npm packages in the Package Registry (FREE)

For documentation of the specific API endpoints that the npm package manager client uses, see the npm API documentation.

Learn how to build an npm or yarn package.

Watch a video demo of how to publish npm packages to the GitLab Package Registry.

Publish to GitLab Package Registry

Authentication to the Package Registry

You need an token to publish a package. There are different tokens available depending on what you're trying to achieve. For more information, review the guidance on tokens.

  • If your organization uses two factor authentication (2FA), you must use a personal access token with the scope set to api.
  • If you are publishing a package via CI/CD pipelines, you must use a CI job token.

Create a token and save it to use later in the process.

Do not use authentication methods other than the methods documented here. Undocumented authentication methods might be removed in the future.

Naming convention

Depending on how the package is installed, you may need to adhere to the naming convention.

You can use one of two API endpoints to install packages:

  • Instance-level: Use when you have many npm packages in different GitLab groups or in their own namespace.
  • Project-level: Use when you have few npm packages and they are not in the same GitLab group.

If you plan to install a package through the project level, then you do not have to adhere to the naming convention.

If you plan to install a package through the instance level, then you must name your package with a scope. Scoped packages begin with a @ have the format of @owner/package-name. You can set up the scope for your package in the .npmrc file and by using the publishConfig option in the package.json.

  • The value used for the @scope is the root of the project that is hosting the packages and not the root of the project with the source code of the package itself. The scope should be lowercase.
  • The package name can be anything you want
Project URL Package Registry in Scope Full package name
https://gitlab.com/my-org/engineering-group/analytics Analytics @my-org @my-org/package-name

Make sure that the name of your package in the package.json file matches this convention:

"name": "@my-org/package-name"

Publishing a package via the command line

Authenticating via the .npmrc

Create or edit the .npmrc file in the same directory as your package.json. Include the following lines in the .npmrc file:

@scope:registry=https://your_domain_name/api/v4/projects/your_project_id/packages/npm/
//your_domain_name/api/v4/projects/your_project_id/packages/npm/:_authToken="${NPM_TOKEN}"
  • Replace @scope with the root level group of the project you're publishing to the package to.
  • Replace your_domain_name with your domain name, for example, gitlab.com.
  • Replace your_project_id is your project ID, found on the project's home page.
  • "${NPM_TOKEN}" is associated with the token you created later in the process.

WARNING: Never hardcode GitLab tokens (or any tokens) directly in .npmrc files or any other files that can be committed to a repository.

Publishing a package via the command line

Associate your token with the "${NPM_TOKEN}" in the .npmrc. Replace your_token with a deploy token, group access token, project access token, or personal access token.

NPM_TOKEN=your_token npm publish

Your package should now publish to the Package Registry.

Publishing a package via a CI/CD pipeline

Authenticating via the .npmrc

Create or edit the .npmrc file in the same directory as your package.json in a GitLab project. Include the following lines in the .npmrc file:

@scope:registry=https://your_domain_name/api/v4/projects/your_project_id/packages/npm/
//your_domain_name/api/v4/projects/${CI_PROJECT_ID}/packages/npm/:_authToken=${CI_JOB_TOKEN}
  • Replace @scope with the root level group of the project you're publishing to the package to.
  • The ${CI_PROJECT_ID} and ${CI_JOB_TOKEN} are predefined variables that are available in the pipeline and do not need to be replaced.

Publishing a package via a CI/CD pipeline

In the GitLab project that houses your .npmrc and package.json, edit or create a .gitlab-ci.yml file. For example:

image: node:latest

stages:
  - deploy

deploy:
  stage: deploy
  script:
    - echo "//${CI_SERVER_HOST}/api/v4/projects/${CI_PROJECT_ID}/packages/npm/:_authToken=${CI_JOB_TOKEN}">.npmrc
    - npm publish

Your package should now publish to the Package Registry when the pipeline runs.

Install a package

If multiple packages have the same name and version, when you install a package, the most recently-published package is retrieved.

You can install a package from a GitLab project or instance:

  • Instance-level: Use when you have many npm packages in different GitLab groups or in their own namespace.
  • Project-level: Use when you have few npm packages and they are not in the same GitLab group.

