I'm trying to learn node and npm, using express for a little project.
When i install it, i got
npm WARN deprecated core-js#2.6.10: core-js#<3.0 is no longer maintained and not recommended for usage due to the number of issues. Please, upgrade your dependencies to the actual version of core-js#3.
I understood that if everything works, it's not necessary to update everything, but i'm trying to learn and go the extra, unnecessary, mile.
How can i update only core-js?
npm install core-js#^3
will update it adding it to the dependencies in package.json.
Is this the right way to do it?
Or it's better to update the parent package that use it? If so, how can i understand which is the package that need an update and how to update it?
Or is there a way to update only the modules listed in package-lock.json.
Thanks.
You provided one way to update a package. However, there are a few more.
To update a global package, you could run:
npm update -g <package_name>
To update a package that's in your package.json (i.e., local to your project), run:
npm update <package_name>
You could also see what outdated package are there as follows:
npm outdated
You could again add -g option to check outdated global packages.
Sources: https://docs.npmjs.com/updating-packages-downloaded-from-the-registry
Also: man npm may help (in Linux).
To update to a new major version all the packages, install the npm-check-updates package globally:
npm install -g npm-check-updates
this will upgrade all the version hints in the package.json file, to dependencies and devDependencies, so npm can install the new major version.
You are now ready to run the update:
npm update
or npm install
My package depends on PackageA. PackageA depends on PackageB_Version2. I now need to install PackageC which depends on PackageB. How can I force npm to install that PackageC which is compatible with existing version of PackageB (i.e., PackageB_Version2)?
NPM will install a version specific packaging you tell it the version #. From the docs:
npm install [<#scope>/]<name>#<version>
npm install [<#scope>/]<name>#<version range>
So once you determine the version numbers and dependencies install with save to package.json and you will have your version dependencies saved until you update them.
I want to install a specific version of npm (1.3.11). How can I do this? Is this even possible?
The npm docs explain how to install the latest version, but not a specific version.
You can suffix any NPM package with a specific version, including npm itself:
npm install npm#1.3.11 [-g]
(if you use -g, you will overwrite your currently installed version, which may or may not be your intention so be careful)
We need to integrate Karma test runner into TeamCity and for that I'd like to give sys-engineers small script (powershell or whatever) that would:
pick up desired version number from some config file (I guess I can put it as a comment right in the karma.conf.js)
check if the defined version of karma runner installed in npm's global repo
if it's not, or the installed version is older than desired: pick up and install right version
run it: karma start .\Scripts-Tests\karma.conf.js --reporters teamcity --single-run
So my real question is: "how can one check in a script, if desired version of package installed?". Should you do the check, or it's safe to just call npm -g install everytime?
I don't want to always check and install the latest available version, because other config values may become incompatible
To check if any module in a project is 'old':
npm outdated
'outdated' will check every module defined in package.json and see if there is a newer version in the NPM registry.
For example, say xml2js 0.2.6 (located in node_modules in the current project) is outdated because a newer version exists (0.2.7). You would see:
xml2js#0.2.7 node_modules/xml2js current=0.2.6
To update all dependencies, if you are confident this is desirable:
npm update
Or, to update a single dependency such as xml2js:
npm update xml2js
To update package.json version numbers, append the --save flag:
npm update --save
npm outdated will identify packages that should be updated, and npm update <package name> can be used to update each package. But prior to npm#5.0.0, npm update <package name> will not update the versions in your package.json which is an issue.
The best workflow is to:
Identify out of date packages with npm outdated
Update the versions in your package.json
Run npm update to install the latest versions of each package
Check out npm-check-updates to help with this workflow.
Install npm-check-updates with npm i npm-check-updates -g
Run npm-check-updates to list what packages are out of date (basically the same thing as running npm outdated)
Run npm-check-updates -u to update all the versions in your package.json (this is the magic sauce)
Run npm update as usual to install the new versions of your packages based on the updated package.json
There is also a "fresh" module called npm-check:
npm-check
Check for outdated, incorrect, and unused dependencies.
It also provides a convenient interactive way to update the dependencies with npm-check -u.
One easy step:
$ npm i -g npm-check-updates && ncu -u && npm i
That is all. All of the package versions in package.json will be the latest major versions.
Edit:
What is happening here?
Installing a package that checks updates for you.
Use this package to update all package versions in your package.json (-u is short for --updateAll).
Install all of the new versions of the packages.
To update a single local package:
First find out your outdated packages by:
npm outdated
Then update the package or packages that you want manually as:
npm update --save <package_name>
This way it is not necessary to update your local package.json
file manually.
Note that the above command will update your package to the latest version.
If you write some version in your package.json file and do:
npm update <package_name>
In this case you will get just the next stable version (wanted) regarding the version that you wrote in your package.json file.
And with npm list <package_name> you can find out the current version of your local package.
You can try either of these options:
Check outdated packages
npm outdated
Check and pick packages to update
npx npm-check -u
No additional packages, to just check outdated and update those which are, this command will do:
npm install $(npm outdated | cut -d' ' -f 1 | sed '1d' | xargs -I '$' echo '$#latest' | xargs echo)
NPM commands to update or fix vulnerabilities in some dependency manifest files
Use below command to check outdated or vulnerabilities in your node modules.
npm audit
If any vulnerabilities found, use below command to fix all issues.
npm audit fix
If it doesn't work for you then try
npm audit fix -f, this command will almost fix all vulnerabilities. Some dependencies or devDependencies are locked in package-lock.json file, so we use -f flag to force update them.
If you don't want to use force audit fix then you can manually fix your dependencies versions by changing them in package-lock.json and package.json file. Then run
npm update && npm upgrade
When installing npm packages (both globally or locally) you can define a specific version by using the #version syntax to define a version to be installed.
