• Stars
    star
    7,529
  • Rank 5,116 (Top 0.2 %)
  • Language
    JavaScript
  • License
    MIT License
  • Created over 9 years ago
  • Updated 3 months ago

Reviews

There are no reviews yet. Be the first to send feedback to the community and the maintainers!

Repository Details

A better `npm publish`

np XO code style

A better npm publish



Why

  • Interactive UI
  • Ensures you are publishing from your release branch (main and master by default)
  • Ensures the working directory is clean and that there are no unpulled changes
  • Reinstalls dependencies to ensure your project works with the latest dependency tree
  • Ensures your Node.js and npm versions are supported by the project and its dependencies
  • Runs the tests
  • Bumps the version in package.json and npm-shrinkwrap.json (if present) and creates a git tag
  • Prevents accidental publishing of pre-release versions under the latest dist-tag
  • Publishes the new version to npm, optionally under a dist-tag
  • Rolls back the project to its previous state in case publishing fails
  • Pushes commits and tags (newly & previously created) to GitHub/GitLab
  • Supports two-factor authentication
  • Enables two-factor authentication on new repositories
    (does not apply to external registries)
  • Opens a prefilled GitHub Releases draft after publish
  • Warns about the possibility of extraneous files being published
  • See exactly what will be executed with preview mode, without pushing or publishing anything remotely
  • Supports GitHub Packages

Why not

Prerequisite

  • Node.js 16 or later
  • npm 7.19.0 or later
  • Git 2.11 or later

Install

npm install --global np

Usage

$ np --help

  Usage
    $ np <version>

    Version can be:
      patch | minor | major | prepatch | preminor | premajor | prerelease | 1.2.3

  Options
    --any-branch            Allow publishing from any branch
    --branch                Name of the release branch (default: main | master)
    --no-cleanup            Skips cleanup of node_modules
    --no-tests              Skips tests
    --yolo                  Skips cleanup and testing
    --no-publish            Skips publishing
    --preview               Show tasks without actually executing them
    --tag                   Publish under a given dist-tag
    --no-yarn               Don't use Yarn
    --contents              Subdirectory to publish
    --no-release-draft      Skips opening a GitHub release draft
    --release-draft-only    Only opens a GitHub release draft
    --test-script           Name of npm run script to run tests before publishing (default: test)
    --no-2fa                Don't enable 2FA on new packages (not recommended)
    --message               Version bump commit message. `%s` will be replaced with version. (default: '%s' with npm and 'v%s' with yarn)

  Examples
    $ np
    $ np patch
    $ np 1.0.2
    $ np 1.0.2-beta.3 --tag=beta
    $ np 1.0.2-beta.3 --tag=beta --contents=dist

Interactive UI

Run np without arguments to launch the interactive UI that guides you through publishing a new version.

Config

np can be configured both globally and locally. When using the global np binary, you can configure any of the CLI flags in either a .np-config.js (as CJS), .np-config.cjs, .np-config.mjs, or .np-config.json file in the home directory. When using the local np binary, for example, in a npm run script, you can configure np by setting the flags in either a top-level np field in package.json or in one of the aforementioned file types in the project directory. If it exists, the local installation will always take precedence. This ensures any local config matches the version of np it was designed for.

Currently, these are the flags you can configure:

  • anyBranch - Allow publishing from any branch (false by default).
  • branch - Name of the release branch (master by default).
  • cleanup - Cleanup node_modules (true by default).
  • tests - Run npm test (true by default).
  • yolo - Skip cleanup and testing (false by default).
  • publish - Publish (true by default).
  • preview - Show tasks without actually executing them (false by default).
  • tag - Publish under a given dist-tag (latest by default).
  • yarn - Use yarn if possible (true by default).
  • contents - Subdirectory to publish (. by default).
  • releaseDraft - Open a GitHub release draft after releasing (true by default).
  • testScript - Name of npm run script to run tests before publishing (test by default).
  • 2fa - Enable 2FA on new packages (true by default) (setting this to false is not recommended).
  • message - The commit message used for the version bump. Any %s in the string will be replaced with the new version. By default, npm uses %s and Yarn uses v%s.

For example, this configures np to never use Yarn and to use dist as the subdirectory to publish:

package.json

{
	"name": "superb-package",
	"np": {
		"yarn": false,
		"contents": "dist"
	}
}

.np-config.json

{
	"yarn": false,
	"contents": "dist"
}

.np-config.js or .np-config.cjs

module.exports = {
	yarn: false,
	contents: 'dist'
};

.np-config.mjs

export default {
	yarn: false,
	contents: 'dist'
};

Note: The global config only applies when using the global np binary, and is never inherited when using a local binary.

