README.md
1semver(1) -- The semantic versioner for npm
2===========================================
3
4## Install
5
6```bash
7npm install --save semver
8````
9
10## Usage
11
12As a node module:
13
14```js
15const semver = require('semver')
16
17semver.valid('1.2.3') // '1.2.3'
18semver.valid('a.b.c') // null
19semver.clean(' =v1.2.3 ') // '1.2.3'
20semver.satisfies('1.2.3', '1.x || >=2.5.0 || 5.0.0 - 7.2.3') // true
21semver.gt('1.2.3', '9.8.7') // false
22semver.lt('1.2.3', '9.8.7') // true
23semver.minVersion('>=1.0.0') // '1.0.0'
24semver.valid(semver.coerce('v2')) // '2.0.0'
25semver.valid(semver.coerce('42.6.7.9.3-alpha')) // '42.6.7'
26```
27
28As a command-line utility:
29
30```
31$ semver -h
32
33A JavaScript implementation of the https://semver.org/ specification
34Copyright Isaac Z. Schlueter
35
36Usage: semver [options] <version> [<version> [...]]
37Prints valid versions sorted by SemVer precedence
38
39Options:
40-r --range <range>
41 Print versions that match the specified range.
42
43-i --increment [<level>]
44 Increment a version by the specified level. Level can
45 be one of: major, minor, patch, premajor, preminor,
46 prepatch, or prerelease. Default level is 'patch'.
47 Only one version may be specified.
48
49--preid <identifier>
50 Identifier to be used to prefix premajor, preminor,
51 prepatch or prerelease version increments.
52
53-l --loose
54 Interpret versions and ranges loosely
55
56-p --include-prerelease
57 Always include prerelease versions in range matching
58
59-c --coerce
60 Coerce a string into SemVer if possible
61 (does not imply --loose)
62
63Program exits successfully if any valid version satisfies
64all supplied ranges, and prints all satisfying versions.
65
66If no satisfying versions are found, then exits failure.
67
68Versions are printed in ascending order, so supplying
69multiple versions to the utility will just sort them.
70```
71
72## Versions
73
74A "version" is described by the `v2.0.0` specification found at
75<https://semver.org/>.
76
77A leading `"="` or `"v"` character is stripped off and ignored.
78
79## Ranges
80
81A `version range` is a set of `comparators` which specify versions
82that satisfy the range.
83
84A `comparator` is composed of an `operator` and a `version`. The set
85of primitive `operators` is:
86
87* `<` Less than
88* `<=` Less than or equal to
89* `>` Greater than
90* `>=` Greater than or equal to
91* `=` Equal. If no operator is specified, then equality is assumed,
92 so this operator is optional, but MAY be included.
93
94For example, the comparator `>=1.2.7` would match the versions
95`1.2.7`, `1.2.8`, `2.5.3`, and `1.3.9`, but not the versions `1.2.6`
96or `1.1.0`.
97
98Comparators can be joined by whitespace to form a `comparator set`,
99which is satisfied by the **intersection** of all of the comparators
100it includes.
101
102A range is composed of one or more comparator sets, joined by `||`. A
103version matches a range if and only if every comparator in at least
104one of the `||`-separated comparator sets is satisfied by the version.
105
106For example, the range `>=1.2.7 <1.3.0` would match the versions
107`1.2.7`, `1.2.8`, and `1.2.99`, but not the versions `1.2.6`, `1.3.0`,
108or `1.1.0`.
109
110The range `1.2.7 || >=1.2.9 <2.0.0` would match the versions `1.2.7`,
111`1.2.9`, and `1.4.6`, but not the versions `1.2.8` or `2.0.0`.
112
113### Prerelease Tags
114
115If a version has a prerelease tag (for example, `1.2.3-alpha.3`) then
116it will only be allowed to satisfy comparator sets if at least one
117comparator with the same `[major, minor, patch]` tuple also has a
118prerelease tag.
119
120For example, the range `>1.2.3-alpha.3` would be allowed to match the
121version `1.2.3-alpha.7`, but it would *not* be satisfied by
122`3.4.5-alpha.9`, even though `3.4.5-alpha.9` is technically "greater
123than" `1.2.3-alpha.3` according to the SemVer sort rules. The version
124range only accepts prerelease tags on the `1.2.3` version. The
125version `3.4.5` *would* satisfy the range, because it does not have a
126prerelease flag, and `3.4.5` is greater than `1.2.3-alpha.7`.
