54

I want to publish a normal, public package to npm. When I do npm publish I get:

npm ERR! publish Failed PUT 400
npm ERR! code E400
npm ERR! unscoped packages cannot be private : my-package

3 Answers 3

77

Per the NPM docs, you now have to do:

npm publish --access public

This tells the npm registry that you want your package to be downloadable by everyone.

Instead of using --access, you can also add the setting to your package.json, as seen in @smnbbrv's answer below. But if I'm right an this is just a bug, you may want to just use --access as a temporary workaround.

6
  • 2
    yes! thank you npm team. finally, no more cold sweats that i'll accidentally end up in the wrong terminal... Nov 22, 2018 at 18:16
  • 6
    thank you npm team for the clear message that requires a separate SO question / answer. Unbelievable, this is a so much breaking change, and the error message is saying random text...
    – smnbbrv
    Nov 23, 2018 at 19:41
  • @smnbbrv — ahahah, you're sure right... as though they couldn't see it coming, that such a major breaking change warrants a friendly reminder in the error message.. what's with these npm developers anyways? hahah, cheers Nov 25, 2018 at 7:06
  • What a random error message, and even randomer resolution.
    – Patrick
    Nov 25, 2018 at 13:06
  • awesome @mb21 ;) Nov 25, 2018 at 13:31
11

With all the credits to @mb21 and his solution there is a small addition to his answer.

The proposed

npm publish --access public

works perfectly. However it is not always possible to make it work within the CI environment, e.g. when you use semantic-release. The proper solution there would be using the very same access parameter but inside your package.jsons publishConfig (btw this also makes it easier to publish manually in the future):

{
  "name": "...",
  ...
  "publishConfig": {
    "access": "public"
  }
}

And now you can use it within CI tools or simply

npm publish

It costed me some time to figure this out, so I hope it saves some time for the future readers.

1
  • Thank you. This helped me solve npm err! can't restrict access to unscoped packages.
    – Gezzasa
    Jul 5, 2023 at 20:29
1

If you want it to be private, then you'll have to add a scope to your package.

Instead of my-package then you'll use @my-private-libraries/my-package

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