839c36cecc
PR-URL: https://github.com/nodejs/node/pull/48540 Reviewed-By: Antoine du Hamel <duhamelantoine1995@gmail.com> Reviewed-By: Mohammed Keyvanzadeh <mohammadkeyvanzade94@gmail.com> |
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.. | ||
dist | ||
shims | ||
CHANGELOG.md | ||
LICENSE.md | ||
package.json | ||
README.md |
corepack
Corepack is a zero-runtime-dependency Node.js script that acts as a bridge between Node.js projects and the package managers they are intended to be used with during development. In practical terms, Corepack lets you use Yarn, npm, and pnpm without having to install them.
How to Install
Default Installs
Corepack is distributed by default with all recent Node.js versions.
Run corepack enable
to install the required Yarn and pnpm binaries on your path.
Manual Installs
Install Corepack using npm
First uninstall your global Yarn and pnpm binaries (just leave npm). In general, you'd do this by running the following command:
npm uninstall -g yarn pnpm
# That should be enough, but if you installed Yarn without going through npm it might
# be more tedious - for example, you might need to run `brew uninstall yarn` as well.
Then install Corepack:
npm install -g corepack
We do acknowledge the irony and overhead of using npm to install Corepack, which is at least part of why the preferred option is to use the Corepack version that is distributed along with Node.js itself.
Install Corepack from source
See CONTRIBUTING.md
.
Usage
When Building Packages
Just use your package managers as you usually would. Run yarn install
in Yarn
projects, pnpm install
in pnpm projects, and npm
in npm projects. Corepack
will catch these calls, and depending on the situation:
-
If the local project is configured for the package manager you're using, Corepack will silently download and cache the latest compatible version.
-
If the local project is configured for a different package manager, Corepack will request you to run the command again using the right package manager - thus avoiding corruptions of your install artifacts.
-
If the local project isn't configured for any package manager, Corepack will assume that you know what you're doing, and will use whatever package manager version has been pinned as "known good release". Check the relevant section for more details.
When Authoring Packages
Set your package's manager with the packageManager
field in package.json
:
{
"packageManager": "yarn@3.2.3+sha224.953c8233f7a92884eee2de69a1b92d1f2ec1655e66d08071ba9a02fa"
}
Here, yarn
is the name of the package manager, specified at version 3.2.3
,
along with the SHA-224 hash of this version for validation.
packageManager@x.y.z
is required. The hash is optional but strongly
recommended as a security practice. Permitted values for the package manager are
yarn
, npm
, and pnpm
.
Known Good Releases
When running Corepack within projects that don't list a supported package manager, it will default to a set of Known Good Releases. In a way, you can compare this to Node.js, where each version ships with a specific version of npm.
If there is no Known Good Release for the requested package manager, Corepack looks up the npm registry for the latest available version and cache it for future use.
The Known Good Releases can be updated system-wide using the --activate
flag
from the corepack prepare
and corepack hydrate
commands.
Offline Workflow
The utility commands detailed in the next section.
-
Either you can use the network while building your container image, in which case you'll simply run
corepack prepare
to make sure that your image includes the Last Known Good release for the specified package manager.- If you want to have all Last Known Good releases for all package managers,
just use the
--all
flag which will do just that.
- If you want to have all Last Known Good releases for all package managers,
just use the
-
Or you're publishing your project to a system where the network is unavailable, in which case you'll preemptively generate a package manager archive from your local computer (using
corepack prepare -o
) before storing it somewhere your container will be able to access (for example within your repository). After that it'll just be a matter of runningcorepack hydrate <path/to/corepack.tgz>
to setup the cache.
Utility Commands
corepack <binary name>[@<version>] [... args]
This meta-command runs the specified package manager in the local folder. You can use it to force an install to run with a given version, which can be useful when looking for regressions.
Note that those commands still check whether the local project is configured for
the given package manager (ie you won't be able to run corepack yarn install
on a project where the packageManager
field references pnpm
).
corepack enable [... name]
Option | Description |
---|---|
--install-directory |
Add the shims to the specified location |
This command will detect where Corepack is installed and will create shims next to it for each of the specified package managers (or all of them if the command is called without parameters). Note that the npm shims will not be installed unless explicitly requested, as npm is currently distributed with Node.js through other means.