127
128The purpose for this behavior is twofold. First, prerelease versions
129frequently are updated very quickly, and contain many breaking changes
130that are (by the author's design) not yet fit for public consumption.
131Therefore, by default, they are excluded from range matching
132semantics.
133
134Second, a user who has opted into using a prerelease version has
135clearly indicated the intent to use *that specific* set of
136alpha/beta/rc versions. By including a prerelease tag in the range,
137the user is indicating that they are aware of the risk. However, it
138is still not appropriate to assume that they have opted into taking a
139similar risk on the *next* set of prerelease versions.
140
141Note that this behavior can be suppressed (treating all prerelease
142versions as if they were normal versions, for the purpose of range
143matching) by setting the `includePrerelease` flag on the options
144object to any
145[functions](https://github.com/npm/node-semver#functions) that do
146range matching.
147
148#### Prerelease Identifiers
149
150The method `.inc` takes an additional `identifier` string argument that
151will append the value of the string as a prerelease identifier:
152
153```javascript
154semver.inc('1.2.3', 'prerelease', 'beta')
155// '1.2.4-beta.0'
156```
157
158command-line example:
159
160```bash
161$ semver 1.2.3 -i prerelease --preid beta
1621.2.4-beta.0
163```
164
165Which then can be used to increment further:
166
167```bash
168$ semver 1.2.4-beta.0 -i prerelease
1691.2.4-beta.1
170```
171
172### Advanced Range Syntax
173
174Advanced range syntax desugars to primitive comparators in
175deterministic ways.
176
177Advanced ranges may be combined in the same way as primitive
178comparators using white space or `||`.
179
180#### Hyphen Ranges `X.Y.Z - A.B.C`
181
182Specifies an inclusive set.
183
184* `1.2.3 - 2.3.4` := `>=1.2.3 <=2.3.4`
185
186If a partial version is provided as the first version in the inclusive
187range, then the missing pieces are replaced with zeroes.
188
189* `1.2 - 2.3.4` := `>=1.2.0 <=2.3.4`
190
191If a partial version is provided as the second version in the
192inclusive range, then all versions that start with the supplied parts
193of the tuple are accepted, but nothing that would be greater than the
194provided tuple parts.
195
196* `1.2.3 - 2.3` := `>=1.2.3 <2.4.0`
197* `1.2.3 - 2` := `>=1.2.3 <3.0.0`
198
199#### X-Ranges `1.2.x` `1.X` `1.2.*` `*`
200
201Any of `X`, `x`, or `*` may be used to "stand in" for one of the
202numeric values in the `[major, minor, patch]` tuple.
203
204* `*` := `>=0.0.0` (Any version satisfies)
205* `1.x` := `>=1.0.0 <2.0.0` (Matching major version)
206* `1.2.x` := `>=1.2.0 <1.3.0` (Matching major and minor versions)
207
208A partial version range is treated as an X-Range, so the special
209character is in fact optional.
210
211* `""` (empty string) := `*` := `>=0.0.0`
212* `1` := `1.x.x` := `>=1.0.0 <2.0.0`
213* `1.2` := `1.2.x` := `>=1.2.0 <1.3.0`
214
215#### Tilde Ranges `~1.2.3` `~1.2` `~1`
216
217Allows patch-level changes if a minor version is specified on the
218comparator. Allows minor-level changes if not.
219
220* `~1.2.3` := `>=1.2.3 <1.(2+1).0` := `>=1.2.3 <1.3.0`
221* `~1.2` := `>=1.2.0 <1.(2+1).0` := `>=1.2.0 <1.3.0` (Same as `1.2.x`)
222* `~1` := `>=1.0.0 <(1+1).0.0` := `>=1.0.0 <2.0.0` (Same as `1.x`)
223* `~0.2.3` := `>=0.2.3 <0.(2+1).0` := `>=0.2.3 <0.3.0`
224* `~0.2` := `>=0.2.0 <0.(2+1).0` := `>=0.2.0 <0.3.0` (Same as `0.2.x`)
225* `~0` := `>=0.0.0 <(0+1).0.0` := `>=0.0.0 <1.0.0` (Same as `0.x`)
226* `~1.2.3-beta.2` := `>=1.2.3-beta.2 <1.3.0` Note that prereleases in
227 the `1.2.3` version will be allowed, if they are greater than or
228 equal to `beta.2`. So, `1.2.3-beta.4` would be allowed, but
229 `1.2.4-beta.2` would not, because it is a prerelease of a
230 different `[major, minor, patch]` tuple.
