.
Show the description in npm search
Install dev-dependencies
along with packages.
Note that dev-dependencies
are also installed if the npat
flag is
set.
EDITOR
environment variable if set, or "vi"
on Posix,
or "notepad"
on Windows.The command to run for npm edit
or npm config edit
.
If set to true, then npm will stubbornly refuse to install (or even consider installing) any package that claims to not be compatible with the current Node.js version.
Makes various commands more forceful.
The "retries" config for the retry
module to use when fetching
packages from the registry.
The "factor" config for the retry
module to use when fetching
packages.
The "minTimeout" config for the retry
module to use when fetching
packages.
The "maxTimeout" config for the retry
module to use when fetching
packages.
"git"
The command to use for git commands. If git is installed on the
computer, but is not in the PATH
, then set this to the full path to
the git binary.
Operates in "global" mode, so that packages are installed into the
prefix
folder instead of the current working directory. See
folders(1)
for more on the differences in behavior.
{prefix}/lib/node_modules
folder, instead of the
current working directory.{prefix}/bin
{prefix}/share/man
The config file to read for global config options.
The config file to read for global ignore patterns to apply to all users and all projects.
If not found, but there is a "gitignore" file in the same directory, then that will be used instead.
The group to use when running package scripts in global mode as the root user.
HTTPS_PROXY
or https_proxy
or HTTP_PROXY
or
http_proxy
environment variables.A proxy to use for outgoing https requests.
Sets a User-Agent to the request header
A white-space separated list of glob patterns of files to always exclude from packages when building tarballs.
A module that will be loaded by the npm init
command. See the
documentation for the
init-package-json module
for more information, or init(1).
The value npm init
should use by default for the package version.
The value npm init
should use by default for the package author's name.
The value npm init
should use by default for the package author's email.
The value npm init
should use by default for the package author's homepage.
Whether or not to output JSON data, rather than the normal output.
This feature is currently experimental, and the output data structures
for many commands is either not implemented in JSON yet, or subject to
change. Only the output from npm ls --json
is currently valid.
If true, then local installs will link if there is a suitable globally installed package.
Note that this means that local installs can cause things to be installed into the global space at the same time. The link is only done if one of the two conditions are met:
What level of logs to report. On failure, all logs are written to
npm-debug.log
in the current working directory.
Any logs of a higher level than the setting are shown. The default is "http", which shows http, warn, and error output.
This is the stream that is passed to the npmlog module at run time.
It cannot be set from the command line, but if you are using npm programmatically, you may wish to send logs to somewhere other than stderr.
If the color
config is set to true, then this stream will receive
colored output if it is a TTY.
Show extended information in npm ls
Commit message which is used by npm version
when creating version commit.
Any "%s" in the message will be replaced with the version number.
The node version to use when checking package's "engines" hash.
Run tests on installation and report results to the
npaturl
.
The url to report npat test results.
A node module to require()
when npm loads. Useful for programmatic
usage.
Attempt to install packages in the optionalDependencies
hash. Note
that if these packages fail to install, the overall installation
process is not aborted.
Output parseable results from commands that write to standard output.
The location to install global items. If set on the command line, then it forces non-global commands to run in the specified folder.
Set to true to run in "production" mode.
npm install
without any arguments.Whether or not to include proprietary extended attributes in the tarballs created by npm.
Unless you are expecting to unpack package tarballs with something other than npm -- particularly a very outdated tar implementation -- leave this as true.
HTTP_PROXY
or http_proxy
environment variable, or nullA proxy to use for outgoing http requests.
Rebuild bundled dependencies after installation.
The base URL of the npm package registry.
Remove failed installs.
Save installed packages to a package.json file as dependencies.
When used with the npm rm
command, it removes it from the dependencies
hash.
Only works if there is already a package.json file present.
If a package would be saved at install time by the use of --save
,
--save-dev
, or --save-optional
, then also put it in the
bundleDependencies
list.
When used with the npm rm
command, it removes it from the
bundledDependencies list.
Save installed packages to a package.json file as devDependencies.
When used with the npm rm
command, it removes it from the devDependencies
hash.
Only works if there is already a package.json file present.
Save installed packages to a package.json file as optionalDependencies.
When used with the npm rm
command, it removes it from the devDependencies
hash.
Only works if there is already a package.json file present.
Space-separated options that are always passed to search.
Space-separated options that limit the results from search.
Indication of which field to sort search results by. Prefix with a -
character to indicate reverse sort.
The shell to run for the npm explore
command.
If set to true, then the npm version
command will tag the version
using -s
to add a signature.
Note that git requires you to have set up GPG keys in your git configs for this to work properly.
Whether or not to do SSL key validation when making requests to the registry via https.
See also the ca
config.
If you ask npm to install a package and don't tell it a specific version, then it will install the specified tag.
Also the tag that is added to the package@version specified by the npm
tag
command, if no explicit tag is given.
Where to store temporary files and folders. All temp files are deleted on success, but left behind on failure for forensic purposes.
When set to true, npm uses unicode characters in the tree output. When false, it uses ascii characters to draw trees.
Set to true to suppress the UID/GID switching when running package scripts. If set explicitly to false, then installing as a non-root user will fail.
Set to show short usage output (like the -H output)
instead of complete help when doing help(1)
.
The UID to set to when running package scripts as root.
The username on the npm registry. Set with npm adduser
The location of user-level configuration settings.
The location of a user-level ignore file to apply to all packages.
If not found, but there is a .gitignore file in the same directory, then that will be used instead.
The "umask" value to use when setting the file creation mode on files and folders.
Folders and executables are given a mode which is 0777
masked against
this value. Other files are given a mode which is 0666
masked against
this value. Thus, the defaults are 0755
and 0644
respectively.
If true, output the npm version and exit successfully.
Only relevant when specified explicitly on the command line.
If true, output the npm version as well as node's process.versions
hash, and exit successfully.
Only relevant when specified explicitly on the command line.
The program to use to view help content.
Set to "browser"
to view html help content in the default web browser.
If set to null
, then prompt the user for responses in some
circumstances.
If set to true
, then answer "yes" to any prompt. If set to false
then answer "no" to any prompt.