Tips

npm hooks

You can use any of the test/version/publish related npm lifecycle hooks in your package.json to add extra behavior.

For example, here we build the documentation before tagging the release:

{
	"name": "my-awesome-package",
	"scripts": {
		"version": "./build-docs && git add docs"
	}
}

Release script

You can also add np to a custom script in package.json. This can be useful if you want all maintainers of a package to release the same way (Not forgetting to push Git tags, for example). However, you can't use publish as name of your script because it's an npm defined lifecycle hook.

{
	"name": "my-awesome-package",
	"scripts": {
		"release": "np"
	},
	"devDependencies": {
		"np": "*"
	}
}

User-defined tests

If you want to run a user-defined test script before publishing instead of the normal npm test or yarn test, you can use --test-script flag or the testScript config. This can be useful when your normal test script is running with a --watch flag or in case you want to run some specific tests (maybe on the packaged files) before publishing.

For example, np --test-script=publish-test would run the publish-test script instead of the default test.

{
	"name": "my-awesome-package",
	"scripts": {
		"test": "ava --watch",
		"publish-test": "ava"
	},
	"devDependencies": {
		"np": "*"
	}
}

Signed Git tag

Set the sign-git-tag npm config to have the Git tag signed:

$ npm config set sign-git-tag true

Or set the version-sign-git-tag Yarn config:

$ yarn config set version-sign-git-tag true

Private packages

You can use np for packages that aren't publicly published to npm (perhaps installed from a private git repo).

Set "private": true in your package.json and the publishing step will be skipped. All other steps including versioning and pushing tags will still be completed.

Public scoped packages

To publish scoped packages to the public registry, you need to set the access level to public. You can do that by adding the following to your package.json:

"publishConfig": {
	"access": "public"
}

If publishing a scoped package for the first time, np will prompt you to ask if you want to publish it publicly.

Private Org-scoped packages

To publish a private Org-scoped package, you need to set the access level to restricted. You can do that by adding the following to your package.json:

"publishConfig": {
	"access": "restricted"
}

Publish to a custom registry

Set the registry option in package.json to the URL of your registry:

"publishConfig": {
	"registry": "https://my-internal-registry.local"
}

Publish with a CI

If you use a Continuous Integration server to publish your tagged commits, use the --no-publish flag to skip the publishing step of np.

Publish to gh-pages

To publish to gh-pages (or any other branch that serves your static assets), install branchsite, an np-like CLI tool aimed to complement np, and create an npm "post" hook that runs after np.

$ npm install --save-dev branchsite
"scripts": {
	"deploy": "np",
	"postdeploy": "bs"
}

Initial version

For new packages, start the version field in package.json at 0.0.0 and let np bump it to 1.0.0 or 0.1.0 when publishing.

Release an update to an old major version

To release a minor/patch version for an old major version, create a branch from the major version's git tag and run np:

$ git checkout -b fix-old-bug v1.0.0 # Where 1.0.0 is the previous major version
# Create some commits…
$ git push --set-upstream origin HEAD
$ np patch --any-branch --tag=v1

The prerequisite step runs forever on macOS

If you're using macOS Sierra 10.12.2 or later, your SSH key passphrase is no longer stored into the keychain by default. This may cause the prerequisite step to run forever because it prompts for your passphrase in the background. To fix this, add the following lines to your ~/.ssh/config and run a simple Git command like git fetch.

Host *
 AddKeysToAgent yes
 UseKeychain yes

If you're running into other issues when using SSH, please consult GitHub's support article.

Ignore strategy

The ignore strategy, either maintained in the files-property in package.json or in .npmignore, is meant to help reduce the package size. To avoid broken packages caused by essential files being accidentally ignored, np prints out all the new and unpublished files added to Git. Test files and other common files that are never published are not considered. np assumes either a standard directory layout or a customized layout represented in the directories property in package.json.

