pnpm CLI
Différences avec npm
Contraitement à npm, pnpm valide toutes les options. For example, pnpm install --target_arch x64
will
fail as --target_arch
is not a valid option for pnpm install
.
However, some dependencies may use the npm_config_
environment variable, which
is populated from the CLI options. Dans ce cas, vous disposez des options suivantes:
- explicitly set the env variable:
npm_config_target_arch=x64 pnpm install
- force the unknown option with
--config.
:pnpm install --config.target_arch=x64
Options
-C <path>, --dir <path>
Run as if pnpm was started in <path>
instead of the current working directory.
-w, --workspace-root
Run as if pnpm was started in the root of the workspace instead of the current working directory.
Commandes
Pour plus d'informations, référez-vous à la documentation pour avoir la liste des commandes CLI. Voici une liste de commandes utiles, avec leur équivalence en npm, pour vous aider à démarrer :
commande npm | équivalent pnpm |
---|---|
npm install | pnpm install |
npm i <pkg> | pnpm add <pkg> |
npm run <cmd> | pnpm <cmd> |
When an unknown command is used, pnpm will search for a script with the given name,
so pnpm run lint
is the same as pnpm lint
. If there is no script with the specified name,
then pnpm will execute the command as a shell script, so you can do things like pnpm eslint
(see pnpm exec).
Environment variables
Some environment variables that are not pnpm related might change the behaviour of pnpm:
These environment variables may influence what directories pnpm will use for storing global information:
XDG_CACHE_HOME
XDG_CONFIG_HOME
XDG_DATA_HOME
XDG_STATE_HOME
You can search the docs to find the settings that leverage these environment variables.