debian-mirror-gitlab/doc/user/packages/npm_registry/index.md
2022-03-02 08:16:31 +05:30

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npm packages in the Package Registry (FREE)

Moved from GitLab Premium to GitLab Free in 13.3.

Publish npm packages in your project's Package Registry. Then install the packages whenever you need to use them as a dependency.

Only scoped packages are supported.

For documentation of the specific API endpoints that the npm package manager client uses, see the npm API documentation.

WARNING: Never hardcode GitLab tokens (or any tokens) directly in .npmrc files or any other files that can be committed to a repository.

Build an npm package

This section covers how to install npm or Yarn and build a package for your JavaScript project.

If you already use npm and know how to build your own packages, go to the next section.

Install npm

Install Node.js and npm in your local development environment by following the instructions at npmjs.com.

When installation is complete, verify you can use npm in your terminal by running:

npm --version

The npm version is shown in the output:

6.10.3

Install Yarn

As an alternative to npm, you can install Yarn in your local environment by following the instructions at classic.yarnpkg.com.

When installation is complete, verify you can use Yarn in your terminal by running:

yarn --version

The Yarn version is shown in the output:

1.19.1

Create a project

To create a project:

  1. Create an empty directory.

  2. Go to the directory and initialize an empty package by running:

    npm init
    

    Or if you're using Yarn:

    yarn init
    
  3. Enter responses to the questions. Ensure the package name follows the naming convention and is scoped to the project or group where the registry exists.

A package.json file is created.

Use the GitLab endpoint for npm packages

To use the GitLab endpoint for npm packages, choose an option:

  • Project-level: Use when you have few npm packages and they are not in the same GitLab group. The package naming convention is not enforced at this level. Instead, you should use a scope for your package. When you use a scope, the registry URL is updated only for that scope.
  • Instance-level: Use when you have many npm packages in different GitLab groups or in their own namespace. Be sure to comply with the package naming convention.

Some features such as publishing a package is only available on the project-level endpoint.

Authenticate to the Package Registry

You must authenticate with the Package Registry when the project is private. Public projects do not require authentication.

To authenticate, use one of the following:

  • A personal access token (required for two-factor authentication (2FA)), with the scope set to api.
  • A deploy token, with the scope set to read_package_registry, write_package_registry, or both.
  • It's not recommended, but you can use OAuth tokens. Standard OAuth tokens cannot authenticate to the GitLab npm Registry. You must use a personal access token with OAuth headers.
  • A CI job token.
  • Your npm package name must be in the format of @scope/package-name. It must match exactly, including the case.

Authenticate with a personal access token or deploy token

To authenticate with the Package Registry, you need a personal access token or deploy token.

Project-level npm endpoint

To use the project-level npm endpoint, set your npm configuration:

# Set URL for your scoped packages.
# For example package with name `@foo/bar` will use this URL for download
npm config set @foo:registry https://gitlab.example.com/api/v4/projects/<your_project_id>/packages/npm/

# Add the token for the scoped packages URL. Replace <your_project_id>
# with the project where your package is located.
npm config set -- '//gitlab.example.com/api/v4/projects/<your_project_id>/packages/npm/:_authToken' "<your_token>"
  • <your_project_id> is your project ID, found on the project's home page.
  • <your_token> is your personal access token or deploy token.
  • Replace gitlab.example.com with your domain name.

You should now be able to publish and install npm packages in your project.

If you encounter an error with Yarn, view troubleshooting steps.

Instance-level npm endpoint

To use the instance-level npm endpoint, set your npm configuration:

# Set URL for your scoped packages.
# For example package with name `@foo/bar` will use this URL for download
npm config set @foo:registry https://gitlab.example.com/api/v4/packages/npm/

# Add the token for the scoped packages URL. This will allow you to download
# `@foo/` packages from private projects.
npm config set -- '//gitlab.example.com/api/v4/packages/npm/:_authToken' "<your_token>"
  • <your_token> is your personal access token or deploy token.
  • Replace gitlab.example.com with your domain name.

You should now be able to install npm packages in your project.

If you encounter an error with Yarn, view troubleshooting steps.

Authenticate with a CI job token

  • Introduced in GitLab 12.5.
  • Moved from GitLab Premium to GitLab Free in 13.3.

If you're using npm with GitLab CI/CD, a CI job token can be used instead of a personal access token or deploy token. The token inherits the permissions of the user that generates the pipeline.