FAQ

I get an error when publishing my package through Yarn

If you get an error like this…

❯ Prerequisite check
✔ Ping npm registry
✔ Check npm version
✔ Check yarn version
✖ Verify user is authenticated

npm ERR! code E403
npm ERR! 403 Forbidden - GET https://registry.yarnpkg.com/-/package/my-awesome-package/collaborators?format=cli - Forbidden

…please check whether the command npm access ls-collaborators my-awesome-package succeeds. If it doesn't, Yarn has overwritten your registry URL. To fix this, add the correct registry URL to package.json:

"publishConfig": {
	"registry": "https://registry.npmjs.org"
}

Maintainers

More Repositories

1

awesome

😎 Awesome lists about all kinds of interesting topics
270,042
star
2

awesome-nodejs

⚡ Delightful Node.js packages and resources
52,854
star
3

awesome-electron

Useful resources for creating apps with Electron
25,634
star
4

quick-look-plugins

List of useful Quick Look plugins for developers
17,497
star
5

got

🌐 Human-friendly and powerful HTTP request library for Node.js
TypeScript
14,218
star
6

type-fest

A collection of essential TypeScript types
TypeScript
14,015
star
7

ky

🌳 Tiny & elegant JavaScript HTTP client based on the Fetch API
TypeScript
13,762
star
8

pure

Pretty, minimal and fast ZSH prompt
Shell
12,391
star
9

pageres

Capture website screenshots
TypeScript
9,573
star
10

ora

Elegant terminal spinner
JavaScript
8,591
star
11

github-markdown-css

The minimal amount of CSS to replicate the GitHub Markdown style
CSS
7,421
star
12

caprine

Elegant Facebook Messenger desktop app
TypeScript
7,014
star
13

screenfull

Simple wrapper for cross-browser usage of the JavaScript Fullscreen API
HTML
6,891
star
14

Gifski

🌈 Convert videos to high-quality GIFs on your Mac
Swift
6,807
star
15

fkill-cli

Fabulously kill processes. Cross-platform.
JavaScript
6,782
star
16

query-string

Parse and stringify URL query strings
JavaScript
6,453
star
17

execa

Process execution for humans
JavaScript
6,019
star
18

modern-normalize

🐒 Normalize browsers' default style
TypeScript
5,038
star
19

css-in-readme-like-wat

Style your readme using CSS with this simple trick
5,013
star
20

awesome-npm

Awesome npm resources and tips
4,315
star
21

promise-fun

Promise packages, patterns, chat, and tutorials
4,277
star
22

awesome-scifi

Sci-Fi worth consuming
4,268
star
23

electron-store

Simple data persistence for your Electron app or module - Save and load user preferences, app state, cache, etc
JavaScript
4,165
star
24

create-dmg

Create a good-looking DMG for your macOS app in seconds
JavaScript
3,950
star
25

speed-test

Test your internet connection speed and ping using speedtest.net from the CLI
JavaScript
3,882
star
26

eslint-plugin-unicorn

More than 100 powerful ESLint rules
JavaScript
3,877
star
27

ow

Function argument validation for humans
TypeScript
3,799
star
28

file-type

Detect the file type of a file, stream, or data
JavaScript
3,632
star
29

meow

🐈 CLI app helper
JavaScript
3,305
star
30

p-queue

Promise queue with concurrency control
TypeScript
3,202
star
31

open

Open stuff like URLs, files, executables. Cross-platform.
JavaScript
2,976
star
32

Plash

💦 Make any website your Mac desktop wallpaper
Swift
2,735
star
33

alfy

Create Alfred workflows with ease
JavaScript
2,570
star
34

trash

Move files and directories to the trash
JavaScript
2,512
star
35

fast-cli

Test your download and upload speed using fast.com
JavaScript
2,484
star
36

guides

A collection of succinct guides - Public Domain
2,424
star
37

globby

User-friendly glob matching
JavaScript
2,376
star
38

slugify

Slugify a string
JavaScript
2,357
star
39

emoj

Find relevant emoji from text on the command-line 😮 ✨ 🙌 🐴 💥 🙈
JavaScript
2,311
star
40

cli-spinners

Spinners for use in the terminal
JavaScript
2,255
star
41

on-change

Watch an object or array for changes
JavaScript
1,966
star
42

devtools-detect

Detect if DevTools is open and its orientation
HTML
1,924
star
43

gulp-imagemin

Minify PNG, JPEG, GIF and SVG images
JavaScript
1,903
star
44

touch-bar-simulator

Use the Touch Bar on any Mac
Swift
1,900
star
45

notifier-for-github

Browser extension - Get notified about new GitHub notifications
JavaScript
1,828
star
46

editorconfig-sublime

Sublime Text plugin for EditorConfig - Helps developers maintain consistent coding styles between different editors
Python
1,757
star
47

