This command allows you to run an arbitrary command from an npm package (either one installed locally, or fetched remotely), in a similar context as running it via \fBnpm run\fR.
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Run without positional arguments or \fB--call\fR, this allows you to interactively run commands in the same sort of shell environment that \fBpackage.json\fR scripts are run. Interactive mode is not supported in CI environments when standard input is a TTY, to prevent hangs.
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Whatever packages are specified by the \fB--package\fR option will be provided in the \fBPATH\fR of the executed command, along with any locally installed package executables. The \fB--package\fR option may be specified multiple times, to execute the supplied command in an environment where all specified packages are available.
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If any requested packages are not present in the local project dependencies, then a prompt is printed, which can be suppressed by providing either \fB--yes\fR or \fB--no\fR. When standard input is not a TTY or a CI environment is detected, \fB--yes\fR is assumed. The requested packages are installed to a folder in the npm cache, which is added to the \fBPATH\fR environment variable in the executed process.
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Package names provided without a specifier will be matched with whatever version exists in the local project. Package names with a specifier will only be considered a match if they have the exact same name and version as the local dependency.
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If no \fB-c\fR or \fB--call\fR option is provided, then the positional arguments are used to generate the command string. If no \fB--package\fR options are provided, then npm will attempt to determine the executable name from the package specifier provided as the first positional argument according to the following heuristic:
If the package has a single entry in its \fBbin\fR field in \fBpackage.json\fR, or if all entries are aliases of the same command, then that command will be used.
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If the package has multiple \fBbin\fR entries, and one of them matches the unscoped portion of the \fBname\fR field, then that command will be used.
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If this does not result in exactly one option (either because there are no bin entries, or none of them match the \fBname\fR of the package), then \fBnpm exec\fR exits with an error.
To run a binary \fIother than\fR the named binary, specify one or more \fB--package\fR options, which will prevent npm from inferring the package from the first command argument.
When run via the \fBnpx\fR binary, all flags and options \fImust\fR be set prior to any positional arguments. When run via \fBnpm exec\fR, a double-hyphen \fB--\fR flag can be used to suppress npm's parsing of switches and options that should be sent to the executed command.
In this case, npm will parse the \fB--package\fR option first, resolving the \fB@npmcli/foo\fR package. Then, it will execute the following command in that context:
The double-hyphen character is recommended to explicitly tell npm to stop parsing command line options and switches. The following command would thus be equivalent to the \fBnpx\fR command above:
Enable running a command in the context of the configured workspaces of the current project while filtering by running only the workspaces defined by this configuration option.
When set for the \fBnpm init\fR command, this may be set to the folder of a workspace which does not yet exist, to create the folder and set it up as a brand new workspace within the project.
Commands that operate on the \fBnode_modules\fR tree (install, update, etc.) will link workspaces into the \fBnode_modules\fR folder. - Commands that do other things (test, exec, publish, etc.) will operate on the root project, \fIunless\fR one or more workspaces are specified in the \fBworkspace\fR config.
When false, specifying individual workspaces via the \fBworkspace\fR config, or all workspaces via the \fBworkspaces\fR flag, will cause npm to operate only on the specified workspaces, and not on the root project.
You may use the \fB\fBworkspace\fR\fR\fI\(la/using-npm/config#workspace\(ra\fR or \fB\fBworkspaces\fR\fR\fI\(la/using-npm/config#workspaces\(ra\fR configs in order to run an arbitrary command from an npm package (either one installed locally, or fetched remotely) in the context of the specified workspaces. If no positional argument or \fB--call\fR option is provided, it will open an interactive subshell in the context of each of these configured workspaces one at a time.
You can execute an arbitrary command from a package in the context of each of the configured workspaces when using the \fB\fBworkspaces\fR config options\fR\fI\(la/using-npm/config#workspace\(ra\fR, in this example we're using \fBeslint\fR to lint any js file found within each workspace folder:
The \fBworkspace\fR config can also be specified multiple times in order to run a specific script in the context of multiple workspaces. When defining values for the \fBworkspace\fR config in the command line, it also possible to use \fB-w\fR as a shorthand, e.g:
The \fBnpx\fR binary was rewritten in npm v7.0.0, and the standalone \fBnpx\fR package deprecated at that time. \fBnpx\fR uses the \fBnpm exec\fR command instead of a separate argument parser and install process, with some affordances to maintain backwards compatibility with the arguments it accepted in previous versions.
To prevent security and user-experience problems from mistyping package names, \fBnpx\fR prompts before installing anything. Suppress this prompt with the \fB-y\fR or \fB--yes\fR option.
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The \fB--no-install\fR option is deprecated, and will be converted to \fB--no\fR.
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Shell fallback functionality is removed, as it is not advisable.
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The \fB-p\fR argument is a shorthand for \fB--parseable\fR in npm, but shorthand for \fB--package\fR in npx. This is maintained, but only for the \fBnpx\fR executable.
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The \fB--ignore-existing\fR option is removed. Locally installed bins are always present in the executed process \fBPATH\fR.
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The \fB--npm\fR option is removed. \fBnpx\fR will always use the \fBnpm\fR it ships with.
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The \fB--node-arg\fR and \fB-n\fR options are removed.
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The \fB--always-spawn\fR option is redundant, and thus removed.
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The \fB--shell\fR option is replaced with \fB--script-shell\fR, but maintained in the \fBnpx\fR executable for backwards compatibility.
The npm cli utilizes its internal package cache when using the package name specified. You can use the following to change how and when the cli uses this cache. See npm help cache for more on how the cache works.
Enable running a command in the context of the configured workspaces of the current project while filtering by running only the workspaces defined by this configuration option.