In other words, doing:
npm install -g karma#0.9.2
will ensure that only 0.9.2 is installed and won't reinstall if it already exists.
As a word of a advice, I would suggest avoiding global npm installs wherever you can. Many people don't realize that if a dependency defines a bin file, it gets installed to ./node_modules/.bin/. Often, its very easy to use that local version of an installed module that is defined in your package.json. In fact, npm scripts will add the ./node_modules/.bin onto your path.
As an example, here is a package.json that, when I run npm install && npm test will install the version of karma defined in my package.json, and use that version of karma (installed at node_modules/.bin/karma) when running the test script:
{
"name": "myApp",
"main": "app.js",
"scripts": {
"test": "karma test/*",
},
"dependencies": {...},
"devDependencies": {
"karma": "0.9.2"
}
}
This gives you the benefit of your package.json defining the version of karma to use and not having to keep that config globally on your CI box.
As of npm#5.0.0+ you can simply do:
npm update <package name>
This will automatically update the package.json file. We don't have to update the latest version manually and then use npm update <package name>
You can still get the old behavior using
npm update --no-save
(Reference)
A different approach would be to first uprade the package.json file using,
ncu -u
and then simply run,
npm install
to update all the packages to the latest version.
ps: It will update all the packages to the latest version however if the package is already up to date that package will not be affected at all.
3 simple steps you can use for update all outdated packages
First, check the packages which are outdated
sudo npm i -g npm-check-updates
Second, put all of them in ready
ncu -u
Results in Terminal will be like this:
Third, just update all of them.
npm install
That's it.
Just do this to update everything to the latest version -
npx npm-check-updates -u
Note - You'll be prompted to install npm-check-updates. Press y and enter.
Now run npm i. You're good to go.
To really update just one package install NCU and then run it just for that package. This will bump to the real latest.
npm install -g npm-check-updates
ncu -f your-intended-package-name -u
You can do this completely automatically in 2022
Install npm-check-updates
Run the command
ncu --doctor -u
It will first try every dependency you have and run tests, if the tests fail it will update each dependency one by one and run tests after each update
One more for bash:
npm outdated -parseable|cut -d: -f5|xargs -L1 npm i
I'm just interested in updating the outdated packages using the semantic versioning rules in my package.json.
Here's a one-liner that takes care of that
npm update `npm outdated | awk '{print $1}' | tr '\n' ' '`
What it does:
takes the output from npm outdated and
pipes that into awk where we're grabbing just the name of the package (in column 1)
then we're using tr to convert newline characters into spaces
finally -- using backticks -- we're using the output of the preceding steps as arguments to npm update so we get all our needed updates in one shot.
One would think that there's a way to do this using npm alone, but it wasn't here when I looked, so I'm just dropping this here in case it's helpful to anyone 😀.
** I believe there's an answer that MikeMajara provides here that does something similar, but it's appending #latest to the updated package name, which I'm not really interested in as a part of my regularly scheduled updates.
If you want to upgrade a package to the latest release, (major, minor and patch), append the #latest keyword to the end of the package name, ex:
npm i express-mongo-sanitize#latest
this will update express-mongo-sanitize from version 1.2.1 for example to version 2.2.0.
If you want to know which packages are outdated and which can be updated, use the npm outdated command
ex:
$ npm outdated
Package Current Wanted Latest Location Depended by
express-rate-limit 3.5.3 3.5.3 6.4.0 node_modules/express-rate-limit apiv2
helmet 3.23.3 3.23.3 5.1.0 node_modules/helmet apiv2
request-ip 2.2.0 2.2.0 3.3.0 node_modules/request-ip apiv2
validator 10.11.0 10.11.0 13.7.0 node_modules/validator apiv2
If you have multiple projects with the same node-modules content, pnpm is recommended. This will prevent the modules from being downloaded in each project. After the installation the answer to your question is:
pnpm up
Say you want to install a library lib-a which has dependencies dep-1 and dep-2. If lib-a has declared in its package.json to use a version of dep-2 that is out of date (say it doesn't work on node 0.8.0 which just came out), but there is a branch of dep-2 that works with node 0.8.0 - branch name node0.8.0.
So the packages in the equation are:
git://github.com/user-a/lib-a
git://github.com/user-b/dep-1
git://github.com/user-c/dep-2
git://github.com/user-c/dep-2#node0.8.0
Is there a way to tell NPM to install lib-a, but use dep-2#node0.8.0 instead of dep-2?
With NPM you can install a specific branch of a project like this:
npm install git://github.com/user-c/dep-2#node0.8.0
And if I were to customize the package.json of lib-a, you could tell it to use dep-2#node0.8.0 like this:
{
"name": "lib-a",
"dependencies": {
"dep-1": ">= 1.5.0",
"dep-2": "git://github.com/user-c/dep-2#node0.8.0"
}
}
By modifying the package.json you can then run
npm install lib-a
and it will install the node 0.8.0 compatible dep-2 branch. But, that requires I have access to modifying lib-a, which for my specific case I don't. Technically, I could fork lib-a and make the above change to package.json. But in my specific case, lib-a is a dependency of another library, so I'd have to fork the project it's referenced in, and on and on...
So the question is, is there a way to tell NPM to install lib-a, and tell it to use the node0.8.0 branch of dep-2? Something like this:
npm install lib-a --overrides dep-2:git://github.com/user-c/dep-2#node0.8.0
That would be awesome. If it's not possible, that would be good to know so I can prepare myself to have to fork/customize the chain of projects.
NPM install syntax:
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)
so you can choose one of these methods to install your modules.
The case of the simplest way to install a specific version is this one:
npm install module#0.0.2
more info:
https://docs.npmjs.com/cli/install