863

I have this in my package.json file (shortened version):

{
  "name": "a-module",
  "version": "0.0.1",
  "dependencies": {
    "coffee-script":      ">= 1.1.3"
  },
  "devDependencies": {
    "stylus":             ">= 0.17.0"
  }
}

I am using NPM version 1.1.1 on Mac 10.6.8.

When I run the following command from the project root, it installs both the dependencies and devDependencies:

npm install

I was under the impression that this command installed the devDependencies:

npm install --dev

How do I make it so npm install only installs dependencies (so production environment only gets those modules), while something like npm install --dev installs both dependencies and devDependencies?

3
  • 1
    According to the doc, you are right, the --dev installs the devdeps, otherwise, only the deps. npmjs.org/doc/json.html. I know this works for named packages, at least.
    – mna
    Feb 13, 2012 at 22:54
  • 2
    if you come across this Question in 2015, --save-dev switch does the trick exactly as asked in this Question.
    – Anand
    Mar 25, 2015 at 8:38
  • 2
    This answer stackoverflow.com/a/22004559/3718119 gives a nice explanation to differences between dependencies and devDependencies and when each of them is used.
    – quasoft
    Sep 11, 2015 at 12:02

15 Answers 15

1318

The npm install command will install the devDependencies along other dependencies when run inside a package directory, in a development environment (the default).

In version 8.x and above use --omit=dev flag to install only regular dependencies:

npm install --omit=dev

This will install only dependencies, and not devDependencies, regardless of the value of the NODE_ENV environment variable.

If you use 6.x or an earlier version, you need to use the --only=prod flag instead.

Note:
Before v3.3.0 of npm (2015-08-13), the option was called --production, i.e.

npm install --production

You may also need --no-optional flag.

12
  • 5
    Agate's reasoning is probably to remove devDependencies so that consumers installing your package with npm install yourpackage.tgz don't also get the devDependencies. However, that is already the case. See Kevin Cox's answer below (stackoverflow.com/a/15826602/825588).
    – Johann
    Aug 27, 2013 at 23:51
  • 7
    npmjs.org/doc/cli/npm-install.html "By default, npm install will install all modules listed as dependencies. With the --production flag, npm will not install modules listed in devDependencies."
    – tomByrer
    Sep 29, 2014 at 14:49
  • 31
    Oh my god. I totally had NODE_ENV=production from something else I was doing and could not figure out for the life of me why npm install wouldn't install dependencies. Thanks for the thorough answer.
    – aendra
    May 5, 2015 at 23:29
  • 11
    For npm 3.3 and onward: npm WARN install Usage of the --dev option is deprecated. Use --only=dev instead.
    – srcspider
    Nov 2, 2015 at 9:22
  • 5
    According to the current documentation it is still only --production: "With the --production flag (or when the NODE_ENV environment variable is set to production), npm will not install modules listed in devDependencies." May 16, 2020 at 10:48
316

I run into that problem too! npm install is somewhat confusing and web posts keep bringing in the -d/--dev flags as if there is an explicit 'development' install mode.

  • npm install will install both "dependencies" and "devDependencies"

  • npm install --production will only install "dependencies"

  • npm install --dev will only install "devDependencies"

5
  • 65
    WARNING: If NODE_ENV is set to production and you run npm install it will not install dev dependencies. I ran into this issue in my Dockerfile.
    – vaughan
    Jan 28, 2016 at 23:46
  • 6
    @vaughan I've run into this too, can be solved by running npm --production=false install (though not sure if this will work alongside the --dev flag)
    – Bavell
    Mar 16, 2016 at 16:21
  • @vaughan what if echo $NODE_ENV returns empty? Jun 20, 2021 at 12:01
  • why would someone use npm install --dev? in mean in what scenario? e.g. they already installed by npm install --production and now decide to do some test?
    – Jim Raynor
    Oct 1, 2021 at 7:51
  • @JimRaynor I have a project where the production dependencies are installed globally and the development dependencies are installed locally. It's a test harness, so not a usual use case at all (and not how I'd design it), but it's definitely a use case. We run --production with a -g flag, and a --dev without the -g. Nov 10, 2021 at 3:37
164

