npm update [-g] [<pkg>...]
aliases: up, upgradeThis command will update all the packages listed to the latest version
(specified by the tag config), respecting semver.
It will also install missing packages. As with all commands that install
packages, the --dev flag will cause devDependencies to be processed
as well.
If the -g flag is specified, this command will update globally installed
packages.
If no package name is specified, all packages in the specified location (global or local) will be updated.
As of npm@2.6.1, the npm update will only inspect top-level packages.
Prior versions of npm would also recursively inspect all dependencies.
To get the old behavior, use npm --depth 9999 update.
As of npm@5.0.0, the npm update will change package.json to save the
new version as the minimum required dependency. To get the old behavior,
use npm update --no-save.
IMPORTANT VERSION NOTE: these examples assume npm@2.6.1 or later. For
older versions of npm, you must specify --depth 0 to get the behavior
described below.
For the examples below, assume that the current package is app and it depends
on dependencies, dep1 (dep2, .. etc.). The published versions of dep1 are:
{
"dist-tags": { "latest": "1.2.2" },
"versions": [
"1.2.2",
"1.2.1",
"1.2.0",
"1.1.2",
"1.1.1",
"1.0.0",
"0.4.1",
"0.4.0",
"0.2.0"
]
}If app's package.json contains:
"dependencies": {
"dep1": "^1.1.1"
}Then npm update will install dep1@1.2.2, because 1.2.2 is latest and
1.2.2 satisfies ^1.1.1.
However, if app's package.json contains:
"dependencies": {
"dep1": "~1.1.1"
}In this case, running npm update will install dep1@1.1.2. Even though the latest
tag points to 1.2.2, this version does not satisfy ~1.1.1, which is equivalent
to >=1.1.1 <1.2.0. So the highest-sorting version that satisfies ~1.1.1 is used,
which is 1.1.2.
Suppose app has a caret dependency on a version below 1.0.0, for example:
"dependencies": {
"dep1": "^0.2.0"
}npm update will install dep1@0.2.0, because there are no other
versions which satisfy ^0.2.0.
If the dependence were on ^0.4.0:
"dependencies": {
"dep1": "^0.4.0"
}Then npm update will install dep1@0.4.1, because that is the highest-sorting
version that satisfies ^0.4.0 (>= 0.4.0 <0.5.0)
npm update -g will apply the update action to each globally installed
package that is outdated -- that is, has a version that is different from
latest.
NOTE: If a package has been upgraded to a version newer than latest, it will
be downgraded.
👀 Found a typo? Let us know!
The current stable version of npm is here. To upgrade, run: npm install npm@latest -g
To report bugs or submit feature requests for the docs, please post here. Submit npm issues here.