emittery

Simple and modern async event emitter
JavaScript
1,721
star
48

is

Type check values
TypeScript
1,678
star
49

capture-website

Capture screenshots of websites
JavaScript
1,670
star
50

Defaults

💾 Swifty and modern UserDefaults
Swift
1,661
star
51

electron-boilerplate

Boilerplate to kickstart creating an app with Electron
JavaScript
1,632
star
52

pageres-cli

Capture website screenshots
JavaScript
1,620
star
53

clipboardy

Access the system clipboard (copy/paste)
JavaScript
1,598
star
54

gulp-rev

Static asset revisioning by appending content hash to filenames: `unicorn.css` → `unicorn-d41d8cd98f.css`
JavaScript
1,538
star
55

pify

Promisify a callback-style function
JavaScript
1,494
star
56

boxen

Create boxes in the terminal
JavaScript
1,467
star
57

Actions

⚙️ Supercharge your shortcuts
Swift
1,437
star
58

multiline

Multiline strings in JavaScript
JavaScript
1,424
star
59

hyper-snazzy

Elegant Hyper theme with bright colors
JavaScript
1,412
star
60

amas

Awesome & Marvelous Amas
1,392
star
61

LaunchAtLogin

Add “Launch at Login” functionality to your macOS app in seconds
Swift
1,346
star
62

del

Delete files and directories
JavaScript
1,316
star
63

refined-twitter

Browser extension that simplifies the Twitter interface and adds useful features
JavaScript
1,313
star
64

KeyboardShortcuts

⌨️ Add user-customizable global keyboard shortcuts (hotkeys) to your macOS app in minutes
Swift
1,313
star
65

iterm2-snazzy

Elegant iTerm2 theme with bright colors
1,313
star
66

electron-context-menu

Context menu for your Electron app
JavaScript
1,297
star
67

p-limit

Run multiple promise-returning & async functions with limited concurrency
JavaScript
1,294
star
68

Settings

⚙ Add a settings window to your macOS app in minutes
Swift
1,282
star
69

trash-cli

Move files and folders to the trash
JavaScript
1,244
star
70

electron-util

Useful utilities for Electron apps and modules
JavaScript
1,188
star
71

is-online

Check if the internet connection is up
JavaScript
1,181
star
72

ponyfill

🦄 Like polyfill but with pony pureness
1,136
star
73

conf

Simple config handling for your app or module
TypeScript
1,109
star
74

anatine

[DEPRECATED] 🐦 Pristine Twitter app
JavaScript
1,097
star
75

electron-dl

Simplified file downloads for your Electron app
JavaScript
1,087
star
76

log-update

Log by overwriting the previous output in the terminal. Useful for rendering progress bars, animations, etc.
JavaScript
1,027
star
77

pretty-bytes

Convert bytes to a human readable string: 1337 → 1.34 kB
JavaScript
1,022
star
78

grunt-sass

Compile Sass to CSS
JavaScript
1,020
star
79

mem

Memoize functions - an optimization technique used to speed up consecutive function calls by caching the result of calls with identical input
TypeScript
1,019
star
80

DockProgress

Show progress in your app's Dock icon
Swift
1,003
star
81

wallpaper

Manage the desktop wallpaper
JavaScript
996
star
82

p-map

Map over promises concurrently
JavaScript
996
star
83

public-ip

Get your public IP address - very fast!
JavaScript
979
star
84

gulp-app

[DEPRECATED] Gulp as an app
JavaScript
961
star
85

grunt-shell

Run shell commands
JavaScript
952
star
86

load-grunt-tasks

Load multiple grunt tasks using globbing patterns
JavaScript
940
star
87

hasha

Hashing made simple. Get the hash of a buffer/string/stream/file.
JavaScript
934
star
88

pretty-ms

Convert milliseconds to a human readable string: `1337000000` → `15d 11h 23m 20s`
JavaScript
929
star
89

terminal-image

Display images in the terminal
JavaScript
923
star
90

object-assign

ES2015 Object.assign() ponyfill
JavaScript
922
star
91

copy-text-to-clipboard

Copy text to the clipboard in modern browsers (0.2 kB)
JavaScript
858
star
92

System-Color-Picker

🎨 The macOS color picker as an app with more features
Swift
842
star
93

normalize-url

Normalize a URL
JavaScript
818
star
94

get-port

Get an available TCP port
JavaScript
817
star
95

atom-editorconfig

Helps developers maintain consistent coding styles between different editors
JavaScript
811
star
96

grunt-concurrent

Run grunt tasks concurrently
JavaScript
799
star
97

dot-prop

Get, set, or delete a property from a nested object using a dot path
JavaScript
777
star
98

p-progress

Create a promise that reports progress
TypeScript
751
star
99

gulp-changed

Only pass through changed files
JavaScript
747
star
100

generator-nm

Scaffold out a node module
JavaScript
742
star