table of contents
| NPX(1) | General Commands Manual | NPX(1) |
NAME¶
npx
Synopsis¶
<!-- AUTOGENERATED USAGE DESCRIPTIONS -->
Description¶
This command allows you to run an arbitrary command from an npm package (either one installed locally, or fetched remotely), in a similar context as running it via npm run.
Run this command to execute a package's binary. Any options and arguments after the package name are passed directly to the executed command, not to npx itself. For example, npx create-react-app my-app --template typescript will pass my-app and --template typescript to the create-react-app command. To see what options a specific package accepts, consult that package's documentation (e.g., at npmjs.com or in its repository).
Whatever packages are specified by the --package option
will be provided in the PATH of the executed command, along with any
locally installed package executables.
The --package option may be specified multiple times, to execute the
supplied command in an environment where all specified packages are
available.
If any requested packages are not present in the local project
dependencies, then they are installed to a folder in the npm cache, which is
added to the PATH environment variable in the executed process.
A prompt is printed (which can be suppressed by providing either --yes
or --no).
Package names provided without a specifier will be matched with
whatever version exists in the local project.
Package names with a specifier will only be considered a match if they have
the exact same name and version as the local dependency.
If no -c or --call option is provided, then the
positional arguments are used to generate the command string.
If no --package options are provided, then npm will attempt to
determine the executable name from the package specifier provided as the
first positional argument according to the following heuristic:
- If the package has a single entry in its bin field in package.json, or if all entries are aliases of the same command, then that command will be used.
- If the package has multiple bin entries, and one of them matches the unscoped portion of the name field, then that command will be used.
- If this does not result in exactly one option (either because there are no
bin entries, or none of them match the name of the package), then
npm exec exits with an error.
To run a binary other than the named binary, specify one or
more
--package options, which will prevent npm from inferring the package
from the first command argument.
npx vs npm exec¶
When run via the npx binary, all flags and options
must be set prior to any positional arguments.
When run via npm exec, a double-hyphen -- flag can be used to
suppress npm's parsing of switches and options that should be sent to the
executed command.
For example:
$ npx foo@latest bar --package=@npmcli/foo
In this case, npm will resolve the foo package name, and run the following command:
$ foo bar --package=@npmcli/foo
Since the --package option comes after the positional arguments, it is treated as an argument to the executed command.
In contrast, due to npm's argument parsing logic, running this command is different:
$ npm exec foo@latest bar --package=@npmcli/foo
In this case, npm will parse the --package option first,
resolving the
@npmcli/foo package.
Then, it will execute the following command in that context:
$ foo@latest bar
The double-hyphen character is recommended to explicitly tell npm
to stop parsing command line options and switches.
The following command would thus be equivalent to the npx command
above:
$ npm exec -- foo@latest bar --package=@npmcli/foo
Examples¶
Run the version of tap in the local dependencies, with the provided arguments:
$ npm exec -- tap --bail test/foo.js $ npx tap --bail test/foo.js
Run a command other than the command whose name matches the package name by specifying a --package option:
$ npm exec --package=foo -- bar --bar-argument # ~ or ~ $ npx --package=foo bar --bar-argument
Run an arbitrary shell script, in the context of the current project:
$ npm x -c 'eslint && say "hooray, lint passed"' $ npx -c 'eslint && say "hooray, lint passed"'
Compatibility with Older npx Versions¶
The npx binary was rewritten in npm v7.0.0, and the
standalone npx package deprecated at that time.
npx uses the npm exec command instead of a separate argument
parser and install process, with some affordances to maintain backwards
compatibility with the arguments it accepted in previous versions.
This resulted in some shifts in its functionality:
- Any npm config value may be provided.
- To prevent security and user-experience problems from mistyping package
names, npx prompts before installing anything.
Suppress this prompt with the -y or --yes option. - The --no-install option is deprecated, and will be converted to --no.
- Shell fallback functionality is removed, as it is not advisable.
- The -p argument is a shorthand for --parseable in npm, but
shorthand for --package in npx.
This is maintained, but only for the npx executable. - The --ignore-existing option is removed.
Locally installed bins are always present in the executed process PATH. - The --npm option is removed.
npx will always use the npm it ships with. - The --node-arg and -n options have been removed.
Use NODE_OPTIONS instead: e.g.,
NODE_OPTIONS="--trace-warnings --trace-exit" npx foo --random=true - The --always-spawn option is redundant, and thus removed.
- The --shell option is replaced with --script-shell, but maintained in the npx executable for backwards compatibility.
See Also¶
- npm run
- npm scripts
- npm test
- npm start
- npm restart
- npm stop
- npm config
- npm exec
| April 2026 | 11.12.1 |