Just updated from npm 3 to 5, to use this feature.
Sorry, I must be missing something totally obvious, but how do make npm respect the pinned versions in package-lock.json file when installing?
Let's say I have a package.json with a fair bit of outdated packages.  Doing an npm install will pull in new stuff and breaks my app.
For example, the main package I want to stabilize is bootstrap - I want to block its version at bootstrap@4.0.0-alpha.6 for now, but npm install finds 4.0.0-beta.28.
If I npm update any package, package-lock.json gets updated.  
Let's go to my development directory.
This is my package.json entry for bootstrap:
"bootstrap": "^4.0.0-alpha.6"
And this is what I see for my installed packages and meta data:
$ npm list 2>/dev/null | grep bootstrap
├─┬ bootstrap@4.0.0-alpha.6
├─┬ bootstrap-vue@0.16.1
│ ├── bootstrap@4.0.0-alpha.6 deduped
(env) jluc@py$ grep bootstrap package.json package-lock.json
package.json:    "bootstrap": "^4.0.0-alpha.6",
package.json:    "bootstrap-vue": "^0.16.1",
package-lock.json:    "bootstrap": {
package-lock.json:      "version": "https://registry.npmjs.org/bootstrap/-/bootstrap-4.0.0-alpha.6.tgz",
package-lock.json:    "bootstrap-vue": {
package-lock.json:      "version": "https://registry.npmjs.org/bootstrap-vue/-/bootstrap-vue-0.16.1.tgz",
package-lock.json:        "bootstrap": "https://registry.npmjs.org/bootstrap/-/bootstrap-4.0.0-alpha.6.tgz",
Looks good. Lock is bootstrap-4.0.0-alpha.6.
But how I use actually use that package-lock.json?
Here's what I did:
- created a brand new directory
- copied in package.json and package-lock.json
- ran npm install.
No good.  npm again found bootstrap beta and package-lock.json had no effect, in fact it was rewritten from what npm install did.   Which is consistent with the behavior you want in dev, but doesn't tell me how I would use the lockfile to stabilize my packages.  
(env) jluc@trynpmlock$ npm list 2>/dev/null | grep bootstrap
├── bootstrap@4.0.0-beta.2
├─┬ bootstrap-vue@0.16.1
│ ├── bootstrap@4.0.0-beta.2 deduped
(env) jluc@trynpmlock$ grep bootstrap package.json package-lock.json
package.json:    "bootstrap": "^4.0.0-alpha.6",
package.json:    "bootstrap-vue": "^0.16.1",
package-lock.json:    "bootstrap": {
package-lock.json:      "resolved": "https://registry.npmjs.org/bootstrap/-/bootstrap-4.0.0-beta.2.tgz",
package-lock.json:    "bootstrap-vue": {
package-lock.json:      "resolved": "https://registry.npmjs.org/bootstrap-vue/-/bootstrap-vue-0.16.1.tgz",
package-lock.json:        "bootstrap": "4.0.0-beta.2",
- If I delete the package.json and only have a directory with package-lock.json, then - npm installinstalls very little and leaves me with a truncated package-lock.json
- npm install has a - --no-package-lockoption, but that prevents updating the package-lock.json.
Basically how do I tell npm install everything from package.json, but respect locks in package-lock.json?  Do I use a different command than npm install?  Is it because npm install's doc refers to locks in the context of a package installation, but locks don't apply when you install the package.json in its entirety?
Yes, I know I can specify "bootstrap": "4.0.0-alpha.6", minus the ^, to pin the version manually.
My environment:
(env) jluc@py$ npm -v
5.5.1
 
     
     
     
     
    