Do I need both package-lock.json and package.json?

Omri Luzon picture Omri Luzon · Jul 12, 2017 · Viewed 71.5k times · Source

After updating my NPM to the latest version (from 3.X to 5.2.0) and running npm install on an existing project, I get an auto-created package-lock.json file.

I can tell package-lock.json gives me an exact dependency tree as opposed to package.json.

From that info alone, it seems like package.json is redundant and not needed anymore.

Are both of them necessary for NPM to work?
Is it safe or possible to use only the package-lock.json file?

The docs on package-lock.json (doc1, doc2) doesn't mention anything about that.

Edit:

After some more thinking about it, I came to the conclusion that if someone wants to use your project with an older version of NPM (before 5.x) it would still install all of the dependencies, but with less accurate versions (patch versions)

Answer

Markus Stefanko picture Markus Stefanko · Dec 2, 2018

Do you need both package-lock.json and package.json? No.

Do you need the package.json? Yes.

Can you have a project with only the package-lock.json? No.

The package.json is used for more than dependencies - like defining project properties, description, author & license information, scripts, etc. The package-lock.json is solely used to lock dependencies to a specific version number.