I've been trying to find the supported versions on node on the expressjs page, but can't find an official list. Has expressjs been updated to work with the newest releases of node?
As of today (Oct 09, 2015), the package.json file on the ExpressJS master branch still mentions that it supports node versions >= 0.10.0, so semantically speaking that would imply node 4.x.
However, there is an open issue dealing specifically with the node 4.x support. The current state is that express devs are trying to find which dependencies might have an issue running on node 4, but so far they've not found any.
So in theory, Express 4 should not have any issues running on Node 4.
Related
I have a Node 12 app and am trying to assess when i should migrate up to a newer version of Node. Even though it is no longer officialy suppported the app builds today on v12. I read in heroku's documentation (https://devcenter.heroku.com/articles/nodejs-support) that I can install "most node versions". That seems to explain why the app is still building, but then I also read that official buildpack support is given to active or LTS node versions.
Given the above, what is the implication for older apps? That it will build until a breaking change in the buildpack stops it from building? Is there a buildpack per node version which, if true, would mean that the build will work but without benefit of updates or bugfixes?
Would there ever be a case where we shouldn't use the latest stable version of node with the latest version Angular? Whenever I read the Angular update guide, there is always a mention of the minimum version of node to be used with that version Angular. So rather than worrying about using the minimum version of node, just use the current stable version.
Are there any drawbacks to doing that?
I'm not aware of anything that may create a problem here, so yes, but...
As this answer mentions it, you'll find in this link every node version that are safe to use with the version of angular you're using.
I'm downgrading node.js from v7.7.4 to v0.10.48 because I'm on a CentOS 6.5 server and apparently v0.10.48 is the latest it can handle. Are there issues with going backwards like this?
It should work
There are no issues in way that it will work just as well as it did when it was the current version.
But...
There will be issues with the compatibility of modules on npm. Many of the modules may not work. That is partially because Node v0.10 uses V8 v3.14 (for comparison the current Node versions use V8 v5.x) so a lot of modern JavaScript syntax doesn't work there.
Syntax
For details of what syntax works and what doesn't see:
http://node.green/
For example you will not be able to use a simple arrow functions:
const add1 = x => x + 1;
or even the const keyword for that matter. You will miss a lot of syntax that we now take for granted even on the frontend. Remember that io.js was forked from Node v0.12 mainly because it used such an outdated version of V8 - and it was literally years ago and was about a newer and much modern version than the one you want to use.
Core API
Also the core modules changed during that time changed a lot - compare:
https://nodejs.org/dist/latest-v0.10.x/docs/api/
https://nodejs.org/dist/latest-v7.x/docs/api/
Modules
Because current versions of Node support newer language syntax and have improved core API, a lot of the modules on npm will not work correctly or at all. Make sure that whatever module you use still supports Node v0.10 or use an old version that did support it. You may need to use shrinkwrap to downgrade a lot of sub-dependencies because even if you use an old version of a module that used to work on Node v0.10, it may still load the latest versions of its dependencies that don't work any more.
Security
Also there will be potential issues with bugs and vulnerabilities that will not get fixed. The v0.10 version manitenance ended on 2016-10-31 and the status of this version is currently: End-of-Life. The oldest version that is still maintained today (as of May, 2017) is 4.x.
See:
https://github.com/nodejs/LTS
Meteor is typically behind in Node.js version because it is a framework that uses its own bundled version of Node.js, and its APIs and features are built to rely on that version of Node.js.
I'm sure that in many cases upgrading Node.js poses no problem.
As an example, Meteor 2.10 at time of writing ships with Node.js 14. But we're already on Node.js 19.
Is there a way to tell Meteor (f.e. with the meteor cli, or some meteor package) to use newer versions of Node.js (and npm)?
Meteor 1.4 now supports Node 4.4.7!
See release notes
To upgrade to Meteor 1.4:
Go to the root of your project's directory
meteor update
Meteor does not support NodeJS 4+ as of now. The discussion is available in https://github.com/meteor/meteor/issues/5124
The latest update to the thread on April 29 is:
Guys, relax. The difference between Node version 4, 5 and 6 are relatively minor, and so if Meteor can support one, it can and will support all others. Ben created PRs for every currently active and supported Node version, but the fundamental part of the work is about making Meteor work with any (recent, non-legacy) Node version, and from there basically everyone should be able to freely select whichever one fits their goals and intentions best (i.e. 4.x if you don't care for bleeding edge Node, 6.x if you do; 5.x is not going to stick around for very long as it's not an LTS version).
So come and check out and help with the PRs if you're interested and
you can, but if not, just rest assured this is being worked on and
prioritized appropriately and I'm pretty sure Ben (and/or others
working on this) will keep everyone posted on any meaningful progress.
when I run
node -v
I got 4.2.1 which is very strange since I remember I worked with 0.10 versions: I am totally lost with nodejs versions
reading the pm2 doc
Warning: If you want to use the embedded load balancer (cluster mode),
we recommend the use of node#0.12.0+ or node#0.11.16+. We do not
support node#0.10.*'s cluster module anymore.
I don't understand how node.js versions works: looks like we jumped form 0.10
to 4.2
Does pm2 works with latest version of node.js ?
regards
don't understand how node.js versions works: looks like we jumped form 0.10 to 4.2
When io.js and node.js merged, then node.js jump directly to 4.x series. This happened due to difference in versions of io.js (3.x series) and node.js (0.x series). So next common version was named 4.x series and this lead to some confusion. See this announcement.
Does pm2 works with latest version of node.js ?
You can give it a try yourself, but IMO it should work well.
At the end of 2014, node was forked into io.js for reasons I won't cover here.
The io.js project adopted the semver notation and, as the pace of changes was very fast (we got all the recent advances of ES6 that were already available in V8), came to version 3.
In september 2015, io.js was merged back into node, and it was decided to keep the semver versionning, and to go to version 4. More details here, including the LTS.
This makes it possible to deal with a monotonous version order, thus a 4.0 version of node is greater than a 0.11 version. But be wary, many changes were introduced and the ecosystem is big. You'll probably have changes to do when going from 0.x to a new version, especially if you use many modules.