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ni

npm i in a yarn project, again? F**k!

ni - use the right package manager

<pre> <code> npm i -g <b>@antfu/ni</b> </code> </pre>

<a href='https://docs.npmjs.com/cli/v6/commands/npm'>npm</a> · <a href='https://yarnpkg.com'>yarn</a> · <a href='https://pnpm.io/'>pnpm</a> · <a href='https://bun.sh/'>bun</a> · <a href='https://deno.land/'>deno</a>

ni - install

bash
ni

# npm install
# yarn install
# pnpm install
# bun install
# deno install
bash
ni vite

# npm i vite
# yarn add vite
# pnpm add vite
# bun add vite
# deno add vite
bash
ni @types/node -D

# npm i @types/node -D
# yarn add @types/node -D
# pnpm add -D @types/node
# bun add -d @types/node
# deno add -D @types/node
bash
ni -P

# npm i --omit=dev
# yarn install --production
# pnpm i --production
# bun install --production
# (deno not supported)
bash
ni --frozen

# npm ci
# yarn install --frozen-lockfile (Yarn 1)
# yarn install --immutable (Yarn Berry)
# pnpm install --frozen-lockfile
# bun install --frozen-lockfile
# deno install --frozen
bash
ni -g eslint

# npm i -g eslint
# yarn global add eslint (Yarn 1)
# pnpm add -g eslint
# bun add -g eslint
# deno install eslint

# this uses default agent, regardless your current working directory
bash
ni -i

# interactively select the dependency to install
# search for packages by name
<details> <summary>catalogs support</summary>

Since v29.0.0

When working in a pnpm workspace with catalogs configured in pnpm-workspace.yaml, ni automatically enters catalog mode. Instead of adding packages with pinned versions, it writes catalog: references into package.json and updates the workspace catalog.

bash
# Given pnpm-workspace.yaml with:
#   catalogs:
#     prod:
#       react: ^18.3.0

ni react
# → detects react in "prod" catalog
# → writes "react": "catalog:prod" to package.json
# → runs pnpm install

ni lodash
# → lodash not in any catalog
# → prompts to select a catalog (or skip)
# → fetches latest version, updates pnpm-workspace.yaml
# → writes "lodash": "catalog:prod" to package.json
# → runs pnpm install

When only a default catalog (catalog: top-level) is used, new packages are added directly without prompting. When only named catalogs exist, the default catalog is never offered.

Flags like -D are respected — the catalog ref is written to the correct package.json section:

bash
ni typescript -D
# → writes "typescript": "catalog:dev" to devDependencies

Use -w / --workspace to target the workspace root package.json:

bash
ni react -w
# → writes catalog ref to workspace root package.json

To disable catalog mode, set catalog=false in ~/.nirc or NI_CATALOG=false environment variable.

</details>

nr - run

bash
nr dev --port=3000

# npm run dev -- --port=3000
# yarn run dev --port=3000
# pnpm run dev --port=3000
# bun run dev --port=3000
# deno task dev --port=3000
bash
nr

# interactively select the script to run
# supports https://www.npmjs.com/package/npm-scripts-info convention
bash
nr -

# rerun the last command
bash
nr -p
nr -p dev

# interactively select the package and script to run
<details> <summary>shell completion scripts</summary>
bash
# Add completion script for bash
nr --completion-bash >> ~/.bashrc

# Add completion script for zsh
# For zim:fw
mkdir -p ~/.zim/custom/ni-completions
nr --completion-zsh > ~/.zim/custom/ni-completions/_ni
echo "zmodule $HOME/.zim/custom/ni-completions --fpath ." >> ~/.zimrc
zimfw install

# Add completion script for fish
mkdir -p ~/.config/fish/completions
nr --completion-fish > ~/.config/fish/completions/nr.fish
</details>

nlx - download & execute

bash
nlx vitest

# npx vitest
# yarn dlx vitest
# pnpm dlx vitest
# bunx vitest
# deno run npm:vitest

nup - upgrade

bash
nup

# npm upgrade
# yarn upgrade (Yarn 1)
# yarn up (Yarn Berry)
# pnpm update
# bun update
# deno upgrade
bash
nup -i

# (not available for npm)
# yarn upgrade-interactive (Yarn 1)
# yarn up -i (Yarn Berry)
# pnpm update -i
# bun update -i
# deno outdated -u -i

nun - uninstall

bash
nun webpack

# npm uninstall webpack
# yarn remove webpack
# pnpm remove webpack
# bun remove webpack
# deno remove webpack
bash
nun

# interactively multi-select
# the dependencies to remove
bash
nun -g silent

# npm uninstall -g silent
# yarn global remove silent
# pnpm remove -g silent
# bun remove -g silent
# deno uninstall -g silent

nci - clean install

bash
nci

# npm ci
# yarn install --frozen-lockfile
# pnpm install --frozen-lockfile
# bun install --frozen-lockfile
# deno cache --reload

nd - dedupe dependencies

bash
nd

# npm dedupe
# yarn dedupe
# pnpm dedupe

na - agent alias

bash
na

# npm
# yarn
# pnpm
# bun
# deno
bash
na run foo

# npm run foo
# yarn run foo
# pnpm run foo
# bun run foo
# deno task foo

Global Flags

bash
# ?               | 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

Config

ini
; ~/.nirc

; fallback when no lock found
defaultAgent=npm # default "prompt"

; for global installs
globalAgent=npm

; use node --run instead of package manager run command (requires Node.js 22+)
runAgent=node

; prefix commands with sfw
useSfw=true

; use catalog mode when catalogs are detected (default true)
catalog=true
bash
# ~/.bashrc

# custom configuration file path
export NI_CONFIG_FILE="$HOME/.config/ni/nirc"

# environment variables have higher priority than config file if presented
export NI_DEFAULT_AGENT="npm" # default "prompt"
export NI_GLOBAL_AGENT="npm"
export NI_USE_SFW="true"
export NI_CATALOG="false" # disable catalog mode
ps
# for Windows

# custom configuration file path in PowerShell accessible within the `$profile` path
$Env:NI_CONFIG_FILE = 'C:\to\your\config\location'

Automatic installation

You can set NI_AUTO_INSTALL=true to enable automatic installation.

If the corresponding package manager (npm, yarn, pnpm, bun, or deno) is not installed, it will install it globally before running the command.

Integrations

Homebrew

You can install ni with Homebrew:

bash
brew install ni

asdf

You can also install ni via the 3rd-party asdf-plugin maintained by CanRau

bash
# 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

How?

ni assumes that you work with lock-files (and you should).

Before ni runs the command, it detects your yarn.lock / pnpm-lock.yaml / package-lock.json / bun.lock / bun.lockb / deno.json / deno.jsonc to know the current package manager (or packageManager field in your packages.json if specified) using the package-manager-detector package and then runs the corresponding package-manager-detector command.

Trouble shooting

Conflicts with PowerShell

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:

PowerShell
'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:

PowerShell
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
}

nx, nix and nu are no longer available

We renamed nx/nix and nu to nlx and nup to avoid conflicts with the other existing tools - nx, nix and nushell. You can always alias them back on your shell configuration file (.zshrc, .bashrc, etc).

bash
alias nx="nlx"
# or
alias nix="nlx"
# or
alias nu="nup"