231
232#### Caret Ranges `^1.2.3` `^0.2.5` `^0.0.4`
233
234Allows changes that do not modify the left-most non-zero digit in the
235`[major, minor, patch]` tuple. In other words, this allows patch and
236minor updates for versions `1.0.0` and above, patch updates for
237versions `0.X >=0.1.0`, and *no* updates for versions `0.0.X`.
238
239Many authors treat a `0.x` version as if the `x` were the major
240"breaking-change" indicator.
241
242Caret ranges are ideal when an author may make breaking changes
243between `0.2.4` and `0.3.0` releases, which is a common practice.
244However, it presumes that there will *not* be breaking changes between
245`0.2.4` and `0.2.5`. It allows for changes that are presumed to be
246additive (but non-breaking), according to commonly observed practices.
247
248* `^1.2.3` := `>=1.2.3 <2.0.0`
249* `^0.2.3` := `>=0.2.3 <0.3.0`
250* `^0.0.3` := `>=0.0.3 <0.0.4`
251* `^1.2.3-beta.2` := `>=1.2.3-beta.2 <2.0.0` Note that prereleases in
252 the `1.2.3` version will be allowed, if they are greater than or
253 equal to `beta.2`. So, `1.2.3-beta.4` would be allowed, but
254 `1.2.4-beta.2` would not, because it is a prerelease of a
255 different `[major, minor, patch]` tuple.
256* `^0.0.3-beta` := `>=0.0.3-beta <0.0.4` Note that prereleases in the
257 `0.0.3` version *only* will be allowed, if they are greater than or
258 equal to `beta`. So, `0.0.3-pr.2` would be allowed.
259
260When parsing caret ranges, a missing `patch` value desugars to the
261number `0`, but will allow flexibility within that value, even if the
262major and minor versions are both `0`.
263
264* `^1.2.x` := `>=1.2.0 <2.0.0`
265* `^0.0.x` := `>=0.0.0 <0.1.0`
266* `^0.0` := `>=0.0.0 <0.1.0`
267
268A missing `minor` and `patch` values will desugar to zero, but also
269allow flexibility within those values, even if the major version is
270zero.
271
272* `^1.x` := `>=1.0.0 <2.0.0`
273* `^0.x` := `>=0.0.0 <1.0.0`
274
275### Range Grammar
276
277Putting all this together, here is a Backus-Naur grammar for ranges,
278for the benefit of parser authors:
279
280```bnf
281range-set ::= range ( logical-or range ) *
282logical-or ::= ( ' ' ) * '||' ( ' ' ) *
283range ::= hyphen | simple ( ' ' simple ) * | ''
284hyphen ::= partial ' - ' partial
285simple ::= primitive | partial | tilde | caret
286primitive ::= ( '<' | '>' | '>=' | '<=' | '=' ) partial
287partial ::= xr ( '.' xr ( '.' xr qualifier ? )? )?
288xr ::= 'x' | 'X' | '*' | nr
289nr ::= '0' | ['1'-'9'] ( ['0'-'9'] ) *
290tilde ::= '~' partial
291caret ::= '^' partial
292qualifier ::= ( '-' pre )? ( '+' build )?
293pre ::= parts
294build ::= parts
295parts ::= part ( '.' part ) *
296part ::= nr | [-0-9A-Za-z]+
297```
298
299## Functions
300
301All methods and classes take a final `options` object argument. All
302options in this object are `false` by default. The options supported
303are:
304
305- `loose` Be more forgiving about not-quite-valid semver strings.
306 (Any resulting output will always be 100% strict compliant, of
307 course.) For backwards compatibility reasons, if the `options`
308 argument is a boolean value instead of an object, it is interpreted
309 to be the `loose` param.
310- `includePrerelease` Set to suppress the [default
311 behavior](https://github.com/npm/node-semver#prerelease-tags) of
312 excluding prerelease tagged versions from ranges unless they are
313 explicitly opted into.
314
315Strict-mode Comparators and Ranges will be strict about the SemVer
316strings that they parse.
317
318* `valid(v)`: Return the parsed version, or null if it's not valid.
319* `inc(v, release)`: Return the version incremented by the release
320 type (`major`, `premajor`, `minor`, `preminor`, `patch`,
321 `prepatch`, or `prerelease`), or null if it's not valid
322 * `premajor` in one call will bump the version up to the next major
323 version and down to a prerelease of that major version.
324 `preminor`, and `prepatch` work the same way.
325 * If called from a non-prerelease version, the `prerelease` will work the
326 same as `prepatch`. It increments the patch version, then makes a
327 prerelease. If the input version is already a prerelease it simply
328 increments it.