If the file system where the corepack
binary is located is read-only, this
command will fail. A workaround is to add the binaries as alias in your
shell configuration file (e.g. in ~/.bash_aliases
):
alias yarn="corepack yarn"
alias yarnpkg="corepack yarnpkg"
alias pnpm="corepack pnpm"
alias pnpx="corepack pnpx"
alias npm="corepack npm"
alias npx="corepack npx"
On Windows PowerShell, you can add functions using the $PROFILE
automatic
variable:
echo "function yarn { corepack yarn `$args }" >> $PROFILE
echo "function yarnpkg { corepack yarnpkg `$args }" >> $PROFILE
echo "function pnpm { corepack pnpm `$args }" >> $PROFILE
echo "function pnpx { corepack pnpx `$args }" >> $PROFILE
echo "function npm { corepack npm `$args }" >> $PROFILE
echo "function npx { corepack npx `$args }" >> $PROFILE
corepack disable [... name]
Option | Description |
---|---|
--install-directory |
Remove the shims to the specified location |
This command will detect where Node.js is installed and will remove the shims from there.
corepack prepare [... name@version]
Option | Description |
---|---|
--all |
Prepare the "Last Known Good" version of all supported package managers |
-o,--output |
Also generate an archive containing the package managers |
--activate |
Also update the "Last Known Good" release |
This command will download the given package managers (or the one configured for
the local project if no argument is passed in parameter) and store it within the
Corepack cache. If the -o,--output
flag is set (optionally with a path as
parameter), an archive will also be generated that can be used by the
corepack hydrate
command.
corepack hydrate <path/to/corepack.tgz>
Option | Description |
---|---|
--activate |
Also update the "Last Known Good" release |
This command will retrieve the given package manager from the specified archive and will install it within the Corepack cache, ready to be used without further network interaction.
Environment Variables
-
COREPACK_DEFAULT_TO_LATEST
can be set to0
in order to instruct Corepack not to lookup on the remote registry for the latest version of the selected package manager. -
COREPACK_ENABLE_NETWORK
can be set to0
to prevent Corepack from accessing the network (in which case you'll be responsible for hydrating the package manager versions that will be required for the projects you'll run, usingcorepack hydrate
). -
COREPACK_ENABLE_STRICT
can be set to0
to prevent Corepack from throwing error if the package manager does not correspond to the one defined for the current project. This means that if a user is using the package manager specified in the current project, it will use the version specified by the project'spackageManager
field. But if the user is using other package manager different from the one specified for the current project, it will use the system-wide package manager version. -
COREPACK_ENABLE_PROJECT_SPEC
can be set to0
to prevent Corepack from checking if the package manager corresponds to the one defined for the current project. This means that it will always use the system-wide package manager regardless of what is being specified in the project'spackageManager
field. -
COREPACK_HOME
can be set in order to define where Corepack should install the package managers. By default it is set to%LOCALAPPDATA%\node\corepack
on Windows, and to$HOME/.cache/node/corepack
everywhere else. -
COREPACK_ROOT
has no functional impact on Corepack itself; it's automatically being set in your environment by Corepack when it shells out to the underlying package managers, so that they can feature-detect its presence (useful for commands likeyarn init
). -
COREPACK_NPM_REGISTRY
sets the registry base url used when retrieving package managers from npm. Default value ishttps://registry.npmjs.org
-
COREPACK_NPM_TOKEN
sets a Bearer token authorization header when connecting to a npm type registry. -
COREPACK_NPM_USERNAME
andCOREPACK_NPM_PASSWORD
to set a Basic authorization header when connecting to a npm type registry. Note that both environment variables are required and as plain text. If you want to send an empty password, explicitly setCOREPACK_NPM_PASSWORD
to an empty string. -
HTTP_PROXY
,HTTPS_PROXY
, andNO_PROXY
are supported throughnode-proxy-agent
.
Troubleshooting
Networking
There are a wide variety of networking issues that can occur while running corepack
commands. Things to check:
- Make sure your network connection is active.
- Make sure the host for your request can be resolved by your DNS; try using
curl [URL]
(ipv4) andcurl -6 [URL]
(ipv6) from your shell. - Check your proxy settings (see Environment Variables).
Contributing
See CONTRIBUTING.md
.
Design
See DESIGN.md
.
License (MIT)
See LICENSE.md
.