npm i
in a yarn project, again? F**k!
ni - use the right package manager
npm i -g @antfu/ni
ni
# npm install
# yarn install
# pnpm install
# bun install
ni vite
# npm i vite
# yarn add vite
# pnpm add vite
# bun add vite
ni @types/node -D
# npm i @types/node -D
# yarn add @types/node -D
# pnpm add -D @types/node
# bun add -d @types/node
ni --frozen
# npm ci
# yarn install --frozen-lockfile (Yarn 1)
# yarn install --immutable (Yarn Berry)
# pnpm install --frozen-lockfile
# bun install --no-save
ni -g eslint
# npm i -g eslint
# yarn global add eslint (Yarn 1)
# pnpm add -g eslint
# bun add -g eslint
# this uses default agent, regardless your current working directory
nr dev --port=3000
# npm run dev -- --port=3000
# yarn run dev --port=3000
# pnpm run dev --port=3000
# bun run dev --port=3000
nr
# interactively select the script to run
# supports https://www.npmjs.com/package/npm-scripts-info convention
nr -
# rerun the last command
nlx vitest
# npx vitest
# yarn dlx vitest
# pnpm dlx vitest
# bunx vitest
nu
# npm upgrade
# yarn upgrade (Yarn 1)
# yarn up (Yarn Berry)
# pnpm update
# bun update
nu -i
# (not available for npm & bun)
# yarn upgrade-interactive (Yarn 1)
# yarn up -i (Yarn Berry)
# pnpm update -i
nun webpack
# npm uninstall webpack
# yarn remove webpack
# pnpm remove webpack
# bun remove webpack
nun -g silent
# npm uninstall -g silent
# yarn global remove silent
# pnpm remove -g silent
# bun remove -g silent
nci
# npm ci
# yarn install --frozen-lockfile
# pnpm install --frozen-lockfile
# bun install --no-save
if the corresponding node manager is not present, this command will install it globally along the way.
na
# npm
# yarn
# pnpm
# bun
na run foo
# npm run foo
# yarn run foo
# pnpm run foo
# bun run foo
# ? | Print the command execution depends on the agent
ni vite ?
# -C | Change directory before running the command
ni -C packages/foo vite
nr -C playground dev
# -v, --version | Show version number
ni -v
# -h, --help | Show help
ni -h
; ~/.nirc
; fallback when no lock found
defaultAgent=npm # default "prompt"
; for global installs
globalAgent=npm
# ~/.bashrc
# custom configuration file path
export NI_CONFIG_FILE="$HOME/.config/ni/nirc"
# for Windows
# custom configuration file path in PowerShell accessible within the `$profile` path
$Env:NI_CONFIG_FILE = 'C:\to\your\config\location'
You can also install ni via the 3rd-party asdf-plugin maintained by CanRau
# first add the plugin
asdf plugin add ni https://github.com/CanRau/asdf-ni.git
# then install the latest version
asdf install ni latest
# and make it globally available
asdf global ni latest
ni assumes that you work with lockfiles (and you should)
Before it runs, it will detect your yarn.lock
/ pnpm-lock.yaml
/ package-lock.json
/ bun.lockb
to know current package manager (or packageManager
field in your packages.json if specified), and runs the corresponding commands.
PowerShell comes with a built-in alias ni
for the New-Item
cmdlet. To remove the alias in your current PowerShell session in favor of this package, use the following command:
'Remove-Item Alias:ni -Force -ErrorAction Ignore'
If you want to persist the changes, you can add them to your PowerShell profile. The profile path is accessible within the $profile
variable. The ps1 profile file can normally be found at
- PowerShell 5 (Windows PowerShell):
C:\Users\USERNAME\Documents\WindowsPowerShell\Microsoft.PowerShell_profile.ps1
- PowerShell 7:
C:\Users\USERNAME\Documents\PowerShell\Microsoft.PowerShell_profile.ps1
- VSCode:
C:\Users\USERNAME\Documents\PowerShell\Microsoft.VSCode_profile.ps1
You can use the following script to remove the alias at shell start by adding the above command to your profile:
if (-not (Test-Path $profile)) {
New-Item -ItemType File -Path (Split-Path $profile) -Force -Name (Split-Path $profile -Leaf)
}
$profileEntry = 'Remove-Item Alias:ni -Force -ErrorAction Ignore'
$profileContent = Get-Content $profile
if ($profileContent -notcontains $profileEntry) {
("`n" + $profileEntry) | Out-File $profile -Append -Force -Encoding UTF8
}
We renamed nx
/nix
to nlx
to avoid conflicts with the other existing tools - nx and nix. You can always alias them back on your shell configuration file (.zshrc
, .bashrc
, etc).
alias nx="nlx"
# or
alias nix="nlx"