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.TH "NPM\-INSTALL" "1" "October 2014" "" ""
.SH "NAME"
\fBnpm-install\fR \- Install a package
.SH SYNOPSIS
.P
.RS 2
.nf
npm install (with no args in a package dir)
npm install <tarball file>
npm install <tarball url>
npm install <folder>
npm install [@<scope>/]<name> [\-\-save|\-\-save\-dev|\-\-save\-optional] [\-\-save\-exact]
npm install [@<scope>/]<name>@<tag>
npm install [@<scope>/]<name>@<version>
npm install [@<scope>/]<name>@<version range>
npm i (with any of the previous argument usage)
.fi
.RE
.SH DESCRIPTION
.P
This command installs a package, and any packages that it depends on\. If the
package has a shrinkwrap file, the installation of dependencies will be driven
by that\. See npm help shrinkwrap\.
.P
A \fBpackage\fR is:
.RS 0
.IP \(bu 2
a) a folder containing a program described by a package\.json file
.IP \(bu 2
b) a gzipped tarball containing (a)
.IP \(bu 2
c) a url that resolves to (b)
.IP \(bu 2
d) a \fB<name>@<version>\fR that is published on the registry (see npm help 7 \fBnpm\-registry\fR) with (c)
.IP \(bu 2
e) a \fB<name>@<tag>\fR that points to (d)
.IP \(bu 2
f) a \fB<name>\fR that has a "latest" tag satisfying (e)
.IP \(bu 2
g) a \fB<git remote url>\fR that resolves to (b)
.RE
.P
Even if you never publish your package, you can still get a lot of
benefits of using npm if you just want to write a node program (a), and
perhaps if you also want to be able to easily install it elsewhere
after packing it up into a tarball (b)\.
.RS 0
.IP \(bu 2
\fBnpm install\fR (in package directory, no arguments):
Install the dependencies in the local node_modules folder\.
In global mode (ie, with \fB\-g\fR or \fB\-\-global\fR appended to the command),
it installs the current package context (ie, the current working
directory) as a global package\.
By default, \fBnpm install\fR will install all modules listed as
dependencies\. With the \fB\-\-production\fR flag,
npm will not install modules listed in \fBdevDependencies\fR\|\.
.IP \(bu 2
\fBnpm install <folder>\fR:
Install a package that is sitting in a folder on the filesystem\.
.IP \(bu 2
\fBnpm install <tarball file>\fR:
Install a package that is sitting on the filesystem\. Note: if you just want
to link a dev directory into your npm root, you can do this more easily by
using \fBnpm link\fR\|\.
Example:
.P
.RS 2
.nf
npm install \./package\.tgz
.fi
.RE
.IP \(bu 2
\fBnpm install <tarball url>\fR:
Fetch the tarball url, and then install it\. In order to distinguish between
this and other options, the argument must start with "http://" or "https://"
Example:
.P
.RS 2
.nf
npm install https://github\.com/indexzero/forever/tarball/v0\.5\.6
.fi
.RE
.IP \(bu 2
\fBnpm install [@<scope>/]<name> [\-\-save|\-\-save\-dev|\-\-save\-optional]\fR:
Do a \fB<name>@<tag>\fR install, where \fB<tag>\fR is the "tag" config\. (See
npm help 7 \fBnpm\-config\fR\|\.)
In most cases, this will install the latest version
of the module published on npm\.
Example:
.P
.RS 2
.nf
npm install sax
.fi
.RE
\fBnpm install\fR takes 3 exclusive, optional flags which save or update
the package version in your main package\.json:
.RS 0
.IP \(bu 2
\fB\-\-save\fR: Package will appear in your \fBdependencies\fR\|\.
.IP \(bu 2
\fB\-\-save\-dev\fR: Package will appear in your \fBdevDependencies\fR\|\.
.IP \(bu 2
\fB\-\-save\-optional\fR: Package will appear in your \fBoptionalDependencies\fR\|\.
When using any of the above options to save dependencies to your
package\.json, there is an additional, optional flag:
.IP \(bu 2
\fB\-\-save\-exact\fR: Saved dependencies will be configured with an
exact version rather than using npm's default semver range
operator\.
\fB<scope>\fR is optional\. The package will be downloaded from the registry
associated with the specified scope\. If no registry is associated with
the given scope the default registry is assumed\. See npm help 7 \fBnpm\-scope\fR\|\.
Note: if you do not include the @\-symbol on your scope name, npm will
interpret this as a GitHub repository instead, see below\. Scopes names
must also be followed by a slash\.
Examples:
.P
.RS 2
.nf
npm install sax \-\-save
npm install githubname/reponame
npm install @myorg/privatepackage
npm install node\-tap \-\-save\-dev
npm install dtrace\-provider \-\-save\-optional
npm install readable\-stream \-\-save \-\-save\-exact
.fi
.RE
.RE
.RE
.P
.RS 2
.nf
**Note**: If there is a file or folder named `<name>` in the current
working directory, then it will try to install that, and only try to
fetch the package by name if it is not valid\.
.fi
.RE
.RS 0
.IP \(bu 2
\fBnpm install [@<scope>/]<name>@<tag>\fR:
Install the version of the package that is referenced by the specified tag\.
If the tag does not exist in the registry data for that package, then this
will fail\.
Example:
.P
.RS 2
.nf
npm install sax@latest
npm install @myorg/mypackage@latest
.fi
.RE
.IP \(bu 2
\fBnpm install [@<scope>/]<name>@<version>\fR:
Install the specified version of the package\. This will fail if the
version has not been published to the registry\.
