table of contents
other versions
- buster 5.8.0+ds6-4+deb10u2
- buster-backports 7.4.0+ds-1~bpo10+2
- testing 7.5.2+ds-2
- unstable 7.5.2+ds-2
- experimental 7.6.3+ds-1
NPM-CI(1) | NPM-CI(1) |
NAME¶
npm-ci - Install a project with a clean slateSYNOPSIS¶
npm ci
EXAMPLE¶
Make sure you have a package-lock and an up-to-date install:$ cd ./my/npm/project $ npm install added 154 packages in 10s $ ls | grep package-lock
Run npm ci in that project
$ npm ci added 154 packages in 5s
Configure Travis to build using npm ci instead of npm install:
# .travis.yml install: - npm ci # keep the npm cache around to speed up installs cache: directories: - "$HOME/.npm"
DESCRIPTION¶
This command is similar to npm help npm-install, except it's meant to be used in automated environments such as test platforms, continuous integration, and deployment. It can be significantly faster than a regular npm install by skipping certain user-oriented features. It is also more strict than a regular install, which can help catch errors or inconsistencies caused by the incrementally-installed local environments of most npm users.In short, the main differences between using npm install and npm ci are:
- The project must have an existing package-lock.json or npm-shrinkwrap.json.
- If dependencies in the package lock do not match those in package.json, npm ci will exit with an error, instead of updating the package lock.
- npm ci can only install entire projects at a time: individual dependencies cannot be added with this command.
- If a node_modules is already present, it will be automatically removed before npm ci begins its install.
- It will never write to package.json or any of the package-locks: installs are essentially frozen.
SEE ALSO¶
- npm help install
- npm help 5 package-locks
December 2019 |