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libnpmpublish is a Node.js library for programmatically publishing and unpublishing npm packages. It does not take care of packing tarballs from source code, but once you have a tarball, it can take care of putting it up on a nice registry for you.

Example

const { publish, unpublish } = require('libnpmpublish')

Install

$ npm install libnpmpublish

Table of Contents

API

opts for libnpmpublish commands

libnpmpublish uses npm-registry-fetch. Most options are passed through directly to that library, so please refer to its own opts documentation for options that can be passed in.

A couple of options of note for those in a hurry:

  • opts.token - can be passed in and will be used as the authentication token for the registry. For other ways to pass in auth details, see the n-r-f docs.
  • opts.Promise - If you pass this in, the Promises returned by libnpmpublish commands will use this Promise class instead. For example: {Promise: require('bluebird')}

> libpub.publish(pkgJson, tarData, [opts]) -> Promise

Publishes tarData to the appropriate configured registry. pkgJson should be the parsed package.json for the package that is being published.

tarData can be a Buffer, a base64-encoded string, or a binary stream of data. Note that publishing itself can't be streamed, so the entire stream will be consumed into RAM before publishing (and are thus limited in how big they can be).

Since libnpmpublish does not generate tarballs itself, one way to build your own tarball for publishing is to do npm pack in the directory you wish to pack. You can then fs.createReadStream('my-proj-1.0.0.tgz') and pass that to libnpmpublish, along with require('./package.json').

publish() does its best to emulate legacy publish logic in the standard npm client, and so should generally be compatible with any registry the npm CLI has been able to publish to in the past.

If opts.npmVersion is passed in, it will be used as the _npmVersion field in the outgoing packument. It's recommended you add your own user agent string in there!

If opts.algorithms is passed in, it should be an array of hashing algorithms to generate integrity hashes for. The default is ['sha512'], which means you end up with dist.integrity = 'sha512-deadbeefbadc0ffee'. Any algorithm supported by your current node version is allowed -- npm clients that do not support those algorithms will simply ignore the unsupported hashes.

If opts.access is passed in, it must be one of public or restricted. Unscoped packages cannot be restricted, and the registry may agree or disagree with whether you're allowed to publish a restricted package.

Example
const pkg = require('./dist/package.json')
const tarball = fs.createReadStream('./dist/pkg-1.0.1.tgz')
await libpub.publish(pkg, tarball, {
  npmVersion: 'my-pub-script@1.0.2',
  token: 'my-auth-token-here'
})
// Package has been published to the npm registry.

> libpub.unpublish(spec, [opts]) -> Promise

Unpublishes spec from the appropriate registry. The registry in question may have its own limitations on unpublishing.

spec should be either a string, or a valid npm-package-arg parsed spec object. For legacy compatibility reasons, only tag and version specs will work as expected. range specs will fail silently in most cases.

Example
await libpub.unpublish('lodash', { token: 'i-am-the-worst'})
//
// `lodash` has now been unpublished, along with all its versions, and the world
// devolves into utter chaos.
//
// That, or we all go home to our friends and/or family and have a nice time
// doing nothing having to do with programming or JavaScript and realize our
// lives are just so much happier now, and we just can't understand why we ever
// got so into this JavaScript thing but damn did it pay well. I guess you'll
// settle for gardening or something.