The new option is:

npm install --only=prod

If you want to install only devDependencies:

npm install --only=dev
10
  • 1
    This answers the opposite of the question. OP is asking how NOT to install devDependencies.
    – musicin3d
    Nov 7, 2016 at 0:01
  • 4
    you are partially correct @musicin3d, that's why on the first part I answered how to install prod only dependencies and on the second part how to install dev only dependencies, just in case.
    – Cloxure
    Dec 27, 2016 at 19:06
  • 7
    Hey there. I left that comment before @user1614572 added the part about --only=prod. You, sir, are partially correct. ;P
    – musicin3d
    Dec 28, 2016 at 20:11
  • 1
    @Jacques: I didn't miss the point, but let me clarify: at the time you commented, the documentation showed both options, with no indication as to which would be preferred or new. What made you claim "This is the correct answer"? Furthermore, both options are still equally valid today, and if you care about integrity, you'd delete your 2016 comment, and/or add a new one if you do have reasons to say that --production is deprecated. SO isn't a set-in-time blog post. It's an evolving wiki. Let's keep it current! May 2, 2019 at 1:24
  • 3
    It’s a comment, not an answer. I don’t go checking all my comments periodically. I’ve never seen people go update comments from years ago. You basically came on here to criticize that I put a year on my comment. I won’t be responding further. Have fun trolling other people.
    – Jacques
    May 2, 2019 at 2:32
56

If you have already installed all your dependencies, and you want to avoid having to download your production packages from NPM again, you can simply type:

npm prune --production

This will remove your dev dependencies from your node_modules folder, which is helpful if you're trying to automate a two step process like

  1. Webpack my project, using dev dependencies
  2. Build a Docker image using only production modules

Running npm prune in between will save you from having to reinstall everything!

2
  • 2
    In 2021, npm v7.11 you just need npm install --only=production even if you installed the whole thing and it achieves the same result May 11, 2021 at 22:26
  • 1
    In 2023 npm warns when using --only=production with the following: npm WARN config only Use --omit=dev to omit dev dependencies from the install.
    – elad.chen
    Jun 10, 2023 at 10:59
47

If you read this POST in 2016, please achieve what you want by using

--only={prod[uction]|dev[elopment]} 

argument will cause either only devDependencies or only non-devDependencies to be installed regardless of the NODE_ENV.

from: https://docs.npmjs.com/cli/install

1
23

When using "npm install" the modules are loaded and available throughout your application regardless of if they are "devDependencies" or "dependencies". Sum of this idea: everything which your package.json defines as a dependency (any type) gets installed to node_modules.

The purpose for the difference between dependencies/devDependencies/optionalDependencies is what consumers of your code can do w/ npm to install these resources.

Per the documentation: https://npmjs.org/doc/json.html...

If someone is planning on downloading and using your module in their program, then they probably don't want or need to download and build the external test or documentation framework that you use.

In this case, it's best to list these additional items in a devDependencies hash.

These things will be installed whenever the --dev configuration flag is set. This flag is set automatically when doing npm link or when doing npm install from the root of a package, and can be managed like any other npm configuration param. See config(1) for more on the topic.

However, to resolve this question, if you want to ONLY install the "dependencies" using npm, the following command is:

npm install --production

This can be confirmed by looking at the Git commit which added this filter (along with some other filters [listed below] to provide this functionality).

Alternative filters which can be used by npm:

--save          => updates dependencies entries in the {{{json}}} file
--force         => force fetching remote entries if they exist on disk 
--force-latest  => force latest version on conflict
--production    => do NOT install project devDependencies
--no-color      => do not print colors

@dmarr try using npm install --production

0
20

I suggest to use npm ci. If you want to install only production-needed packages (as you wrote - without devDependencies) then:

npm ci --only=production

or

NODE_ENV=production npm ci

If you prefer oldschool npm install then:

npm install --production

or

NODE_ENV=production npm install

Here is good answer why you should use npm ci.

