Is there a way to get version from package.json in nodejs code?

node.jsNpmVersionVersioningpackage.json

node.js Problem Overview


Is there a way to get the version set in package.json in a nodejs app? I would want something like this

var port = process.env.PORT || 3000
app.listen port
console.log "Express server listening on port %d in %s mode %s", app.address().port, app.settings.env, app.VERSION

node.js Solutions


Solution 1 - node.js

I found that the following code fragment worked best for me. Since it uses require to load the package.json, it works regardless of the current working directory.

var pjson = require('./package.json');
console.log(pjson.version);

A warning, courtesy of @Pathogen:

> Doing this with Browserify has security implications.
> Be careful not to expose your package.json to the client, as it means that all your dependency version numbers, build and test commands and more are sent to the client.
> If you're building server and client in the same project, you expose your server-side version numbers too. > Such specific data can be used by an attacker to better fit the attack on your server.

Solution 2 - node.js

If your application is launched with npm start, you can simply use:

process.env.npm_package_version

See package.json vars for more details.

Solution 3 - node.js

Using ES6 modules you can do the following:

import {version} from './package.json';

Solution 4 - node.js

Or in plain old shell:

$ node -e "console.log(require('./package.json').version);"

This can be shortened to

$ node -p "require('./package.json').version"

Solution 5 - node.js

There are two ways of retrieving the version:

  1. Requiring package.json and getting the version:
const { version } = require('./package.json');
  1. Using the environment variables:
const version = process.env.npm_package_version;

Please don't use JSON.parse, fs.readFile, fs.readFileSync and don't use another npm modules it's not necessary for this question.

Solution 6 - node.js

Here is how to read the version out of package.json:

fs = require('fs')
json = JSON.parse(fs.readFileSync('package.json', 'utf8'))
version = json.version

EDIT: Wow, this answer was originally from 2012! There are several better answers now. Probably the cleanest is:

const { version } = require('./package.json');

Solution 7 - node.js

For those who look for a safe client-side solution that also works on server-side, there is genversion. It is a command-line tool that reads the version from the nearest package.json and generates an importable CommonJS module file that exports the version. Disclaimer: I'm a maintainer.

$ genversion lib/version.js

I acknowledge the client-side safety was not OP's primary intention, but as discussed in answers by Mark Wallace and aug, it is highly relevant and also the reason I found this Q&A.

Solution 8 - node.js

There is another way of fetching certain information from your package.json file namely using pkginfo module.

Usage of this module is very simple. You can get all package variables using:

require('pkginfo')(module);

Or only certain details (version in this case)

require('pkginfo')(module, 'version');

And your package variables will be set to module.exports (so version number will be accessible via module.exports.version).

You could use the following code snippet:

require('pkginfo')(module, 'version');
console.log "Express server listening on port %d in %s mode %s", app.address().port, app.settings.env, module.exports.version

This module has very nice feature - it can be used in any file in your project (e.g. in subfolders) and it will automatically fetch information from your package.json. So you do not have to worry where you package.json is.

I hope that will help.

Solution 9 - node.js

Option 1

Best practice is to version from package.json using npm environment variables.

process.env.npm_package_version

more information on: https://docs.npmjs.com/using-npm/config.html

This will work only when you start your service using NPM command.

> Quick Info: you can read any values in pacakge.json using process.env.npm_package_[keyname]

Option 2

Setting version in environment variable using https://www.npmjs.com/package/dotenv as .env file and reading it as process.env.version

Solution 10 - node.js

NPM one liner:

From npm v7.20.0:

npm pkg get version

Prior to npm v7.20.0:

npm -s run env echo '$npm_package_version'

Note the output is slightly different between these two methods: the former outputs the version number surrounded by quotes (i.e. "1.0.0"), the latter without (i.e. 1.0.0).

Solution 11 - node.js

Just adding an answer because I came to this question to see the best way to include the version from package.json in my web application.

I know this question is targetted for Node.js however, if you are using Webpack to bundle your app just a reminder the recommended way is to use the DefinePlugin to declare a global version in the config and reference that. So you could do in your webpack.config.json

const pkg = require('../../package.json');

...

plugins : [
    new webpack.DefinePlugin({
      AppVersion: JSON.stringify(pkg.version),
...

