I'm trying to add to my bash profile something that will set my node version to a specific version, and if the node version is not installed then install it. What I have so far is:
. /usr/local/opt/nvm/nvm.sh
if [[ $(nvm use v6.9.1) == "" ]]; then
nvm install v6.9.1
fi
However, the problem is that the $(nvm use v6.9.1) is run in a subshell and my node version doesn't get switched.
a) Is there any way to have $(nvm use v6.9.1) run in the current shell?
b) Is there a better way of doing this?
Previously I was just running nvm install v6.9.1 but this was kinda slow which was an issue as it runs each time I open a new terminal.
Thanks Matt!
I have a bash alias I use for this that works for multiple versions:
alias nvmuse='nvm use || nvm install $(cat .nvmrc)'
Have you tried grepping nvm ls?
. /usr/local/opt/nvm/nvm.sh
if [[ $(nvm ls | grep v6.9.1) == "" ]]; then
nvm install v6.9.1
else
nvm use v6.9.1
fi
Is it any faster than using nvm install v6.9.1 for you?
EDIT: You can also set a default version that will always be loaded by default. You can do it by running nvm alias default 6.9.1.
You can try changing your script to this:
if [[ $(node -v) != "v6.9.5" ]]; then
nvm install v6.9.5
nvm alias default v6.9.5
fi
It will take a little long, but just for the first time
In the current version of nvm, nvm install does not reinstall node if it's already installed.
Examples:
$ nvm install v16.0.4
v16.14.2 is already installed.
# The same if you have put the version in your project's .nvmrc
$ nvm install
v16.0.4 is already installed.
Note however, if you specify an ambiguous version such as v16 and a newer version of v16 is available, then nvm will download and install the newer version, ignoring your older version of v16.
$ node --version
v16.0.4
$ nvm install v16
Downloading and installing node v16.14.2...
So specifying v16 is good if you always want to be up-to-date, and have the latest security patches. But eventually you might end up with lots of versions of node installed!
To keep just one version installed (to save disk space, or to keep packages you previously installed globally with npm) then specify the full version v16.0.4.
This works. If use failed, it will execute install.
#!/bin/sh
nvm use 14.18.1 || nvm install 14.18.1
# or if you don't need the warning
nvm use 14.18.1 2>/dev/null || nvm install 14.18.1
I'm trying to add to my bash profile something that will set my node version to a specific version, and if the node version is not installed then install it. What I have so far is:
. /usr/local/opt/nvm/nvm.sh
if [[ $(nvm use v6.9.1) == "" ]]; then
nvm install v6.9.1
fi
However, the problem is that the $(nvm use v6.9.1) is run in a subshell and my node version doesn't get switched.
a) Is there any way to have $(nvm use v6.9.1) run in the current shell?
b) Is there a better way of doing this?
Previously I was just running nvm install v6.9.1 but this was kinda slow which was an issue as it runs each time I open a new terminal.
Thanks Matt!
I have a bash alias I use for this that works for multiple versions:
alias nvmuse='nvm use || nvm install $(cat .nvmrc)'
Have you tried grepping nvm ls?
. /usr/local/opt/nvm/nvm.sh
if [[ $(nvm ls | grep v6.9.1) == "" ]]; then
nvm install v6.9.1
else
nvm use v6.9.1
fi
Is it any faster than using nvm install v6.9.1 for you?
EDIT: You can also set a default version that will always be loaded by default. You can do it by running nvm alias default 6.9.1.
You can try changing your script to this:
if [[ $(node -v) != "v6.9.5" ]]; then
nvm install v6.9.5
nvm alias default v6.9.5
fi
It will take a little long, but just for the first time
In the current version of nvm, nvm install does not reinstall node if it's already installed.
Examples:
$ nvm install v16.0.4
v16.14.2 is already installed.
# The same if you have put the version in your project's .nvmrc
$ nvm install
v16.0.4 is already installed.
