Note: GitHub Packages is currently in beta for GitHub Enterprise Server 2.22. To join the beta for your GitHub Enterprise Server instance, use the sign-up form.
Note: This package type may not be available for your instance, because site administrators can enable or disable each supported package type. For more information, see "Configuring packages support for your enterprise."
Authenticating to GitHub Packages
You need an access token to publish, install, and delete packages.
You can use a personal access token (PAT) to authenticate to GitHub Packages or the GitHub Enterprise Server API. When you create a personal access token, you can assign the token different scopes depending on your needs. For more information about packages-related scopes for a PAT, see "About permissions for GitHub Packages."
To authenticate to a GitHub Packages registry within a GitHub Actions workflow, you can use:
GITHUB_TOKEN
to publish packages associated with the workflow repository.- a PAT to install packages associated with other private repositories (which
GITHUB_TOKEN
can't access).
For more information about GITHUB_TOKEN
used in GitHub Actions workflows, see "Authentication in a workflow."
Authenticating with a personal access token
You must use a personal access token with the appropriate scopes to publish and install packages in GitHub Packages. For more information, see "About GitHub Packages."
You can authenticate to GitHub Packages with npm by either editing your per-user ~/.npmrc file to include your personal access token or by logging in to npm on the command line using your username and personal access token.
To authenticate by adding your personal access token to your ~/.npmrc file, edit the ~/.npmrc file for your project to include the following line, replacing HOSTNAME with the host name of your GitHub Enterprise Server instance and TOKEN with your personal access token. Create a new ~/.npmrc file if one doesn't exist.
If your instance has subdomain isolation enabled:
//npm.HOSTNAME//:_authToken=TOKEN
If your instance has subdomain isolation disabled:
//HOSTNAME/_registry/npm/:_authToken=TOKEN
To authenticate by logging in to npm, use the npm login
command, replacing USERNAME with your GitHub username, TOKEN with your personal access token, and PUBLIC-EMAIL-ADDRESS with your email address.
If GitHub Packages is not your default package registry for using npm and you want to use the npm audit
command, we recommend you use the --scope
flag with the owner of the package when you authenticate to GitHub Packages.
If your instance has subdomain isolation enabled:
$ npm login --scope=@OWNER --registry=https://npm.HOSTNAME/
> Username: USERNAME
> Password: TOKEN
> Email: PUBLIC-EMAIL-ADDRESS
If your instance has subdomain isolation disabled:
$ npm login --scope=@OWNER --registry=https://HOSTNAME/_registry/npm/
> Username: USERNAME
> Password: TOKEN
> Email: PUBLIC-EMAIL-ADDRESS
Publishing a package
Note: Package names and scopes must only use lowercase letters.
By default, GitHub Packages publishes a package in the GitHub repository you specify in the name field of the package.json file. For example, you would publish a package named @my-org/test
to the my-org/test
GitHub repository. You can add a summary for the package listing page by including a README.md file in your package directory. For more information, see "Working with package.json" and "How to create Node.js Modules" in the npm documentation.
You can publish multiple packages to the same GitHub repository by including a URL
field in the package.json file. For more information, see "Publishing multiple packages to the same repository."
You can set up the scope mapping for your project using either a local .npmrc file in the project or using the publishConfig
option in the package.json. GitHub Packages only supports scoped npm packages. Scoped packages have names with the format of @owner/name
. Scoped packages always begin with an @
symbol. You may need to update the name in your package.json to use the scoped name. For example, "name": "@codertocat/hello-world-npm"
.
After you publish a package, you can view the package on GitHub. For more information, see "Viewing packages."
Publishing a package using a local .npmrc file
You can use an .npmrc file to configure the scope mapping for your project. In the .npmrc file, use the GitHub Packages URL and account owner so GitHub Packages knows where to route package requests. Using an .npmrc file prevents other developers from accidentally publishing the package to npmjs.org instead of GitHub Packages.
-
Authenticate to GitHub Packages. For more information, see "Authenticating to GitHub Packages."