2
  • Cool, it does work with npm ci as well, not just npm install!
    – Klesun
    May 11, 2020 at 12:38
  • 1
    This is good advice. However now --only=production should be --omit=dev.
    – Subfuzion
    Aug 2, 2022 at 21:05
18

npm will install dev dependencies when installing from inside a package (if there is a package.json in the current directory). If it is from another location (npm registry, git repo, different location on the filesystem) it only installs the dependencies.

2
  • Could you please reformulate? I think you made a mistake in your parenthesis, I think you forgot to close it earlier and your frase doesn't make much sense to me (non-native english speaker). Johann's comment under Rohan Singh answer pointed me to look to your answer (because my doubt was exactly the same that agate's doubt), and no success. I still don't get it how npm install some-module will not install dev dependencies of some-module. Feb 21, 2015 at 0:26
  • Thanks, fixed. I don't understand the rest of your question however.
    – Kevin Cox
    Feb 21, 2015 at 13:18
7

It's worth mentioning that you can use the NODE_ENV environment variable to achieve the same result. Particularly useful if you're containerizing your Node application (e.g. Docker).

NODE_ENV=production npm install

The above code will install all your dependencies but the dev ones (i.e. devDependencies).

if you need to use environment variables in your Dockerfile more information can be found here.

Environment variables are easy to overwrite whenever needed (e.g. if you want to run your test suite say on Travis CI). If that were the case you could do something like this:

docker run -v $(pwd):/usr/src/app --rm -it -e NODE_ENV=production node:8 npm install

NPM Documentation here

production

  • Default: false
  • Type: Boolean Set to true to run in "production" mode.

    1. devDependencies are not installed at the topmost level when running local npm install without any arguments.
    2. Set the NODE_ENV="production" for lifecycle scripts.

Happy containerization =)

6

npm install --production --no-optional

It installs only deps from dependencies and will ignore optionalDependencies and devDependencies

5

I ran into a problem in the docker node:current-slim (running npm 7.0.9) where npm install appeared to ignore --production, --only=prod and --only=production. I found two work-arounds:

  1. use ci instead (RUN npm ci --only=production) which requires an up-to-date package-lock.json
  2. before npm install, brutally edit the package.json with:

RUN node -e 'const fs = require("fs"); const pkg = JSON.parse(fs.readFileSync("./package.json", "utf-8")); delete pkg.devDependencies; fs.writeFileSync("./package.json", JSON.stringify(pkg), "utf-8");'

This won't edit your working package.json, just the one copied to the docker container. Of course, this shouldn't be necessary, but if it is (as it was for me), there's your hack.

4

Need to add to chosen answer: As of now, npm install in a package directory (containing package.json) will install devDependencies, whereas npm install -g will not install them.

1
  • 10
    Yes, -g will not install devDependencies, but it does install the packages globally, which is often not the intended result. Jul 31, 2014 at 2:15
4

I have found that, when trying to install dev dependencies for a package that contains a node addon, you cannot avoid building the addon when running npm install --dev even if you just want to install the devDependencies. So, I had to go around npm's back:

node -e 'console.log( Object.keys( require( "./package.json" ).devDependencies ) );' | \
sed  -e "s/^[^']*'//" -e "s/'.*$//" | \
xargs npm install

Or, better (and more succinctly) yet,

node -e 'Object.keys( require( "./package.json" ).devDependencies )
.map( function( item ){ console.log( item ) } );' | xargs npm install
3

Use npm install packageName --save this will add package in dependencies, if you use npm install packageName --save-dev then it devDependencies.

npm install packageName --save-dev should be used for adding packages for development purpose. Like adding TDD packages (Chai, mocha, etc). Which are used in development and not in production.

1
  • The OP is not having an issue saving dependencies in package.json but once these dependencies are already saved, then how to coerce npm to install only one specific type of dependency. When I read your answer here, I did not learn anything that helps solve the problem posed by the OP.
    – Louis
    Nov 28, 2016 at 13:59
1

npm install --production is the right way of installing node modules which are required for production. Check the documentation for more details

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