Note however, if you specify an ambiguous version such as v16 and a newer version of v16 is available, then nvm will download and install the newer version, ignoring your older version of v16.
$ node --version
v16.0.4
$ nvm install v16
Downloading and installing node v16.14.2...
So specifying v16 is good if you always want to be up-to-date, and have the latest security patches. But eventually you might end up with lots of versions of node installed!
To keep just one version installed (to save disk space, or to keep packages you previously installed globally with npm) then specify the full version v16.0.4.
This works. If use failed, it will execute install.
#!/bin/sh
nvm use 14.18.1 || nvm install 14.18.1
# or if you don't need the warning
nvm use 14.18.1 2>/dev/null || nvm install 14.18.1
My nvm keep forgetting about the node environment ever since I upgraded to Yosemite(A few months ago)/Capitan EL(I upgraded this week) even though I did
nvm alias default 0.12
Hilariously, it told me after I hit enter
default -> 0.12 (-> v0.12.8)
But when I opened a new terminal it said node: command is not found!!
There are a couple of solutions I tried so far:
I have tried using brew uninstall nvm & brew install nvm
as well as the installing script, since brew complaint it doesn't work with the pre-released OS(which is actually GA right now)
I double checked bash_profile do have the following lines
export NVM_DIR=~/.nvm
source $NVM_DIR/nvm.sh
Unfortunately, none of them works. Have anyone run into a similar issue before?
Thanks!
This is merely a temporary solution, however, it works.
Add nvm use stable in ~/.bash_profile(or whatever version you want to use to replace stable)
Save the file
Do source ~/.bash_profile after this or simply open a new terminal tab.
I just used this command in MacOS el capitan
$> nvm alias default v6.4.0
It worked as expected. Please notice the small v before the version number.
And finally, just if it helps, I used this command to install nvm as is described in the nvm project readme.
$> curl -o- https://raw.githubusercontent.com/creationix/nvm/v0.32.0/install.sh | bash
This worked for me on El Capitan
brew uninstall nvm
brew install nvm
mkdir ~/.nvm
export NVM_DIR="$HOME/.nvm"
. "$(brew --prefix nvm)/nvm.sh"
It said that .nvm folder already existed but I ignored that.
Upon using a new terminal session in OS X, nvm forgets the node version and defaults to nothing:
$ nvm ls:
.nvm
v0.11.12
v0.11.13
I have to keep hitting nvm use v.0.11.13 in every session:
.nvm
v0.11.12
-> v0.11.13
I've tried both the brew install, as well as the official installation script.
My .profile for the brew version:
#nvm
export NVM_DIR=~/.nvm
source $(brew --prefix nvm)/nvm.sh
And for the install.sh script:
$ curl https://raw.githubusercontent.com/creationix/nvm/v0.10.0/install.sh | bash
#nvm
export NVM_DIR="/Users/farhad/.nvm"
[ -s "$NVM_DIR/nvm.sh" ] && . "$NVM_DIR/nvm.sh" # This loads nvm
Any clue to what I'm doing wrong?
Try nvm alias default. For example:
$ nvm alias default 0.12.7
This sets the default node version in your shell. Then verify that the change persists by closing the shell window, opening a new one, then:
node --version
Alias to node itself to avoid updating the default alias along with node version updates later on.
nvm alias default node
In my case, another program had added PATH changes to .bashrc
If the other program changed the PATH after nvm's initialisation, then nvm's PATH changes would be forgotten, and we would get the system node on our PATH (or no node).
The solution was to move the nvm setup to the bottom of .bashrc
### BAD .bashrc ###
# NVM initialisation
export NVM_DIR="$HOME/.nvm"
[ -s "$NVM_DIR/nvm.sh" ] && \. "$NVM_DIR/nvm.sh" # This loads nvm
# Some other program adding to the PATH:
export PATH="$ANT_ROOT:$PATH"
Solution:
### GOOD .bashrc ###
# Some other program adding to the PATH:
export PATH="$ANT_ROOT:$PATH"
# NVM initialisation
export NVM_DIR="$HOME/.nvm"
[ -s "$NVM_DIR/nvm.sh" ] && \. "$NVM_DIR/nvm.sh" # This loads nvm
(This was with bash 4.2.46 on CentOS. It seems to me like a bug in bash, but I may be mistaken.)