-
In the same directory as your
package.json
file, create or edit an.npmrc
file to include a line specifying GitHub Packages URL and the account owner. ReplaceOWNER
with the name of the user or organization account that owns the repository containing your project.If subdomain isolation is enabled:
@OWNER:registry=https://npm.HOSTNAME
If subdomain isolation is disabled:
@OWNER:registry=https://HOSTNAME/_registry/npm
-
Add the .npmrc file to the repository where GitHub Packages can find your project. For more information, see "Adding a file to a repository."
-
Verify the name of your package in your project's package.json. The
name
field must contain the scope and the name of the package. For example, if your package is called "test", and you are publishing to the "My-org" GitHub organization, thename
field in your package.json should be@my-org/test
. -
Verify the
repository
field in your project's package.json. Therepository
field must match the URL for your GitHub repository. For example, if your repository URL isgithub.com/my-org/test
then the repository field should begit://github.com/my-org/test.git
. -
Publish the package:
$ npm publish
Publishing a package using publishConfig
in the package.json file
You can use publishConfig
element in the package.json file to specify the registry where you want the package published. For more information, see "publishConfig" in the npm documentation.
-
Edit the package.json file for your package and include a
publishConfig
entry.If your instance has subdomain isolation enabled:
"publishConfig": { "registry":"https://npm.HOSTNAME/" },
If your instance has subdomain isolation disabled:
"publishConfig": { "registry":"https://HOSTNAME/_registry/npm/" },
-
Verify the
repository
field in your project's package.json. Therepository
field must match the URL for your GitHub repository. For example, if your repository URL isgithub.com/my-org/test
then the repository field should begit://github.com/my-org/test.git
. -
Publish the package:
$ npm publish
Publishing multiple packages to the same repository
To publish multiple packages to the same repository, you can include the URL of the GitHub repository in the repository
field of the package.json file for each package.
To ensure the repository's URL is correct, replace REPOSITORY with the name of the repository containing the package you want to publish, and OWNER with the name of the user or organization account on GitHub that owns the repository.
GitHub Packages will match the repository based on the URL, instead of based on the package name.
"repository":"https://HOSTNAME/OWNER/REPOSITORY",
Installing a package
You can install packages from GitHub Packages by adding the packages as dependencies in the package.json file for your project. For more information on using a package.json in your project, see "Working with package.json" in the npm documentation.
By default, you can add packages from one organization. For more information, see "Installing packages from other organizations."
You also need to add the .npmrc file to your project so that all requests to install packages will go through GitHub Packages. When you route all package requests through GitHub Packages, you can use both scoped and unscoped packages from npmjs.org. For more information, see "npm-scope" in the npm documentation.
-
Authenticate to GitHub Packages. For more information, see "Authenticating to GitHub Packages."
-
In the same directory as your
package.json
file, create or edit an.npmrc
file to include a line specifying GitHub Packages URL and the account owner. ReplaceOWNER
with the name of the user or organization account that owns the repository containing your project.If subdomain isolation is enabled:
@OWNER:registry=https://npm.HOSTNAME
If subdomain isolation is disabled:
@OWNER:registry=https://HOSTNAME/_registry/npm
-
Add the .npmrc file to the repository where GitHub Packages can find your project. For more information, see "Adding a file to a repository."
-
Configure package.json in your project to use the package you are installing. To add your package dependencies to the package.json file for GitHub Packages, specify the full-scoped package name, such as
@my-org/server
. For packages from npmjs.com, specify the full name, such as@babel/core
or@lodash
. For example, this following package.json uses the@octo-org/octo-app
package as a dependency.{ "name": "@my-org/server", "version": "1.0.0", "description": "Server app that uses the @octo-org/octo-app package", "main": "index.js", "author": "", "license": "MIT", "dependencies": { "@octo-org/octo-app": "1.0.0" } }
-
Install the package.
$ npm install
Installing packages from other organizations
By default, you can only use GitHub Packages packages from one organization. If you'd like to route package requests to multiple organizations and users, you can add additional lines to your .npmrc file, replacing HOSTNAME with the host name of your GitHub Enterprise Server instance and OWNER with the name of the user or organization account that owns the repository containing your project.
If your instance has subdomain isolation enabled:
@OWNER:registry=https://npm.HOSTNAME
@OWNER:registry=https://npm.HOSTNAME
If your instance has subdomain isolation disabled:
@OWNER:registry=https://HOSTNAME/_registry/npm
@OWNER:registry=https://HOSTNAME/_registry/npm