Project-level npm endpoint

To use the project-level npm endpoint, add a corresponding section to your .npmrc file:

@foo:registry=https://gitlab.example.com/api/v4/projects/${CI_PROJECT_ID}/packages/npm/
//gitlab.example.com/api/v4/projects/${CI_PROJECT_ID}/packages/npm/:_authToken=${CI_JOB_TOKEN}

Instance-level npm endpoint

To use the instance-level npm endpoint, add a corresponding section to your .npmrc file:

@foo:registry=https://gitlab.example.com/api/v4/packages/npm/
//gitlab.example.com/api/v4/packages/npm/:_authToken=${CI_JOB_TOKEN}

Use variables to avoid hard-coding auth token values

To avoid hard-coding the authToken value, you may use a variable in its place:

npm config set -- '//gitlab.example.com/api/v4/projects/<your_project_id>/packages/npm/:_authToken' "${NPM_TOKEN}"
npm config set -- '//gitlab.example.com/api/v4/packages/npm/:_authToken' "${NPM_TOKEN}"

Then, you can run npm publish either locally or by using GitLab CI/CD.

  • Locally: Export NPM_TOKEN before publishing:

    NPM_TOKEN=<your_token> npm publish
    
  • GitLab CI/CD: Set an NPM_TOKEN CI/CD variable under your project's Settings > CI/CD > Variables.

Working with private registries

When working with private repositories, you may want to configure additional settings to ensure a secure communication channel:

# Force npm to always require authentication when accessing the registry, even for GET requests.
npm config set always-auth true

Package naming convention

When you use the instance-level endpoint, only the packages with names in the format of @scope/package-name are available.

  • The @scope is the root namespace of the GitLab project. To follow npm's convention, it should be lowercase. However, the GitLab package registry allows for uppercase. Before GitLab 13.10, the @scope had to be a case-sensitive match of the GitLab project's root namespace. This was problematic because the npm public registry does not allow uppercase letters. GitLab 13.10 relaxes this requirement and translates uppercase in the GitLab @scope to lowercase for npm. For example, a package @MyScope/package-name in GitLab becomes @myscope/package-name for npm.
  • The package-name can be whatever you want.

For example, if your project is https://gitlab.example.com/my-org/engineering-group/team-amazing/analytics, the root namespace is my-org. When you publish a package, it must have my-org as the scope.

Project Package Supported
my-org/bar @my-org/bar Yes
my-org/bar/baz @my-org/baz Yes
My-Org/Bar/baz @my-org/Baz Yes
My-Org/Bar/baz @My-Org/Baz Yes
my-org/bar/buz @my-org/anything Yes
gitlab-org/gitlab @gitlab-org/gitlab Yes
gitlab-org/gitlab @foo/bar No

In GitLab, this regex validates all package names from all package managers:

/\A\@?(([\w\-\.\+]*)\/)*([\w\-\.]+)@?(([\w\-\.\+]*)\/)*([\w\-\.]*)\z/

This regex allows almost all of the characters that npm allows, with a few exceptions (for example, ~ is not allowed).

The regex also allows for capital letters, while npm does not.

WARNING: When you update the path of a user or group, or transfer a subgroup or project, you must remove any npm packages first. You cannot update the root namespace of a project with npm packages. Make sure you update your .npmrc files to follow the naming convention and run npm publish if necessary.

Publish an npm package

Prerequisites:

To upload an npm package to your project, run this command:

npm publish

To view the package, go to your project's Packages & Registries.

You can also define "publishConfig" for your project in package.json. For example:

{
"publishConfig": { "@foo:registry":" https://gitlab.example.com/api/v4/projects/<your_project_id>/packages/npm/" }
}

This forces the package to publish only to the specified registry.

If you try to publish a package with a name that already exists within a given scope, you get a 403 Forbidden! error.

Publish an npm package by using CI/CD

Prerequisites:

  • Authenticate to the Package Registry.
  • Set a project-level npm endpoint.
  • Your npm package name must be in the format of @scope/package-name. It must match exactly, including the case. This is different than the npm naming convention, but it is required to work with the GitLab Package Registry.

To work with npm commands within GitLab CI/CD, you can use CI_JOB_TOKEN in place of the personal access token or deploy token in your commands.

An example .gitlab-ci.yml file for publishing npm packages:

image: node:latest

stages:
  - deploy

deploy:
  stage: deploy
  script:
    - echo "//${CI_SERVER_HOST}/api/v4/projects/${CI_PROJECT_ID}/packages/npm/:_authToken=${CI_JOB_TOKEN}">.npmrc
    - npm publish

See the Publish npm packages to the GitLab Package Registry using semantic-release step-by-step guide and demo project for a complete example.

Configure the GitLab npm registry with Yarn 2

You can get started with Yarn 2 by following the Yarn documentation.