To install the latest stable version:
nvm install stable
To set default to the stable version (instead of a specific version):
nvm alias default stable
To list installed versions:
nvm list
As of v6.2.0, it will look something like:
$ nvm list
v4.4.2
-> v6.2.0
default -> stable (-> v6.2.0)
node -> stable (-> v6.2.0) (default)
stable -> 6.2 (-> v6.2.0) (default)
iojs -> N/A (default)
nvm does its job by changing the PATH variable, so you need to make sure you aren't somehow changing your PATH to something else after sourcing the nvm.sh script.
In my case, nvm.sh was being called in .bashrc but then the PATH variable was getting updated in .bash_profile which caused my session to find the system node before the nvm node.
Here is a simple instruction:
1) Install:
nvm install 8.10.0
2) Use once per terminal
nvm use 8.10.0
3) Set up as default for all terminals
nvm alias default 8.10.0
You may need to use root permissions to perform those actions.
And don't forget to check nvm documentation for more info.
Also note that you may need to specify node version for your IDE:
None of these solutions worked in my environment, nvm always seems to load the first installed version of node no matter what (unless you change it temporarily via nvm use).
The only way to change the default I have found is to:
Clear nvm cache: nvm cache clear
Set default to desired version: nvm alias default 12 (or whatever version)
Switch to desired version: nvm use 12
Uninstall all other versions:
nvm ls (to list installations)
nvm uninstall x (run for each installation that is not the default)
Reinstall other versions: nvm install x
You can use this script to automate this process (just change the first variable to your desired version) - it will re-install all versions you had previously automatically.
DEFAULT_NVM_VERSION=16
nvm cache clear
nvm install $DEFAULT_NVM_VERSION
nvm alias default $DEFAULT_NVM_VERSION
NVERS=$(nvm ls --no-alias | grep -v -- "->" | grep -o "v[0-9.]*")
while read ver; do nvm uninstall $ver; done <<< $NVERS
while read ver; do nvm install $ver; done <<< $NVERS
nvm use $DEFAULT_NVM_VERSION
Or as a one-liner:
DEFAULT_NVM_VERSION=16 && nvm cache clear && nvm install $DEFAULT_NVM_VERSION && nvm alias default $DEFAULT_NVM_VERSION && NVERS=$(nvm ls --no-alias | grep -v -- "->" | grep -o "v[0-9.]*") && while read ver; do nvm uninstall $ver; done <<< $NVERS && while read ver; do nvm install $ver; done <<< $NVERS && nvm use $DEFAULT_NVM_VERSION
New terminals should now respect the default version.
The top rated solutions didn't seem to work for me. My solution is below:
Uninstall nvm completely using homebrew:brew uninstall nvm
Reinstall brew install nvm
In Terminal, follow the steps
below(these are also listed when installing nvm via homebrew):
mkdir ~/.nvm
cp $(brew --prefix nvm)/nvm-exec ~/.nvm/
export NVM_DIR=~/.nvm
source $(brew --prefix nvm)/nvm.sh
The steps outlined above will add NVM's working directory to your $HOME path, copy nvm-exec to NVM's working directory and add to $HOME/.bashrc, $HOME/.zshrc, or your shell's equivalent configuration file.(again taken from whats listed on an NVM install using homebrew)
I'm using ZSH so I had to modify ~/.zshrc with the lines concerning NVM in that order:
[ -s "$NVM_DIR/nvm.sh" ] && . "$NVM_DIR/nvm.sh" # This loads nvm
source ~/.nvm/nvm.sh
If you have tried everything still no luck you can try this :_
1 -> Uninstall NVM
rm -rf ~/.nvm
2 -> Remove npm dependencies by following this
3 -> Install NVM
curl -o- https://raw.githubusercontent.com/creationix/nvm/v0.33.11/install.sh | bash
4 -> Set ~/.bash_profile configuration
Run sudo nano ~/.bash_profile
Copy and paste following this
export NVM_DIR="$HOME/.nvm"
[ -s "$NVM_DIR/nvm.sh" ] && \. "$NVM_DIR/nvm.sh" # This loads nvm
[ -s "$NVM_DIR/bash_completion" ] && \. "$NVM_DIR/bash_completion" # This loads nvm bash_completion
5 -> CONTROL + X save the changes
6 -> Run . ~/.bash_profile
7 -> Now you should have nvm installed on your machine, to install node run nvm install v7.8.0 this will be default node version or you can install any version of node
This question has mentioned for the OSX, but it happened to me in my linux OS.
