npm version [<newversion> | major | minor | patch | premajor | preminor | prepatch | prerelease | from-git] 'npm [-v | --version]' to print npm version 'npm view <pkg> version' to view a package's published version 'npm ls' to inspect current package/dependency versions
Run this in a package directory to bump the version and write the new data back to package.json and, if present, npm-shrinkwrap.json.
The newversion argument should be a valid semver string, a valid second argument to semver.inc https://github.com/npm/node-semver#functions (one of patch, minor, major, prepatch, preminor, premajor, prerelease), or from-git. In the second case, the existing version will be incremented by 1 in the specified field. from-git will try to read the latest git tag, and use that as the new npm version.
If run in a git repo, it will also create a version commit and tag. This behavior is controlled by git-tag-version (see below), and can be disabled on the command line by running npm --no-git-tag-version version. It will fail if the working directory is not clean, unless the -f or --force flag is set.
If supplied with -m or --message config option, npm will use it as a commit message when creating a version commit. If the message config contains %s then that will be replaced with the resulting version number. For example:
npm version patch -m "Upgrade to %s for reasons"
If the sign-git-tag config is set, then the tag will be signed using the -s flag to git. Note that you must have a default GPG key set up in your git config for this to work properly. For example:
$ npm config set sign-git-tag true $ npm version patch You need a passphrase to unlock the secret key for user: "isaacs (http://blog.izs.me/) <i@izs.me>" 2048-bit RSA key, ID 6C481CF6, created 2010-08-31 Enter passphrase:
If preversion, version, or postversion are in the scripts property of the package.json, they will be executed as part of running npm version.
The exact order of execution is as follows:
Take the following example:
"scripts": { "preversion": "npm test", "version": "npm run build && git add -A dist", "postversion": "git push && git push --tags && rm -rf build/temp" }
This runs all your tests, and proceeds only if they pass. Then runs your build script, and adds everything in the dist directory to the commit. After the commit, it pushes the new commit and tag up to the server, and deletes the build/temp directory.
Commit and tag the version change.