I'm working with git-bash on win 7. I want to develop an ember project and I am working on a thumb drive. I have installed node on my E drive and added the path to the env vars.
$ npm install -g ember-cli
C:\Users\me\AppData\Roaming\npm\ember -> C:\Users\me\AppData\Roaming\npm\node_modules\ember-cli\bin\ember
C:\Users\me\AppData\Roaming\npm\� -> C:\Users\me\AppData\Roaming\npm\node_modules\ember-cli\bin\ember
+ ember-cli#2.16.2
updated 553 packages in 89.25s
$ which npm
/e/nodejs/npm
$ which node
/e/nodejs/node
$ ember build
sh.exe": ember: command not found
So I think whats happening is that npm is installing the packages on the c drive. I need to set a folder on my e drive, to make this portable. How can I do this?
You can set this by configuring the npm prefix setting:
npm config set prefix e:\some\path\on\e
This could be done globally or on a per-project basis by modifying the project's .npmrc file.
Go to the folder with your package.json and run npm config ls to see your effective npm config.
See the npm docs for global settings
Related
I would like npm ... to always run in the context of a subfolder of my project: "./assets".
When I run this command from the project root, it behaves as expected:
$ npm --prefix ./assets install
However, it does not read this from the .npmrc in the root folder.
$ echo "prefix=./assets" > .npmrc
$ npm i
# creates an empty ./node_modules folder
How can I set a set project specific default prefix for npm commands?
If you have install npm globally you can simply configure prefix to set for specific folder so that you can install other node modules to that folder. Following is the command to set prefix.
npm config set prefix /Programming/node-v0.10.31-linux-x64/
here i have configure Node in node-v0.10.31-linux-x64 this folder and node modules will be install there.
or
if you want to install node modules for specific folder individually you can user following command
npm install bower -g --prefix /Programming/node-v0.10.31-linux-x64/
I'm building a .NET Web Application and using NodeJS for a bunch of build tasks (minification, bundling, unit tests, etc).
My problem is that when I run the following from my source code folder:
npm install -g
It not only checks and installs all of the node packages (great!) .. but it also copies the ENTIRE source code folder over to my global node_modules folder (.cs, .sln, bin folders .. the lot ... not so great!)
Is there any way of stopping it from doing this?
Note - I've redirected the npm and cache folders to a separate path using:
npm config set prefix e:\npm-repo\npm --global
npm config set cache e:\npm-repo\cache --global
This is how npm install -g works.
You can try npm install if you want to install only the dependencies from package.json locally.
I want to start using the ionic framework, but unfortunately I'm already failing on the first step.
I am running Ubuntu 13.04 and I have node v0.10.25 installed.
I've installed ionic, at described in their docs:
sudo npm install -g cordova
sudo npm install -g ionic
The installation went well, no errors or warnings, but after the installation I type
ionic
and I get the error:
No command 'ionic' found, did you mean:
Command 'ionice' from package 'util-linux' (main)
Command 'sonic' from package 'sonic' (universe)
ionic: command not found
I'm pretty new to ubuntu so I might have something not configured correctly, but I can't find what.
Thanks
for some of you, the two answer above might not work. here's a more general solution for situation where you see "XX" command not found
first check your npm root and npm root -g
the result for the npm root -g should be something like "/usr/local".
if it's not, then you found your problem.
change it by:
npm config set prefix /usr/local
then npm root -g should give you something like /usr/local/lib/node_modules
.
Then go ahead re-install everything with -g
you will be good to go!
Well, I found it finally.
The ionic installation was at /home/guy/npm/bin/ionic, not at /usr/bin/ionic at it should be.
Solved it with:
sudo ln -s /home/guy/npm/bin/ionic /usr/bin/ionic
I solved the problem by cd to my root. Then install ionic as root admin.
$ sudo npm install -g cordova ionic
then run
$ ionic
to see if it's working.
Someone might run into this after trying to change the global library directory of npm to a folder they have permissions to write to in order to be able to install global libs without root permissions.
In that case you might have forgotten to add the new folder to you PATH environment variable.
The whole process of fixing Permissions can be found here.
in case that source disappears here is a copy of the steps:
There are times when you do not want to change ownership of the
default directory that npm uses (i.e. /usr) as this could cause some
problems, for example if you are sharing the system with other users.
Instead, you can configure npm to use a different directory
altogether. In our case, this will be a hidden directory in our home folder.
Make a directory for global installations:
mkdir ~/.npm-global
Configure npm to use the new directory path:
npm config set prefix '~/.npm-global'
Open or create a ~/.profile file and add this line:
export PATH=~/.npm-global/bin:$PATH
Back on the command line, update your system variables:
source ~/.profile
Test: Download a package globally without using sudo.
npm install -g jshint
Instead of steps 2-4 you can also use the corresponding ENV variable (e.g. if you don't want to modify
~/.profile):
NPM_CONFIG_PREFIX=~/.npm-global npm install -g jshint
if you just follow these steps and reinstall all the Global libs there is a good chance that it will start working for you anyways...
Just remember that if you do this, you will save your global libs into the folder created in step 1 instead of the default location in /usr/local or just /usr (depending on your OS flavor i guess?)
First Solution
I recently ran into this issue and the only solution that worked for me was to uninstall both ionic and cordova.
npm uninstall -g cordova
npm uninstall -g ionic
Then just reinstall
npm install -g cordova
npm install -g ionic
Second Solution
I ran into this issue again! This time check your environmental variables.
Run npm bin -g and check if the path returned is in your environmental variables. For me, it prompted that it was not found in the terminal output. I added that path to the environmental variables and restarted the terminal. From there everything started to work again. (source)
I had the same problem with “bash: ionic: command not found”,
then I added:
%USERPROFILE%\AppData\Roaming\npm
to my environment variable’s path, then I reinstalled ionic and cordova and it start working.