To publish and install with the project-level npm endpoint, set the following configuration in .yarnrc.yml:

npmScopes:
  foo:
    npmRegistryServer: "https://gitlab.example.com/api/v4/projects/<your_project_id>/packages/npm/"
    npmPublishRegistry: "https://gitlab.example.com/api/v4/projects/<your_project_id>/packages/npm/"

npmRegistries:
  //gitlab.example.com/api/v4/projects/<your_project_id>/packages/npm/:
    npmAlwaysAuth: true
    npmAuthToken: "<your_token>"

For the instance-level npm endpoint, use this Yarn 2 configuration in .yarnrc.yml:

npmScopes:
  foo:
    npmRegistryServer: "https://gitlab.example.com/api/v4/packages/npm/"

npmRegistries:
  //gitlab.example.com/api/v4/packages/npm/:
    npmAlwaysAuth: true
    npmAuthToken: "<your_token>"

In this configuration:

  • Replace <your_token> with your personal access token or deploy token.
  • Replace <your_project_id> with your project's ID, which you can find on the project's home page.
  • Replace gitlab.example.com with your domain name.
  • Your scope is foo, without @.

Publishing packages with the same name or version

You cannot publish a package if a package of the same name and version already exists. You must delete the existing package first.

This rule has a different impact depending on the package name:

  • For packages following the naming convention, you can't publish a package with a duplicate name and version to the root namespace.
  • For packages not following the naming convention, you can't publish a package with a duplicate name and version to the project you target with the upload.

This aligns with npmjs.org's behavior. However, npmjs.org does not ever let you publish the same version more than once, even if it has been deleted.

package.json limitations

You can't publish a package if its package.json file exceeds 20,000 characters.

Install a package

npm packages are commonly-installed by using the npm or yarn commands in a JavaScript project. You can install a package from the scope of a project or instance.

If multiple packages have the same name and version, when you install a package, the most recently-published package is retrieved.

  1. Set the URL for scoped packages.

    For instance-level endpoints run:

    npm config set @foo:registry https://gitlab.example.com/api/v4/packages/npm/
    
    • Replace @foo with your scope.
    • Replace gitlab.example.com with your domain name.

    For project-level endpoints run:

    npm config set @foo:registry https://gitlab.example.com/api/v4/projects/<your_project_id>/packages/npm/
    
    • Replace @foo with your scope.
    • Replace gitlab.example.com with your domain name.
    • Replace <your_project_id> with your project ID, found on the project's home page.
  2. Ensure authentication is configured.

  3. To install a package in your project, run:

    npm install @my-scope/my-package
    

    Or if you're using Yarn:

    yarn add @my-scope/my-package
    

In GitLab 12.9 and later, when an npm package is not found in the Package Registry, the request is forwarded to npmjs.com.

Administrators can disable this behavior in the Continuous Integration settings.

Install npm packages from other organizations

You can route package requests to organizations and users outside of GitLab.

To do this, add lines to your .npmrc file. Replace my-org with the namespace or group that owns your project's repository, and use your organization's URL. The name is case-sensitive and must match the name of your group or namespace exactly.

Use environment variables to set up your tokens: export MY_TOKEN="<your token>".

@foo:registry=https://gitlab.example.com/api/v4/packages/npm/
//gitlab.example.com/api/v4/packages/npm/:_authToken=${MY_TOKEN}
//gitlab.example.com/api/v4/projects/<your_project_id>/packages/npm/:_authToken=${MY_TOKEN}

@my-other-org:registry=https://gitlab.example.com/api/v4/packages/npm/
//gitlab.example.com/api/v4/packages/npm/:_authToken=${MY_TOKEN}
//gitlab.example.com/api/v4/projects/<your_project_id>/packages/npm/:_authToken=${MY_TOKEN}

npm metadata

The GitLab Package Registry exposes the following attributes to the npm client. These are similar to the abbreviated metadata format:

  • name
  • versions
    • name
    • version
    • deprecated
    • dependencies
    • devDependencies
    • bundleDependencies
    • peerDependencies
    • bin
    • directories
    • dist
    • engines
    • _hasShrinkwrap

Add npm distribution tags

  • Introduced in GitLab 12.8.
  • Moved from GitLab Premium to GitLab Free in 13.3.

You can add distribution tags to newly-published packages. Tags are optional and can be assigned to only one package at a time.

When you publish a package without a tag, the latest tag is added by default. When you install a package without specifying the tag or version, the latest tag is used.

Examples of the supported dist-tag commands:

npm publish @scope/package --tag               # Publish a package with new tag
npm dist-tag add @scope/package@version my-tag # Add a tag to an existing package
npm dist-tag ls @scope/package                 # List all tags under the package
npm dist-tag rm @scope/package@version my-tag  # Delete a tag from the package
npm install @scope/package@my-tag              # Install a specific tag

You cannot use your CI_JOB_TOKEN or deploy token with the npm dist-tag commands. View this issue for details.