329* `prerelease(v)`: Returns an array of prerelease components, or null
330 if none exist. Example: `prerelease('1.2.3-alpha.1') -> ['alpha', 1]`
331* `major(v)`: Return the major version number.
332* `minor(v)`: Return the minor version number.
333* `patch(v)`: Return the patch version number.
334* `intersects(r1, r2, loose)`: Return true if the two supplied ranges
335 or comparators intersect.
336* `parse(v)`: Attempt to parse a string as a semantic version, returning either
337 a `SemVer` object or `null`.
338
339### Comparison
340
341* `gt(v1, v2)`: `v1 > v2`
342* `gte(v1, v2)`: `v1 >= v2`
343* `lt(v1, v2)`: `v1 < v2`
344* `lte(v1, v2)`: `v1 <= v2`
345* `eq(v1, v2)`: `v1 == v2` This is true if they're logically equivalent,
346 even if they're not the exact same string. You already know how to
347 compare strings.
348* `neq(v1, v2)`: `v1 != v2` The opposite of `eq`.
349* `cmp(v1, comparator, v2)`: Pass in a comparison string, and it'll call
350 the corresponding function above. `"==="` and `"!=="` do simple
351 string comparison, but are included for completeness. Throws if an
352 invalid comparison string is provided.
353* `compare(v1, v2)`: Return `0` if `v1 == v2`, or `1` if `v1` is greater, or `-1` if
354 `v2` is greater. Sorts in ascending order if passed to `Array.sort()`.
355* `rcompare(v1, v2)`: The reverse of compare. Sorts an array of versions
356 in descending order when passed to `Array.sort()`.
357* `diff(v1, v2)`: Returns difference between two versions by the release type
358 (`major`, `premajor`, `minor`, `preminor`, `patch`, `prepatch`, or `prerelease`),
359 or null if the versions are the same.
360
361### Comparators
362
363* `intersects(comparator)`: Return true if the comparators intersect
364
365### Ranges
366
367* `validRange(range)`: Return the valid range or null if it's not valid
368* `satisfies(version, range)`: Return true if the version satisfies the
369 range.
370* `maxSatisfying(versions, range)`: Return the highest version in the list
371 that satisfies the range, or `null` if none of them do.
372* `minSatisfying(versions, range)`: Return the lowest version in the list
373 that satisfies the range, or `null` if none of them do.
374* `minVersion(range)`: Return the lowest version that can possibly match
375 the given range.
376* `gtr(version, range)`: Return `true` if version is greater than all the
377 versions possible in the range.
378* `ltr(version, range)`: Return `true` if version is less than all the
379 versions possible in the range.
380* `outside(version, range, hilo)`: Return true if the version is outside
381 the bounds of the range in either the high or low direction. The
382 `hilo` argument must be either the string `'>'` or `'<'`. (This is
383 the function called by `gtr` and `ltr`.)
384* `intersects(range)`: Return true if any of the ranges comparators intersect
385
386Note that, since ranges may be non-contiguous, a version might not be
387greater than a range, less than a range, *or* satisfy a range! For
388example, the range `1.2 <1.2.9 || >2.0.0` would have a hole from `1.2.9`
389until `2.0.0`, so the version `1.2.10` would not be greater than the
390range (because `2.0.1` satisfies, which is higher), nor less than the
391range (since `1.2.8` satisfies, which is lower), and it also does not
392satisfy the range.
393
394If you want to know if a version satisfies or does not satisfy a
395range, use the `satisfies(version, range)` function.
396
397### Coercion
398
399* `coerce(version)`: Coerces a string to semver if possible
400
401This aims to provide a very forgiving translation of a non-semver string to
402semver. It looks for the first digit in a string, and consumes all
403remaining characters which satisfy at least a partial semver (e.g., `1`,
404`1.2`, `1.2.3`) up to the max permitted length (256 characters). Longer
405versions are simply truncated (`4.6.3.9.2-alpha2` becomes `4.6.3`). All
406surrounding text is simply ignored (`v3.4 replaces v3.3.1` becomes
407`3.4.0`). Only text which lacks digits will fail coercion (`version one`
408is not valid). The maximum length for any semver component considered for
409coercion is 16 characters; longer components will be ignored
410(`10000000000000000.4.7.4` becomes `4.7.4`). The maximum value for any
411semver component is `Number.MAX_SAFE_INTEGER || (2**53 - 1)`; higher value
412components are invalid (`9999999999999999.4.7.4` is likely invalid).
413