You can add a package.json file to your package to make it easy for others to manage and install. Packages published to the registry must contain a package.json file.
A package.json file:
Note: To make your package easier to find on the npm website, we recommend including a custom description in your package.json file.
package.json fieldsname and version fieldsThe package.json file of a published package must contain "name" and "version" fields.
The "name" field contains your package's name, and must be lowercase and one word, and may contain hyphens and underscores.
The "version" field must be in the form x.x.x and follow the semantic versioning guidelines.
If you want to include package author information in "author" field, use the following format (email and website are both optional):
Your Name <email@example.com> (http://example.com)
{"name": "my-awesome-package","version": "1.0.0"}
package.json fileYou can create a package.json file by running a CLI questionnaire or creating a default package.json file.
To create a package.json file with values that you supply, use the npm init command.
On the command line, navigate to the root directory of your package.
cd /path/to/package
Run the following command:
npm init
Answer the questions in the command line questionnaire.
package.json questionnaireIf you expect to create many package.json files, you can customize the questions asked and fields created during the init process so all the package.json files contain a standard set of information.
In your home directory, create a file called .npm-init.js.
To add custom questions, using a text editor, add questions with the prompt function:
module.exports = prompt("what's your favorite flavor of ice cream, buddy?", "I LIKE THEM ALL");
To add custom fields, using a text editor, add desired fields to the .npm-init.js file:
module.exports = {customField: 'Example custom field',otherCustomField: 'This example field is really cool'}
To learn more about creating advanced npm init customizations, see the init-package-json GitHub repository.
package.json fileTo create a default package.json using information extracted from the current directory, use the npm init command with the --yes
or -y flag. For a list of default values, see "Default values extracted from the current directory".
On the command line, navigate to the root directory of your package.
cd /path/to/package
Run the following command:
npm init --yes
> npm init --yesWrote to /home/monatheoctocat/my_package/package.json:{"name": "my_package","description": "","version": "1.0.0","scripts": {"test": "echo \"Error: no test specified\" && exit 1"},"repository": {"type": "git","url": "https://github.com/monatheoctocat/my_package.git"},"keywords": [],"author": "","license": "ISC","bugs": {"url": "https://github.com/monatheoctocat/my_package/issues"},"homepage": "https://github.com/monatheoctocat/my_package"}
name: the current directory nameversion: always 1.0.0description: info from the README, or an empty string ""scripts: by default creates an empty test scriptkeywords: emptyauthor: emptylicense: ISCbugs: information from the current directory, if presenthomepage: information from the current directory, if presentYou can set default config options for the init command. For example, to set the default author email, author name, and license, on the command line, run the following commands:
> npm set init.author.email "example-user@example.com"> npm set init.author.name "example_user"> npm set init.license "MIT"