I tried using nvm alias default <version> but for each new terminal session the used node version was forgotten.
so, here is the solution that i figured out.
make sure to set a default alias for node version,put the following code in .bashrc, and source .bashrc.
export NVM_DIR="/home/bonnie/.nvm"
## If the file exists and is not empty
if [ -s "$NVM_DIR/nvm.sh" ]; then
## Source it
source "$NVM_DIR/nvm.sh"
fi
NODE_DEFAULT_VERSION=$(<"$NVM_DIR/alias/default")
export PATH="$NVM_DIR/versions/node/$NODE_DEFAULT_VERSION/bin":$PATH
descriptive solution link
Doing nvm install 10.14, for example, will nvm use that version for the current shell session but it will not always set it as the default for future sessions as you would expect. The node version you get in a new shell session is determined by nvm alias default. Confusingly, nvm install will only set the default alias if it is not already set. To get the expected behaviour, do this:
nvm alias default ''; nvm install 10.14
This will ensure that that version is downloaded, use it for the current session and set it as the default for future sessions.
run this after you installed any version,
n=$(which node);n=${n%/bin/node}; chmod -R 755 $n/bin/*; sudo cp -r $n/{bin,lib,share} /usr/local
This command is copying whatever version of node you have active via nvm into the /usr/local/ directory and setting the permissions so that all users can access them.
I have found a new way here. Using n Interactively Manage Your Node.js helps.
I was facing the same issue while using the integrated terminal in VS Code editor. Restarting VS Code after changing the node version using nvm fixed the issue for me.
I use NVM with zsh bash
follow this link to remove nvm
$ brew install nvm
I ran this line $ source $(brew --prefix nvm)/nvm.sh after installation and restart terminal
place the line bellow in ~/.zshrc file, also instructed by nvm official GitHub page
export NVM_DIR="$HOME/.nvm"
[ -s "/usr/local/opt/nvm/nvm.sh" ] && . "/usr/local/opt/nvm/nvm.sh" # This loads nvm
[ -s "/usr/local/opt/nvm/etc/bash_completion.d/nvm" ] && . "/usr/local/opt/nvm/etc/bash_completion.d/nvm" # This loads nvm bash_completion
# place this after nvm initialization!
autoload -U add-zsh-hook
load-nvmrc() {
local node_version="$(nvm version)"
local nvmrc_path="$(nvm_find_nvmrc)"
if [ -n "$nvmrc_path" ]; then
local nvmrc_node_version=$(nvm version "$(cat "${nvmrc_path}")")
if [ "$nvmrc_node_version" = "N/A" ]; then
nvm install
elif [ "$nvmrc_node_version" != "$node_version" ]; then
nvm use
fi
elif [ "$node_version" != "$(nvm version default)" ]; then
echo "Reverting to nvm default version"
nvm use default
fi
}
add-zsh-hook chpwd load-nvmrc
load-nvmrc
For some reason in my .bashrc file I found this:
export NVM_DIR="$HOME/.nvm"
[ -s "$NVM_DIR/nvm.sh" ] && \. "$NVM_DIR/nvm.sh" --no-use # This loads nvm
and had to remove --no-use flag, which I don't remember putting there in a first place...