For Mac users
1. install the ionic
npm i -g #ionic/cli
2. check npm path
npm root -g
3. copy full path of ionic
Ex. /usr/local/Cellar/node/15.2.1/lib/node_modules/#ionic/cli/bin
4. open this file as administrator "/etc/paths" with nano or whatever editor
Ex. sudo nano /etc/paths
5. Add ionic bin file full path to file ends. And save file.
That's it.
Run npm root -g, copy the result path and add it to the paths file:
sudo nano /etc/paths
Restart your console and it will work.
this worked for me. try adding below to the ~/.bash_profile for mac OSX el capitan users:
NPM_PACKAGES="${HOME}/.npm-packages"
NODE_PATH="$NPM_PACKAGES/lib/node_modules:$NODE_PATH"
PATH="$NPM_PACKAGES/bin:$PATH"
# Unset manpath so we can inherit from /etc/manpath via the `manpath`
# command
unset MANPATH # delete if you already modified MANPATH elsewhere in your config
MANPATH="$NPM_PACKAGES/share/man:$(manpath)"
then run source ~/.bash_profile to reload the profile in terminal.
additional info: node v4.3.1
In my case, I have just uninstalled ionic and then reinstalled it. And it is working fine now.
I also faced same problem but i solved i used following commands on terminal it worked
sudo npm uninstall ionic
then i used
sudo npm install -g cordova ionic#latest
and it worked fine it automatically installs best stabel version of cordova and latest stable version of ionic . for me it installed ionic 3.7.0
and cordova 7.0.1
you can change temporary :
npm config set prefix C:\Users[username]\AppData\Roaming\npm\node_modules2
change the Path in Environment Variables set C:\Users[username]\AppData\Roaming\npm\node_modules2
Run your command to install your package .
open file explorer copy the link C:\Users[username]\AppData\Roaming\npm\node_modules
ok file yourpackage.CMD created another folder Created "node_modules2" in node_modules and contain your package folder.
copy your package file CMD to parent folder "npm"
copy your package folder to parent folder "node_modules"
now run npm config set prefix C:\Users[username]\AppData\Roaming\npm
change the Path in Environment Variables set C:\Users[username]\AppData\Roaming\npm
now package working correctly with Command line
=> this method working with me When npm block in installation Package for IONIC installation and ReactNative and another package npm.
The package name has changed from ionic to #ionic/cli!
To update, run: npm uninstall -g ionic
Then run: npm i -g #ionic/cli
On Ubuntu 12.04 x 64...
npm -g install hiredis redis
Installs fine and npm ls shows those modules, but only when I'm in node source directory
does not show when I'm in any other directory
For kicks, tried running the command while in that other directory- still no dice :(
They are installing globally, but you cannot see them with npm ls, in other directories. Because npm ls only shows local modules. If you want to list global modules you have to type: npm ls -g.
Sometimes another version or just a wrong path is referenced in the npm config file instead of the installed version.
This may cause node/npm to misplace global modules.
To check and fix:
In cmd line type: npm config list
You should get a list of configuration values, one of them is prefix.
Make sure the path in prefix is the same path (only without node.exe) as the actually installed node.exe path.
(this path is listed further down as node bin location)
If it's not, change it:
Either in the config file (in your user folder, named .npmrc)
Or, via cmd line: npm config set prefix "C:\Program Files\nodejs" (change path for ubuntu of course)
Reinstall the module/package you tried to install, don't forget -g for global.
I've installed Node.js on my Windows 7 x64 development machine, the manual way:
mkdir C:\Devel\nodejs
cd C:\Devel\nodejs
set NODE_PATH=%CD%
setx /M PATH "%PATH%;%NODE_PATH%"
setx /M NODE_PATH "%NODE_PATH%\node_modules"
I've placed the main node x64 binary along with npm package manager in C:\Devel\nodejs. Works like a charm and I can update the main binary without dealing with the installer.
The only problem I can't solve is moving the cache folder. When I install a local package:
npm install express
... cache is placed under %APP_DATA%\npm-cache folder. I'd like to change it to:
C:\Devel\nodejs\npm-cache
How can I change the npm cache folder, or disable it completely?
You can change npm cache folder using the npm command line. (see https://docs.npmjs.com/cli/v6/using-npm/config#cache)
So you might want to try this command :
> npm config set cache C:\Devel\nodejs\npm-cache --global
Then, run npm --global cache verify after running this command.
You can also set an environment variable with export npm_config_cache=/path/to/cache (Unix) or set npm_config_cache=C:\path\to\cache (Win) as an alternative to npm config set (this is true for all config options in npm).
For anyone using docker you can add the env var at runtime with:
docker run -e npm_config_cache=/path/to/cache mydockerimage:tag
You can also do following:
For having cache path as you wish, for a single package while installing it:
npm install packageName --cache path/to/some/folder
For having cache path as you wish, for all the packages in package.json:
Just be in the directory where package.json is as usual and do
npm install --cache path/to/some/folder
You may not find this in npm documentation but i have tried it with npm 6 and it works.
Looks like it works since npm 5 [Refer: How to specify cache folder in npm5 on install command?
In Windows you can simply cd to the desired cache folder and do npm set cache --global
Solution
Paste the following code into npmrc file.
Location of npmrc file: C:\Program Files\nodejs\node_modules\npm\npmrc
prefix=D:\nodejs\npm
cache=D:\nodejs\npm-cache
Notes:
There is no '.' in front of npmrc
Diagrams
NPMRC file folder look like this
NPMRC Content look like this
Hope it helps. Cheers
In addition, I found that running an update command works also - for example:
npm update npm
Lastly, one can check their npm-cache directory to see if is being filled or not.