$ gnpm install @npmcli/config
@npmcli/configConfiguration management for the npm cli.
This module is the spiritual descendant of
npmconf, and the code that once lived in npm's
lib/config/ folder.
It does the management of configuration files that npm uses, but importantly, does not define all the configuration defaults or types, as those parts make more sense to live within the npm CLI itself.
The only exceptions:
prefix config value has some special semantics, setting the local
prefix if specified on the CLI options and not in global mode, or the
global prefix otherwise.project config file is loaded based on the local prefix (which can
only be set by the CLI config options, and otherwise defaults to a walk
up the folder tree to the first parent containing a node_modules
folder, package.json file, or package-lock.json file.)userconfig value, as set by the environment and CLI (defaulting to
~/.npmrc, is used to load user configs.globalconfig value, as set by the environment, CLI, and
userconfig file (defaulting to $PREFIX/etc/npmrc) is used to load
global configs.builtin config, read from a npmrc file in the root of the npm
project itself, overrides all defaults.The resulting hierarchy of configs:
--some-key=some-value on the command line. These are
parsed by nopt, which is not a great choice, but
it's the one that npm has used forever, and changing it will be
difficult.npm_config_some_key=some_value in the
environment. There is no way at this time to modify this prefix.some-key = some-value in the
localPrefix folder (ie, the cwd, or its nearest parent that contains
either a node_modules folder or package.json file.)some-key = some-value in ~/.npmrc.
The userconfig config value can be overridden by the cli, env, or
project configs to change this value.some-key = some-value in
the globalPrefix folder, which is inferred by looking at the location
of the node executable, or the prefix setting in the cli, env,
project, or userconfig. The globalconfig value at any of those
levels can override this.some-key = some-value in
/usr/local/lib/node_modules/npm/npmrc. This is not configurable, and
is determined by looking in the npmPath folder.const Config = require('@npmcli/config')
// the types of all the configs we know about
const types = require('./config/types.js')
// default values for all the configs we know about
const defaults = require('./config/defaults.js')
// if you want -c to be short for --call and so on, define it here
const shorthands = require('./config/shorthands.js')
const conf = new Config({
// path to the npm module being run
npmPath: resolve(__dirname, '..'),
types,
shorthands,
defaults,
// optional, defaults to process.argv
argv: process.argv,
// optional, defaults to process.env
env: process.env,
// optional, defaults to process.execPath
execPath: process.execPath,
// optional, defaults to process.platform
platform: process.platform,
// optional, defaults to process.cwd()
cwd: process.cwd(),
})
// emits log events on the process object
// see `proc-log` for more info
process.on('log', (level, ...args) => {
console.log(level, ...args)
})
// returns a promise that fails if config loading fails, and
// resolves when the config object is ready for action
conf.load().then(() => {
conf.validate()
console.log('loaded ok! some-key = ' + conf.get('some-key'))
}).catch(er => {
console.error('error loading configs!', er)
})
The Config class is the sole export.
const Config = require('@npmcli/config')
Config.typeDefsThe type definitions passed to nopt for CLI option parsing and known
configuration validation.
new Config(options)Options:
types Types of all known config values. Note that some are effectively
given semantic value in the config loading process itself.shorthands An object mapping a shorthand value to an array of CLI
arguments that replace it.defaults Default values for each of the known configuration keys.
These should be defined for all configs given a type, and must be valid.npmPath The path to the npm module, for loading the builtin config
file.cwd Optional, defaults to process.cwd(), used for inferring the
localPrefix and loading the project config.platform Optional, defaults to process.platform. Used when inferring
the globalPrefix from the execPath, since this is done diferently on
Windows.execPath Optional, defaults to process.execPath. Used to infer the
globalPrefix.env Optional, defaults to process.env. Source of the environment
variables for configuration.argv Optional, defaults to process.argv. Source of the CLI options
used for configuration.Returns a config object, which is not yet loaded.
Fields:
config.globalPrefix The prefix for global operations. Set by the
prefix config value, or defaults based on the location of the
execPath option.config.localPrefix The prefix for local operations. Set by the
prefix config value on the CLI only, or defaults to either the cwd or
its nearest ancestor containing a node_modules folder or package.json
file.config.sources A read-only Map of the file (or a comment, if no file
found, or relevant) to the config level loaded from that source.config.data A Map of config level to ConfigData objects. These
objects should not be modified directly under any circumstances.
source The source where this data was loaded from.raw The raw data used to generate this config data, as it was parsed
initially from the environment, config file, or CLI options.data The data object reflecting the inheritance of configs up to this
point in the chain.loadError Any errors encountered that prevented the loading of this
config data.config.list A list sorted in priority of all the config data objects in
the prototype chain. config.list[0] is the cli level,
config.list[1] is the env level, and so on.cwd The cwd paramenv The env paramargv The argv paramexecPath The execPath paramplatform The platform paramdefaults The defaults paramshorthands The shorthands paramtypes The types paramnpmPath The npmPath paramglobalPrefix The effective globalPrefixlocalPrefix The effective localPrefixprefix If config.get('global') is true, then globalPrefix,
otherwise localPrefixhome The user's home directory, found by looking at env.HOME or
calling os.homedir().loaded A boolean indicating whether or not configs are loadedvalid A getter that returns true if all the config objects are valid.
Any data objects that have been modified with config.set(...) will be
re-evaluated when config.valid is read.config.load()Load configuration from the various sources of information.
Returns a Promise that resolves when configuration is loaded, and fails
if a fatal error is encountered.
config.find(key)Find the effective place in the configuration levels a given key is set.
Returns one of: cli, env, project, user, global, builtin, or
default.
Returns null if the key is not set.
config.get(key, where = 'cli')Load the given key from the config stack.
config.set(key, value, where = 'cli')Set the key to the specified value, at the specified level in the config stack.
config.delete(key, where = 'cli')Delete the configuration key from the specified level in the config stack.
config.validate(where)Verify that all known configuration options are set to valid values, and log a warning if they are invalid.
Invalid auth options will cause this method to throw an error with a code
property of ERR_INVALID_AUTH, and a problems property listing the specific
concerns with the current configuration.
If where is not set, then all config objects are validated.
Returns true if all configs are valid.
Note that it's usually enough (and more efficient) to just check
config.valid, since each data object is marked for re-evaluation on every
config.set() operation.
config.repair(problems)Accept an optional array of problems (as thrown by config.validate()) and
perform the necessary steps to resolve them. If no problems are provided,
this method will call config.validate() internally to retrieve them.
Note that you must await config.save('user') in order to persist the changes.
config.isDefault(key)Returns true if the value is coming directly from the
default definitions, if the current value for the key config is
coming from any other source, returns false.
This method can be used for avoiding or tweaking default values, e.g:
Given a global default definition of foo='foo' it's possible to read that value such as:
const save = config.get('foo')Now in a different place of your app it's possible to avoid using the
foodefault value, by checking to see if the current config value is currently one that was defined by the default definitions:const save = config.isDefault('foo') ? 'bar' : config.get('foo')
config.save(where)Save the config file specified by the where param. Must be one of
project, user, global, builtin.
Copyright 2013 - present © cnpmjs.org | Home |