Rebecca Turner
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9 years ago | |
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test | 9 years ago | |
.npmignore | 9 years ago | |
.travis.yml | 9 years ago | |
LICENSE | 10 years ago | |
README.md | 9 years ago | |
npa.js | 9 years ago | |
package.json | 9 years ago |
README.md
npm-package-arg
Parse package name and specifier passed to commands like npm install
or
npm cache add
. This just parses the text given-- it's worth noting that
npm
has further logic it applies by looking at your disk to figure out
what ambiguous specifiers are. If you want that logic, please see
realize-package-specifier.
Arguments look like: foo@1.2
, @bar/foo@1.2
, foo@user/foo
, http://x.com/foo.tgz
,
git+https://github.com/user/foo
, bitbucket:user/foo
, foo.tar.gz
or bar
EXAMPLES
var assert = require("assert")
var npa = require("npm-package-arg")
// Pass in the descriptor, and it'll return an object
var parsed = npa("@bar/foo@1.2")
// Returns an object like:
{
raw: '@bar/foo@1.2', // what was passed in
name: '@bar/foo', // the name of the package
escapedName: '@bar%2ffoo', // the escaped name, for making requests against a registry
scope: '@bar', // the scope of the package, or null
type: 'range', // the type of specifier this is
spec: '>=1.2.0 <1.3.0', // the expanded specifier
rawSpec: '1.2' // the specifier as passed in
}
// Parsing urls pointing at hosted git services produces a variation:
var parsed = npa("git+https://github.com/user/foo")
// Returns an object like:
{
raw: 'git+https://github.com/user/foo',
scope: null,
name: null,
escapedName: null,
rawSpec: 'git+https://github.com/user/foo',
spec: 'user/foo',
type: 'hosted',
hosted: {
type: 'github',
ssh: 'git@github.com:user/foo.git',
sshurl: 'git+ssh://git@github.com/user/foo.git',
https: 'https://github.com/user/foo.git',
directUrl: 'https://raw.githubusercontent.com/user/foo/master/package.json'
}
}
// Completely unreasonable invalid garbage throws an error
// Make sure you wrap this in a try/catch if you have not
// already sanitized the inputs!
assert.throws(function() {
npa("this is not \0 a valid package name or url")
})
USING
var npa = require('npm-package-arg')
- var result = npa(arg)
Parses arg and returns a result object detailing what arg is.
arg -- a package descriptor, like: foo@1.2
, or foo@user/foo
, or
http://x.com/foo.tgz
, or git+https://github.com/user/foo
RESULT OBJECT
The objects that are returned by npm-package-arg contain the following keys:
name
- If known, thename
field expected in the resulting pkg.type
- One of the following strings:git
- A git repohosted
- A hosted project, from github, bitbucket or gitlab. Originally either a full url pointing at one of these services or a shorthand likeuser/project
orgithub:user/project
for github orbitbucket:user/project
for bitbucket.tag
- A tagged version, like"foo@latest"
version
- A specific version number, like"foo@1.2.3"
range
- A version range, like"foo@2.x"
local
- A local file or folder pathremote
- An http url (presumably to a tgz)
spec
- The "thing". URL, the range, git repo, etc.hosted
- If type=hosted this will be an object with the following keys:type
- github, bitbucket or gitlabssh
- The ssh path for this git reposshUrl
- The ssh URL for this git repohttpsUrl
- The HTTPS URL for this git repodirectUrl
- The URL for the package.json in this git repo
raw
- The original un-modified string that was provided.rawSpec
- The part after thename@...
, as it was originally provided.scope
- If a name is something like@org/module
then thescope
field will be set to@org
. If it doesn't have a scoped name, then scope isnull
.escapedName
- A version ofname
escaped to match the npm scoped packages specification. Mostly used when making requests against a registry. Whenname
isnull
,escapedName
will also benull
.
If you only include a name and no specifier part, eg, foo
or foo@
then
a default of latest
will be used (as of 4.1.0). This is contrast with
previous behavior where *
was used.