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NPM-OUTDATED(1) General Commands Manual NPM-OUTDATED(1)

NAME

npm-outdated

Synopsis

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Description

This command will check the registry to see if any (or, specific) installed
packages are currently outdated.

By default, only the direct dependencies of the root project and direct
dependencies of your configured workspaces are shown.
Use --all to find all outdated meta-dependencies as well.

In the output:

  • wanted is the maximum version of the package that satisfies the semver
    range specified in package.json. If there's no available semver range
    (i.e. you're running npm outdated --global, or the package isn't
    included in package.json), then wanted shows the currently-installed
    version.
  • latest is the version of the package tagged as latest in the registry.
    Running npm publish with no special configuration will publish the
    package with a dist-tag of latest. This may or may not be the maximum
    version of the package, or the most-recently published version of the
    package, depending on how the package's developer manages the latest
    dist-tag.
  • location is where in the physical tree the package is located.
  • depended by shows which package depends on the displayed dependency
  • package type (when using --long / -l) tells you whether this
    package is a dependency or a dev/peer/optional dependency. Packages not
    included in package.json are always marked dependencies.
  • homepage (when using --long / -l) is the homepage value contained
    in the package's packument
  • Red means there's a newer version matching your semver requirements, so
    you should update now.
  • Yellow indicates that there's a newer version above your semver
    requirements (usually new major, or new 0.x minor) so proceed with
    caution.

An example

$ npm outdated
Package      Current   Wanted   Latest  Location                  Depended by
glob          5.0.15   5.0.15    6.0.1  node_modules/glob         dependent-package-name
nothingness    0.0.3      git      git  node_modules/nothingness  dependent-package-name
npm            3.5.1    3.5.2    3.5.1  node_modules/npm          dependent-package-name
local-dev      0.0.3   linked   linked  local-dev                 dependent-package-name
once           1.3.2    1.3.3    1.3.3  node_modules/once         dependent-package-name

With these dependencies:

{

"glob": "^5.0.15",
"nothingness": "github:othiym23/nothingness#master",
"npm": "^3.5.1",
"once": "^1.3.1" }

A few things to note:

  • glob requires ^5, which prevents npm from installing glob@6, which
    is outside the semver range.
  • Git dependencies will always be reinstalled, because of how they're
    specified. The installed committish might satisfy the dependency
    specifier (if it's something immutable, like a commit SHA), or it might
    not, so npm outdated and npm update have to fetch Git repos to check.
    This is why currently doing a reinstall of a Git dependency always forces
    a new clone and install.
  • npm@3.5.2 is marked as "wanted", but "latest" is npm@3.5.1 because
    npm uses dist-tags to manage its latest and next release channels.
    npm update will install the newest version, but npm install npm
    (with no semver range) will install whatever's tagged as latest.
  • once is just plain out of date. Reinstalling node_modules from
    scratch or running npm update will bring it up to spec.

Configuration

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See Also

  • package spec
  • npm update
  • npm dist-tag
  • npm registry
  • npm folders
  • npm workspaces

November 2022 9.1.1