npm-access(1)
npm-access
Description
NPM-ACCESS
NAME
npm-access
Synopsis
<!-- AUTOGENERATED USAGE DESCRIPTIONS -->
Description
Used to set access controls on private packages.
For all of the
subcommands, npm access will perform actions on the
packages
in the current working directory if no package name is
passed to the
subcommand.
|
• |
public / restricted (deprecated): |
Set a package to be either publicly accessible or restricted.
|
• |
grant / revoke (deprecated): |
Add or remove the ability of
users and teams to have read-only or read-write
access to a package.
|
• |
2fa-required / 2fa-not-required (deprecated): |
Configure whether a package
requires that anyone publishing it have two-factor
authentication enabled on their account.
|
• |
ls-packages (deprecated): |
Show all of the packages a user
or a team is able to access, along with the
access level, except for read-only public packages (it
won’t print the whole
registry listing)
|
• |
ls-collaborators (deprecated): |
Show all of the access
privileges for a package. Will only show permissions
for packages to which you have at least read access. If
<user> is passed in,
the list is filtered only to teams that user happens
to belong to.
|
• |
edit (not implemented) |
Details
npm
access always operates directly on the current registry,
configurable
from the command line using --registry=<registry
url>.
Unscoped packages are always public.
Scoped packages
default to restricted, but you can either publish
them as
public using npm publish --access=public, or set
their access as public using
npm access public after the initial publish.
You must have privileges to set the access of a package:
|
• |
You are an owner of an unscoped or scoped package. | ||
|
• |
You are a member of the team that owns a scope. | ||
|
• |
You have been given read-write privileges for a package, either as a member |
of a team or directly as an owner.
If you have
two-factor authentication enabled then you’ll be
prompted to
provide an otp token, or may use the --otp=... option
to specify it on
the command line.
If your account
is not paid, then attempts to publish scoped packages will
fail with an HTTP 402 status code (logically enough), unless
you use
--access=public.
Management of teams and team memberships is done with the npm team command.
Configuration
<!-- AUTOGENERATED CONFIG DESCRIPTIONS -->
See Also
|
• |
libnpmaccess |
|||
|
• |
npm team |
|||
|
• |
npm publish |
|||
|
• |
npm config |
|||
|
• |
npm registry |