Authenticate to the Package Registry

You must authenticate to the Package Registry to install a package from a private project. No authentication is needed if the project is public.

To authenticate with npm:

npm config set -- //your_domain_name/:_authToken=your_token

With npm version 7 or earlier, use the full URL to the endpoint.

If you're installing:

  • From the instance level:

    npm config set -- //your_domain_name/api/v4/packages/npm/:_authToken=your_token

    From the project level:

    npm config set -- //your_domain_name/api/v4/projects/your_project_id/packages/npm/:_authToken=your_token

In these examples:

  • Replace your_domain_name with your domain name, for example, gitlab.com.
  • Replace your_project_id is your project ID, found on the project's home page.
  • Replace your_token with a deploy token, group access token, project access token, or personal access token.

NOTE: Starting with npm version 8, you can use a URI fragment instead of a full URL in the _authToken parameter. However, group-level endpoints are not supported.

Install from the instance level

WARNING: To install a package from the instance level, the package must have been published following the scoped naming convention.

  1. Authenticate to the Package Registry.

  2. Set the registry

    npm config set @scope:registry https://your_domain_name.com/api/v4/packages/npm/
    • Replace @scope with the root level group of the project you're installing to the package from.
    • Replace your_domain_name with your domain name, for example gitlab.com.
    • Replace your_token with a deploy token, group access token, project access token, or personal access token.
  3. Install the package

    npm install @scope/my-package

Install from the project level

  1. Authenticate to the Package Registry.

  2. Set the registry

    npm config set @scope:registry=https://your_domain_name/api/v4/projects/your_project_id/packages/npm/
    • Replace @scope with the root level group of the project you're installing to the package from.
    • Replace your_domain_name with your domain name, for example, gitlab.com.
    • Replace your_project_id is your project ID, found on the project's home page.
  3. Install the package

    npm install @scope/my-package

Deprecate a package

Introduced in GitLab 16.0.

You can deprecate a package so that a deprecation warning displays when the package is fetched.

Pre-requisites:

From the command line, run:

npm deprecate @scope/package "Deprecation message"

The CLI also accepts version ranges for @scope/package. For example:

npm deprecate @scope/package "All package versions are deprecated"
npm deprecate @scope/package@1.0.1 "Only version 1.0.1 is deprecated"
npm deprecate @scope/package@"< 1.0.5" "All package versions less than 1.0.5 are deprecated"

Remove deprecation warning

To remove a package's deprecation warning, specify "" (an empty string) for the message. For example:

npm deprecate @scope/package ""

Helpful hints

Package forwarding to npmjs.com

When an npm package is not found in the Package Registry, the request is forwarded to npmjs.com.

Administrators can disable this behavior in the Continuous Integration settings.

Group owners can disable this behavior in the group Packages and Registries settings.

Install npm packages from other organizations

You can route package requests to organizations and users outside of GitLab.

To do this, add lines to your .npmrc file. Replace @my-other-org with the namespace or group that owns your project's repository, and use your organization's URL. The name is case-sensitive and must match the name of your group or namespace exactly.

@scope:registry=https://my_domain_name.com/api/v4/packages/npm/
@my-other-org:registry=https://my_domain_name.example.com/api/v4/packages/npm/

npm metadata

The GitLab Package Registry exposes the following attributes to the npm client. These are similar to the abbreviated metadata format:

  • name
  • versions
    • name
    • version
    • deprecated
    • dependencies
    • devDependencies
    • bundleDependencies
    • peerDependencies
    • bin
    • directories
    • dist
    • engines
    • _hasShrinkwrap

Add npm distribution tags

You can add distribution tags to newly-published packages. Tags are optional and can be assigned to only one package at a time.

When you publish a package without a tag, the latest tag is added by default. When you install a package without specifying the tag or version, the latest tag is used.

Examples of the supported dist-tag commands:

npm publish @scope/package --tag               # Publish a package with new tag
npm dist-tag add @scope/package@version my-tag # Add a tag to an existing package
npm dist-tag ls @scope/package                 # List all tags under the package
npm dist-tag rm @scope/package@version my-tag  # Delete a tag from the package
npm install @scope/package@my-tag              # Install a specific tag

From CI/CD

Introduced in GitLab 15.10.