And then AppVersion is now a global that is available for you to use. Also make sure in your .eslintrc you ignore this via the globals prop

Solution 12 - node.js

You can use ES6 to import package.json to retrieve version number and output the version on console.

import {name as app_name, version as app_version}  from './path/to/package.json';

console.log(`App ---- ${app_name}\nVersion ---- ${app_version}`);

Solution 13 - node.js

To determine the package version in node code, you can use the following:

  1. const version = require('./package.json').version; for < ES6 versions

  2. import {version} from './package.json'; for ES6 version

  3. const version = process.env.npm_package_version; if application has been started using npm start, all npm_* environment variables become available.

  4. You can use following npm packages as well - root-require, pkginfo, project-version.

Solution 14 - node.js

You can use the project-version package.

$ npm install --save project-version

Then

const version = require('project-version');

console.log(version);
//=>  '1.0.0'

It uses process.env.npm_package_version but fallback on the version written in the package.json in case the env var is missing for some reason.

Solution 15 - node.js

In case you want to get version of the target package.

import { version } from 'TARGET_PACKAGE/package.json';

Example:

import { version } from 'react/package.json';

Solution 16 - node.js

If you are looking for module (package.json: "type": "module") (ES6 import) support, e.g. coming from refactoring commonJS, you should (at the time of writing) do either:

import { readFile } from 'fs/promises';

const pkg = JSON.parse(await readFile(new URL('./package.json', import.meta.url)));

console.log(pkg.version)

or, run the node process with node --experimental-json-modules index.js to do:

import pkg from './package.json'
console.log(pkg.version)

You will however get a warning, until json modules will become generally available.

If you get Syntax or (top level) async errors, you are likely in a an older node version. Update to at least node@14.

Solution 17 - node.js

Why don't use the require resolve...

const packageJson = path.dirname(require.resolve('package-name')) + '/package.json';
const { version } = require(packageJson);
console.log('version', version)

With this approach work for all sub paths :)

Solution 18 - node.js

A safe option is to add an npm script that generates a separate version file:

"scripts": {
    "build": "yarn version:output && blitz build",
    "version:output": "echo 'export const Version = { version: \"'$npm_package_version.$(date +%s)'\" }' > version.js"
  }

This outputs version.js with the contents:

export const Version = { version: "1.0.1.1622225484" }

Solution 19 - node.js

I know this isn't the intent of the OP, but I just had to do this, so hope it helps the next person.

If you're using docker-compose for your CI/CD process, you can get it this way!

version:
  image: node:7-alpine
  volumes:
    - .:/usr/src/service/
  working_dir: /usr/src/service/
  command: ash -c "node -p \"require('./package.json').version.replace('\n', '')\""

for the image, you can use any node image. I use alpine because it is the smallest.

Solution 20 - node.js

I do this with findup-sync:

var findup = require('findup-sync');
var packagejson = require(findup('package.json'));
console.log(packagejson.version); // => '0.0.1' 

Solution 21 - node.js

The leanest way I found:

const { version } = JSON.parse(fs.readFileSync('./package.json'))

Solution 22 - node.js

const { version } = require("./package.json");
console.log(version);

const v = require("./package.json").version;
console.log(v);

Solution 23 - node.js

I am using gitlab ci and want to automatically use the different versions to tag my docker images and push them. Now their default docker image does not include node so my version to do this in shell only is this

scripts/getCurrentVersion.sh

BASEDIR=$(dirname $0)
cat $BASEDIR/../package.json | grep '"version"' | head -n 1 | awk '{print $2}' | sed 's/"//g; s/,//g'

Now what this does is

  1. Print your package json
  2. Search for the lines with "version"
  3. Take only the first result
  4. Replace " and ,

Please not that i have my scripts in a subfolder with the according name in my repository. So if you don't change $BASEDIR/../package.json to $BASEDIR/package.json