Example:
.P
.RS 2
.nf
npm install sax@0\.1\.1
npm install @myorg/privatepackage@1\.5\.0
.fi
.RE
.IP \(bu 2
\fBnpm install [@<scope>/]<name>@<version range>\fR:
Install a version of the package matching the specified version range\. This
will follow the same rules for resolving dependencies described in npm help 5 \fBpackage\.json\fR\|\.
Note that most version ranges must be put in quotes so that your shell will
treat it as a single argument\.
Example:
.P
.RS 2
.nf
npm install sax@">=0\.1\.0 <0\.2\.0"
npm install @myorg/privatepackage@">=0\.1\.0 <0\.2\.0"
.fi
.RE
.IP \(bu 2
\fBnpm install <githubname>/<githubrepo>\fR:
Install the package at \fBhttps://github\.com/githubname/githubrepo" by
attempting to clone it using\fRgit`\.
Example:
.P
.RS 2
.nf
npm install mygithubuser/myproject
.fi
.RE
To reference a package in a git repo that is not on GitHub, see git
remote urls below\.
.IP \(bu 2
\fBnpm install <git remote url>\fR:
Install a package by cloning a git remote url\. The format of the git
url is:
.P
.RS 2
.nf
<protocol>://[<user>@]<hostname><separator><path>[#<commit\-ish>]
.fi
.RE
\fB<protocol>\fR is one of \fBgit\fR, \fBgit+ssh\fR, \fBgit+http\fR, or
\fBgit+https\fR\|\. If no \fB<commit\-ish>\fR is specified, then \fBmaster\fR is
used\.
Examples:
.P
.RS 2
.nf
git+ssh://git@github\.com:npm/npm\.git#v1\.0\.27
git+https://isaacs@github\.com/npm/npm\.git
git://github\.com/npm/npm\.git#v1\.0\.27
.fi
.RE
.RE
.P
You may combine multiple arguments, and even multiple types of arguments\.
For example:
.P
.RS 2
.nf
npm install sax@">=0\.1\.0 <0\.2\.0" bench supervisor
.fi
.RE
.P
The \fB\-\-tag\fR argument will apply to all of the specified install targets\. If a
tag with the given name exists, the tagged version is preferred over newer
versions\.
.P
The \fB\-\-force\fR argument will force npm to fetch remote resources even if a
local copy exists on disk\.
.P
.RS 2
.nf
npm install sax \-\-force
.fi
.RE
.P
The \fB\-\-global\fR argument will cause npm to install the package globally
rather than locally\. See npm help 5 \fBnpm\-folders\fR\|\.
.P
The \fB\-\-link\fR argument will cause npm to link global installs into the
local space in some cases\.
.P
The \fB\-\-no\-bin\-links\fR argument will prevent npm from creating symlinks for
any binaries the package might contain\.
.P
The \fB\-\-no\-optional\fR argument will prevent optional dependencies from
being installed\.
.P
The \fB\-\-no\-shrinkwrap\fR argument, which will ignore an available
shrinkwrap file and use the package\.json instead\.
.P
The \fB\-\-nodedir=/path/to/node/source\fR argument will allow npm to find the
node source code so that npm can compile native modules\.
.P
See npm help 7 \fBnpm\-config\fR\|\. Many of the configuration params have some
effect on installation, since that's most of what npm does\.
.SH ALGORITHM
.P
To install a package, npm uses the following algorithm:
.P
.RS 2
.nf
install(where, what, family, ancestors)
fetch what, unpack to <where>/node_modules/<what>
for each dep in what\.dependencies
resolve dep to precise version
for each dep@version in what\.dependencies
not in <where>/node_modules/<what>/node_modules/*
and not in <family>
add precise version deps to <family>
install(<where>/node_modules/<what>, dep, family)
.fi
.RE
.P
For this \fBpackage{dep}\fR structure: \fBA{B,C}, B{C}, C{D}\fR,
this algorithm produces:
.P
.RS 2
.nf
A
+\-\- B
`\-\- C
`\-\- D
.fi
.RE
.P
That is, the dependency from B to C is satisfied by the fact that A
already caused C to be installed at a higher level\.
.P
See npm help 5 folders for a more detailed description of the specific
folder structures that npm creates\.
.SS Limitations of npm's Install Algorithm
.P
There are some very rare and pathological edge\-cases where a cycle can
cause npm to try to install a never\-ending tree of packages\. Here is
the simplest case:
.P
.RS 2
.nf
A \-> B \-> A' \-> B' \-> A \-> B \-> A' \-> B' \-> A \-> \.\.\.
.fi
.RE
.P
where \fBA\fR is some version of a package, and \fBA'\fR is a different version
of the same package\. Because \fBB\fR depends on a different version of \fBA\fR
than the one that is already in the tree, it must install a separate
copy\. The same is true of \fBA'\fR, which must install \fBB'\fR\|\. Because \fBB'\fR
depends on the original version of \fBA\fR, which has been overridden, the
cycle falls into infinite regress\.
.P
To avoid this situation, npm flat\-out refuses to install any
\fBname@version\fR that is already present anywhere in the tree of package
folder ancestors\. A more correct, but more complex, solution would be
to symlink the existing version into the new location\. If this ever
affects a real use\-case, it will be investigated\.
.SH SEE ALSO
.RS 0
.IP \(bu 2
npm help 5 folders
.IP \(bu 2
npm help update
.IP \(bu 2
npm help link
.IP \(bu 2
npm help rebuild
.IP \(bu 2
npm help 7 scripts
.IP \(bu 2
npm help build
.IP \(bu 2
npm help config
.IP \(bu 2
npm help 7 config
.IP \(bu 2
npm help 5 npmrc
.IP \(bu 2
npm help 7 registry
.IP \(bu 2
npm help tag
.IP \(bu 2
npm help rm
.IP \(bu 2
npm help shrinkwrap
.RE