tra-analysis/website/node_modules/npm/doc/cli/npm-link.md

78 lines
2.5 KiB
Markdown
Raw Normal View History

2019-01-06 19:14:45 +00:00
npm-link(1) -- Symlink a package folder
=======================================
## SYNOPSIS
npm link (in package dir)
npm link [<@scope>/]<pkg>[@<version>]
alias: npm ln
## DESCRIPTION
Package linking is a two-step process.
First, `npm link` in a package folder will create a symlink in the global folder
`{prefix}/lib/node_modules/<package>` that links to the package where the `npm
link` command was executed. (see `npm-config(7)` for the value of `prefix`). It
will also link any bins in the package to `{prefix}/bin/{name}`.
Next, in some other location, `npm link package-name` will create a
symbolic link from globally-installed `package-name` to `node_modules/`
of the current folder.
Note that `package-name` is taken from `package.json`,
not from directory name.
The package name can be optionally prefixed with a scope. See `npm-scope(7)`.
The scope must be preceded by an @-symbol and followed by a slash.
When creating tarballs for `npm publish`, the linked packages are
"snapshotted" to their current state by resolving the symbolic links.
This is handy for installing your own stuff, so that you can work on it and
test it iteratively without having to continually rebuild.
For example:
cd ~/projects/node-redis # go into the package directory
npm link # creates global link
cd ~/projects/node-bloggy # go into some other package directory.
npm link redis # link-install the package
Now, any changes to ~/projects/node-redis will be reflected in
~/projects/node-bloggy/node_modules/node-redis/. Note that the link should
be to the package name, not the directory name for that package.
You may also shortcut the two steps in one. For example, to do the
above use-case in a shorter way:
cd ~/projects/node-bloggy # go into the dir of your main project
npm link ../node-redis # link the dir of your dependency
The second line is the equivalent of doing:
(cd ../node-redis; npm link)
npm link redis
That is, it first creates a global link, and then links the global
installation target into your project's `node_modules` folder.
Note that in this case, you are referring to the directory name, `node-redis`,
rather than the package name `redis`.
If your linked package is scoped (see `npm-scope(7)`) your link command must
include that scope, e.g.
npm link @myorg/privatepackage
## SEE ALSO
* npm-developers(7)
* package.json(5)
* npm-install(1)
* npm-folders(5)
* npm-config(1)
* npm-config(7)
* npmrc(5)