Just another thing to check.
If you also have SDKMAN...
Somehow SDKMAN was conflicting with my NVM. If you're at your wits end with this and still can't figure it out, I just fixed it by ignoring the "THIS MUST BE AT THE END OF THE FILE..." from SDKMAN and putting the NVM lines after it.
#THIS MUST BE AT THE END OF THE FILE FOR SDKMAN TO WORK!!!
export SDKMAN_DIR="/Users/myname/.sdkman"
[[ -s "/Users/myname/.sdkman/bin/sdkman-init.sh" ]] && source "/Users/myname/.sdkman/bin/sdkman-init.sh"
export NVM_DIR="$HOME/.nvm"
[ -s "$NVM_DIR/nvm.sh" ] && \. "$NVM_DIR/nvm.sh" # This loads nvm
[ -s "$NVM_DIR/bash_completion" ] && \. "$NVM_DIR/bash_completion" # This loads nvm bash_completion
On my end, I had to change both aliases STABLE and DEFAULT
nvm alias stable {node_version}
nvm alias default {node_version}
$ nvm alias default {NODE_VERSION}
when we use the above command, only update the node version but the npm still uses the old version.
Here is another solution for update the both node and npm, in my case i want to use node 8.9.4 and i have used the below command.
$ nvm use default 8.9.4
And the command returns the output.
Now using node v8.9.4 (npm v5.6.0)
As mentioned in the repository's issues section, nvm use is just for a lifetime of the shell. I have found this very useful, but sometimes it may put you in trouble actually when you are working on different codebases which need different versions of code.
This is the link for the related discussion in GitHub
For some reason, in my ~/.profile file I found that was selecting the version of node, overriding the alias default command of nvm
Just another thing to check.
Linux/ubuntu
how to solve this you can see here
https://i.ibb.co/vQpMrpb/2022-11-19-18-14.jpg
nvm use isn't meant to persist - it's only for the lifetime of the shell.
You can either do nvm alias default node if you want that to be the default when opening new shells or, you can make a .nvmrc file that will take precedence anywhere in the current directory, upwards to /.
https://github.com/nvm-sh/nvm/issues/658
Also in case you had node installed before nvm check in your ~/.bash_profile to not have something like :
export PATH=/bin:/sbin:/usr/bin:/usr/local/sbin:/usr/local/bin:$PATH
If you do have it, comment/remove it and nvm should start handling the default node version.
On Ubuntu there is a potential issue if you are running a non-interactive shell, for example from a cronjob, or an init or upstart script.
Ubuntu's default .bashrc has this guard at the top which drops out early if the shell is non-interactive:
# If not running interactively, don't do anything
[ -z "$PS1" ] && return
So in order to get NVM loaded for non-interactive scripts, you can edit ~/.bashrc and move NVM's init to the top of the file, just above the guard.
Even safer is to copy the NVM init so it appears twice. That will address the concern mentioned in other answers, when other lines are modifying the PATH after NVM. NVM doesn't seem to mind being run twice, although it does slow down the shell startup a little.
In the nvm autoload script from the github I had to chage
local node_version="$(nvm version)" to local node_version="$(node -v)"
There was a local install of nvm on my system in my path so nvm version kept saying system no matter what
1.- Install via homebrew
2.- Because I am using zsh terminal, in ~/.zshrc add this lines, if you are using bash you will need to put that lines in ~/.bash_profile
export NVM_DIR=~/.nvm
source $(brew --prefix nvm)/nvm.sh
Ref: The issue that is causing this is related to the fact that the folder NPM is trying to access/write to is not owned by the user that is executing the command
The run the commands stated below and You should be good to go!
sudo chown -R `whoami` ~/.npm
sudo chown -R `whoami` /usr/local/lib/node_modules
Try running npm install -g ... or npm uninstall -g ... without sudo and it should run without errors.