You can use a CI_JOB_TOKEN or deploy token to run npm dist-tag commands in a GitLab CI/CD job. For example:

npm-deploy-job:
  script:
    - echo "//${CI_SERVER_HOST}/api/v4/projects/${CI_PROJECT_ID}/packages/npm/:_authToken=${CI_JOB_TOKEN}">.npmrc
    - npm dist-tag add @scope/package@version my-tag

Due to a bug in npm 6.9.0, deleting distribution tags fails. Make sure your npm version is 6.9.1 or later.

Supported CLI commands

The GitLab npm repository supports the following commands for the npm CLI (npm) and yarn CLI (yarn):

  • npm install: Install npm packages.
  • npm publish: Publish an npm package to the registry.
  • npm dist-tag add: Add a dist-tag to an npm package.
  • npm dist-tag ls: List dist-tags for a package.
  • npm dist-tag rm: Delete a dist-tag.
  • npm ci: Install npm packages directly from your package-lock.json file.
  • npm view: Show package metadata.
  • npm pack: Create a tarball from a package.
  • npm deprecate: Deprecate a version of a package.

Troubleshooting

404 Not Found errors are happening on npm install or yarn

Using CI_JOB_TOKEN to install npm packages with dependencies in another project gives you 404 Not Found errors. You need to authenticate with a token that has access to the package and all its dependencies.

If the package and its dependencies are in separate projects but in the same group, you can use a group deploy token:

//gitlab.example.com/api/v4/packages/npm/:_authToken=<group-token>
@group-scope:registry=https://gitlab.example.com/api/v4/packages/npm/

If the package and its dependencies are spread across multiple groups, you can use a personal access token from a user that has access to all the groups or individual projects:

//gitlab.example.com/api/v4/packages/npm/:_authToken=<personal-access-token>
@group-1:registry=https://gitlab.example.com/api/v4/packages/npm/
@group-2:registry=https://gitlab.example.com/api/v4/packages/npm/

WARNING: Personal access tokens must be treated carefully. Read our token security considerations for guidance on managing personal access tokens (for example, setting a short expiry and using minimal scopes).

npm publish targets default npm registry (registry.npmjs.org)

Ensure that your package scope is set consistently in your package.json and .npmrc files.

For example, if your project name in GitLab is @scope/my-package, then your package.json file should look like:

{
  "name": "@scope/my-package"
}

And the .npmrc file should look like:

@scope:registry=https://your_domain_name/api/v4/projects/your_project_id/packages/npm/
//your_domain_name/api/v4/projects/your_project_id/packages/npm/:_authToken="${NPM_TOKEN}"

npm install returns npm ERR! 403 Forbidden

If you get this error, ensure that:

  • The Package Registry is enabled in your project settings. Although the Package Registry is enabled by default, it's possible to disable it.
  • Your token is not expired and has appropriate permissions.
  • A package with the same name or version doesn't already exist within the given scope.
  • The scoped packages URL includes a trailing slash:
    • Correct: //gitlab.example.com/api/v4/packages/npm/
    • Incorrect: //gitlab.example.com/api/v4/packages/npm

npm publish returns npm ERR! 400 Bad Request

If you get this error, one of the following problems could be causing it.

Package name does not meet the naming convention

Your package name may not meet the @scope/package-name package naming convention.

Ensure the name meets the convention exactly, including the case. Then try to publish again.

Package already exists

Your package has already been published to another project in the same root namespace and therefore cannot be published again using the same name.

This is also true even if the prior published package shares the same name, but not the version.

Package JSON file is too large

Make sure that your package.json file does not exceed 20,000 characters.

npm publish returns npm ERR! 500 Internal Server Error - PUT

This is a known issue in GitLab 13.3.x and later. The error in the logs appears as:

>NoMethodError - undefined method `preferred_language' for #<Rack::Response

This might be accompanied by another error:

>Errno::EACCES","exception.message":"Permission denied

This is usually a permissions issue with either:

  • 'packages_storage_path' default /var/opt/gitlab/gitlab-rails/shared/packages/.
  • The remote bucket if object storage is used.

In the latter case, ensure the bucket exists and GitLab has write access to it.