Due to a bug in npm 6.9.0, deleting distribution tags fails. Make sure your npm version is 6.9.1 or later.

Troubleshooting

When troubleshooting npm issues, first run the same command with the --verbose flag to confirm what registry you are hitting.

To improve performance, npm caches files related to a package. Note that npm doesn't remove data by itself. The cache grows as new packages are installed. If you encounter issues, clear the cache with this command:

npm cache clean --force

Error running Yarn with the Package Registry for npm registry

If you are using Yarn with the npm registry, you may get an error message like:

yarn install v1.15.2
warning package.json: No license field
info No lockfile found.
warning XXX: No license field
[1/4] 🔍  Resolving packages...
[2/4] 🚚  Fetching packages...
error An unexpected error occurred: "https://gitlab.example.com/api/v4/projects/XXX/packages/npm/XXX/XXX/-/XXX/XXX-X.X.X.tgz: Request failed \"404 Not Found\"".
info If you think this is a bug, please open a bug report with the information provided in "/Users/XXX/gitlab-migration/module-util/yarn-error.log".
info Visit https://classic.yarnpkg.com/en/docs/cli/install for documentation about this command

In this case, try adding this to your .npmrc file (and replace <your_token> with your personal access token or deploy token):

//gitlab.example.com/api/v4/projects/:_authToken=<your_token>

You can also use yarn config instead of npm config when setting your auth-token dynamically:

yarn config set '//gitlab.example.com/api/v4/projects/<your_project_id>/packages/npm/:_authToken' "<your_token>"
yarn config set '//gitlab.example.com/api/v4/packages/npm/:_authToken' "<your_token>"

npm publish targets default npm registry (registry.npmjs.org)

Ensure that your package scope is set consistently in your package.json and .npmrc files.

For example, if your project name in GitLab is foo/my-package, then your package.json file should look like:

{
  "name": "@foo/my-package",
  "version": "1.0.0",
  "description": "Example package for GitLab npm registry",
}

And the .npmrc file should look like:

//gitlab.example.com/api/v4/projects/<your_project_id>/packages/npm/:_authToken=<your_token>
//gitlab.example.com/api/v4/packages/npm/:_authToken=<your_token>
@foo:registry=https://gitlab.example.com/api/v4/packages/npm/

npm install returns Error: Failed to replace env in config: ${npm_TOKEN}

You do not need a token to run npm install unless your project is private. The token is only required to publish. If the .npmrc file was checked in with a reference to $npm_TOKEN, you can remove it. If you prefer to leave the reference in, you must set a value prior to running npm install or set the value by using GitLab CI/CD variables:

NPM_TOKEN=<your_token> npm install

npm install returns npm ERR! 403 Forbidden

If you get this error, ensure that:

  • The Package Registry is enabled in your project settings. Although the Package Registry is enabled by default, it's possible to disable it.
  • Your token is not expired and has appropriate permissions.
  • A package with the same name or version doesn't already exist within the given scope.
  • The scoped packages URL includes a trailing slash:
    • Correct: //gitlab.example.com/api/v4/packages/npm/
    • Incorrect: //gitlab.example.com/api/v4/packages/npm

npm publish returns npm ERR! 400 Bad Request

If you get this error, one of the following problems could be causing it.

Package name does not meet the naming convention

Your package name may not meet the @scope/package-name package naming convention.

Ensure the name meets the convention exactly, including the case. Then try to publish again.

Package already exists

Your package has already been published to another project in the same root namespace and therefore cannot be published again using the same name.

This is also true even if the prior published package shares the same name, but not the version.

Package JSON file is too large

Make sure that your package.json file does not exceed 20,000 characters.

npm publish returns npm ERR! 500 Internal Server Error - PUT

This is a known issue in GitLab 13.3.x and later. The error in the logs will appear as:

>NoMethodError - undefined method `preferred_language' for #<Rack::Response

This might be accompanied by another error:

>Errno::EACCES","exception.message":"Permission denied

This is usually a permissions issue with either:

  • 'packages_storage_path' default /var/opt/gitlab/gitlab-rails/shared/packages/.
  • The remote bucket if object storage is used.

In the latter case, ensure the bucket exists and GitLab has write access to it.

Supported CLI commands

The GitLab npm repository supports the following commands for the npm CLI (npm) and yarn CLI (yarn):

  • npm install: Install npm packages.
  • npm publish: Publish an npm package to the registry.
  • npm dist-tag add: Add a dist-tag to an npm package.
  • npm dist-tag ls: List dist-tags for a package.
  • npm dist-tag rm: Delete a dist-tag.
  • npm ci: Install npm packages directly from your package-lock.json file.
  • npm view: Show package metadata.
  • yarn add: Install an npm package.
  • yarn update: Update your dependencies.