npm-publish - Publish a package
npm publish [<tarball>|<folder>] [--tag <tag>] [--access <public|restricted>] [--otp otpcode] [--dry-run]
Publishes '.' if no argument supplied
Sets tag 'latest' if no --tag specified
Publishes a package to the registry so that it can be installed by
name.
By default npm will publish to the public registry. This can be
overridden by specifying a different default registry or using a npm help
scope in the name (see npm help package.json).
- <folder>: A folder containing a package.json file
- <tarball>: A url or file path to a gzipped tar archive
containing a single folder with a package.json file inside.
- [--tag <tag>]: Registers the published package with the given
tag, such that npm install <name>@<tag> will install
this version. By default, npm publish updates and npm
install installs the latest tag. See npm-dist-tag
npm-dist-tag for details about tags.
- [--access <public|restricted>]: Tells the registry whether
this package should be published as public or restricted. Only applies to
scoped packages, which default to restricted. If you don't have a
paid account, you must publish with --access public to publish
scoped packages.
- [--otp <otpcode>]: If you have two-factor authentication
enabled in auth-and-writes mode then you can provide a code from
your authenticator with this. If you don't include this and you're running
from a TTY then you'll be prompted.
- [--dry-run]: As of npm@6, does everything publish would do
except actually publishing to the registry. Reports the details of what
would have been published.
The publish will fail if the package name and version combination
already exists in the specified registry.
Once a package is published with a given name and version, that
specific name and version combination can never be used again, even if it is
removed with npm help unpublish.
As of npm@5, both a sha1sum and an integrity field with a
sha512sum of the tarball will be submitted to the registry during
publication. Subsequent installs will use the strongest supported algorithm
to verify downloads.
Similar to --dry-run see npm help pack, which
figures out the files to be included and packs them into a tarball to be
uploaded to the registry.
To see what will be included in your package, run npx
npm-packlist. All files are included by default, with the following
exceptions:
- Certain files that are relevant to package installation and distribution
are always included. For example, package.json, README.md,
LICENSE, and so on.
- If there is a "files" list in npm help package.json, then
only the files specified will be included. (If directories are specified,
then they will be walked recursively and their contents included, subject
to the same ignore rules.)
- If there is a .gitignore or .npmignore file, then ignored
files in that and all child directories will be excluded from the package.
If both files exist, then the .gitignore is ignored, and
only the .npmignore is used. .npmignore files follow the
same pattern rules
https://git-scm.com/book/en/v2/Git-Basics-Recording-Changes-to-the-Repository#_ignoring
as .gitignore files
- If the file matches certain patterns, then it will never be
included, unless explicitly added to the "files" list in
package.json, or un-ignored with a ! rule in a
.npmignore or .gitignore file.
- Symbolic links are never included in npm packages.
See npm help developers for full details on what's included
in the published package, as well as details on how the package is
built.
- npm-packlist package http://npm.im/npm-packlist
- npm help registry
- npm help scope
- npm help adduser
- npm help owner
- npm help deprecate
- npm help dist-tag
- npm help pack
- npm help profile