Or if you want to be able to get major, minor and patch version I use this

scripts/getCurrentVersion.sh

VERSION_TYPE=$1
BASEDIR=$(dirname $0)
VERSION=$(cat $BASEDIR/../package.json | grep '"version"' | head -n 1 | awk '{print $2}' | sed 's/"//g; s/,//g')

if [ $VERSION_TYPE = "major" ]; then
  echo $(echo $VERSION | awk -F "." '{print $1}' )
elif [ $VERSION_TYPE = "minor" ]; then
  echo $(echo $VERSION | awk -F "." '{print $1"."$2}' )
else
  echo $VERSION
fi

this way if your version was 1.2.3. Your output would look like this

$ > sh ./getCurrentVersion.sh major
1

$> sh ./getCurrentVersion.sh minor
1.2

$> sh ./getCurrentVersion.sh
1.2.3

Now the only thing you will have to make sure is that your package version will be the first time in package.json that key is used otherwise you'll end up with the wrong version

Solution 24 - node.js

I made a useful code to get the parent module's package.json

function loadParentPackageJson() {
	if (!module.parent || !module.parent.filename) return null
	let dir = path.dirname(module.parent.filename)
	let maxDepth = 5
	let packageJson = null
	while (maxDepth > 0) {
		const packageJsonPath = `${dir}/package.json`
		const exists = existsSync(packageJsonPath)
		if (exists) {
			packageJson = require(packageJsonPath)
			break
		}
		dir = path.resolve(dir, '../')
		maxDepth--
	}
	return packageJson
}

Solution 25 - node.js

If using rollup, the rollup-plugin-replace plugin can be used to add the version without exposing package.json to the client.

// rollup.config.js

import pkg from './package.json';
import { terser } from "rollup-plugin-terser";
import resolve from 'rollup-plugin-node-resolve';
import commonJS from 'rollup-plugin-commonjs'
import replace from 'rollup-plugin-replace';

export default {
  plugins: [
    replace({
      exclude: 'node_modules/**',
      'MY_PACKAGE_JSON_VERSION': pkg.version, // will replace 'MY_PACKAGE_JSON_VERSION' with package.json version throughout source code
    }),
  ]
};

Then, in the source code, anywhere where you want to have the package.json version, you would use the string 'MY_PACKAGE_JSON_VERSION'.

// src/index.js
export const packageVersion = 'MY_PACKAGE_JSON_VERSION' // replaced with actual version number in rollup.config.js

Solution 26 - node.js

Import your package.json file into your server.js or app.js and then access package.json properties into server file.

var package = require('./package.json');

package variable contains all the data in package.json.

Solution 27 - node.js

I've actually been through most of the solutions here and they either did not work on both Windows and Linux/OSX, or didn't work at all, or relied on Unix shell tools like grep/awk/sed.

The accepted answer works technically, but it sucks your whole package.json into your build and that's a Bad Thing that only the desperate should use temporarily to get unblocked, and in general should be avoided, at least for production code. The alternative is to use that method only to write the version to a single constant that can be used instead of the whole file.

So for anyone else looking for a cross-platform solution (not reliant on Unix shell commands) and local (without external dependencies):

Since it can be assumed that Node.js is installed, and it's already cross-platform for this, I just created a make_version.js file with:

const PACKAGE_VERSION = require("./package.json").version;
console.log(`export const PACKAGE_VERSION = "${PACKAGE_VERSION}";`);
console.error("package.json version:", PACKAGE_VERSION);

and added a version command to package.json:

scripts: {
    "version": "node make_version.js > src/version.js",

and then added:

    "prebuild": "npm run version",
    "prestart": "npm run version",

and it creates a new src/versions.js on every start or build. Of course this can be easily tuned in the version script to be a different location, or in the make_version.js file to output different syntax and constant name, etc.

Solution 28 - node.js

Used to version web-components like this:

const { version } = require('../package.json')

class Widget extends HTMLElement {

  constructor() {
    super()
    this.attachShadow({ mode: 'open' })
  }

  public connectedCallback(): void {
    this.renderWidget()
  }

  public renderWidget = (): void => {
    this.shadowRoot?.appendChild(this.setPageTemplate())
    this.setAttribute('version', version)
  }
}

Attributions

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Content TypeOriginal AuthorOriginal Content on Stackoverflow
QuestionAbhik Bose PramanikView Question on Stackoverflow
Solution 1 - node.jsMark WallaceView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 2 - node.jsJulien ChristinView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 3 - node.jsPatrick Lee ScottView Answer on Stackoverflow
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