kappa

A hierarchical npm-registry proxy to make private registries easier. (Based on npm-delegate by @jden)

Usage no npm install needed!

<script type="module">
  import kappa from 'https://cdn.skypack.dev/kappa';
</script>

README

Kappa

Build Status NPM version

Based on [npm-delegate] (https://npmjs.org/package/npm-delegate) by Jason Denizac jason@denizac.org, this module is a hapi plugin used to proxy npm to support private npm repos without replicating the entire public registry.

NOTE: The config.json described below is a Hapi Composer manifest that describes kappa as a plugin. See ./example/global/config.json or ./example/local/config.json for more information.

Quickstart

Global Installation
$ npm install -g kappa
$ kappa -c config.json
Local Installation

If you choose to install locally, running kappa is as easy as

$ npm init
$ npm install --save kappa

# add start script to package.json:
#    "scripts": {
#        "start": "kappa -c config.json",
#    }

$ npm start

You can then put those artifacts (config.json and package.json) under source control for simple deployments later:

$ git clone git@github.com:me/myregistry.git
$ cd myregistry
$ npm install
$ npm start

Options

kappa plugin currently supports the following parameters

  • vhost - the virtual host associated with the kappa server, e.g. 'npm.mydomain.com'
  • paths (optional) - any ordered array of npm repositories to use, e.g. Defaults to ['http://localhost:5984/registry/_design/app/_rewrite/', 'https://registry.npmjs.org/']
  • rewriteTarballs (optional) - When true rewrites the tarball URL in packages to download each resource via kappa. When false, tarball URLs are left untouched, allowing the client to download package tarballs directly from the registry that fulfilled the package request. Defaults to true.

For read operations (GET, HEAD, etc) the proxy will first attempt to fetch the module from the first registry. If the requested module is not found it continues to the next registry, and so on.

For write operations the proxy will only attempt to write to the FIRST registry. All auth occurs with the first registry as well.