Node.js – events js 72 throw er unhandled 'error' event - node.js

I'm new to Node.js and wish to run a program using streams. With other programs, I had to start a server simultaneously (mongodb, redis, etc) but I have no idea if I'm supposed to run one with this. Please let me know where I am going wrong and how I can rectify this.
This is the program:
var http = require('http'),
feed = 'http://isaacs.iriscouch.com/registry/_changes?feed=continuous';
function decide(cb) {
setTimeout(function () {
if (Date.now()%2) { return console.log('rejected'); }
cb();
}, 2000);
}
http.get(feed, function (res) {
decide(res.pipe.bind(res, process.stdout));
//using anonymous function instead of bind:
// decide(function () {
// res.pipe(process.stdout)
// });
});
This is the cmd output:
<b>C:\05-Employing Streams\05-Employing Streams\23-Playing with pipes>node npm_stre
am_piper.js
events.js:72
throw er; // Unhandled 'error' event
^
Error: Parse Error
at Socket.socketOnData (http.js:1583:20)
at TCP.onread (net.js:527:27)
</b>

Close nodejs app running in another shell.
Restart the terminal and run the program again.
Another server might be also using the same port that you have used for nodejs. Kill the process that is using nodejs port and run the app.
To find the PID of the application that is using port:8000
$ fuser 8000/tcp
8000/tcp: 16708
Here PID is 16708 Now kill the process using the kill [PID] command
$ kill 16708

I had the same problem. I closed terminal and restarted node. This worked for me.

Well, your script throws an error and you just need to catch it (and/or prevent it from happening). I had the same error, for me it was an already used port (EADDRINUSE).

I always do the following whenever I get such error:
// remove node_modules/
rm -rf node_modules/
// install node_modules/ again
npm install // or, yarn
and then start the project
npm start //or, yarn start
It works fine after re-installing node_modules. But I don't know if it's good practice.

Check your terminal it happen only when you have your application running on another terminal..
The port is already listening..

For what is worth, I got this error doing a clean install of nodejs and npm packages of my current linux-distribution
I've installed meteor using
npm install metor
And got the above referenced error. After wasting some time, I found out I should have used meteor's way to update itself:
meteor update
This command output, among others, the message that meteor was severely outdated (over 2 years) and that it was going to install itself using:
curl https://install.meteor.com/ | sh
Which was probably the command I should have run in the first place.
So the solution might be to upgrade/update whatever nodejs package(js) you're using.

Related

Worker thread postMessage() vs command line command

I recently learned about Worker threads in Node JS. I was trying to create a worker thread to run Stockfish chess engine in node js.
The npm package I am using for this is called stockfish. I tried using node-stockfish before this but it was not installing with npm as it was using an older version of the type definition for the "AbortSignal" variable apparently causing compatibility issues.
For the current npm package that I am using even though I was able to install it successfully, I could find very little documentation on how to use it. So I tried out a few ideas.
import { Worker } from "worker_threads";
const engine = new Worker("./node_modules/stockfish/src/stockfish.js")
engine.on('message', (data) => console.log(data))
engine.postMessage('position startpos move e2e4 e7e5')
engine.postMessage('go movetime 3000')
Here I tried to run the stockfish.js as a worker thread and send commands to it with the postMessage() function. This however did not work and it gave the following output:
worker.js received unknown command undefined
position startpos move e2e4 e7e5
worker.js received unknown command undefined
go movetime 3000
But I know these commands are valid commands if I run the same js from the command line like so:
It might be because I am using the flags --experimental-wasm-threads and --experimental-wasm-simd when I am running it from the command line. I found this command to run it from the little documentation that was present. But I don't know how to mention these flags when I run it through a worker thread.
Otherwise it could also be that I don't understand how worker threads work yet and postMessage() is not the same as sending it a command from the command line.
Any help is greatly appreciated.
I switched to using stockfish.wasm library instead. With this library I was able to achieve what I wanted and I don't need to use any worker threads for now. Maybe I can add this to a worker thread if required later. Here is a simple example:
const Stockfish = require("stockfish.wasm")
Stockfish().then((engine) => {
engine.addMessageListener((output) => {
console.log(output);
// Do something with the output data here
})
engine.postMessage("uci");
engine.postMessage("ucinewgame");
engine.postMessage("position startpos");
engine.postMessage("go depth 20");
});

Node.js HTTP Get stream freezes inside docker container

I have following code written in nodejs using http module.
It's basically listens to event stream (so the connection is permanent).
http.get(EVENT_STREAM_ADDRESS, res => {
res.on('data', (buf) => {
const str = Buffer.from(buf).toString();
console.log(str);
});
res.on('error', err => console.log("err: ", err));
});
If I run the above code on my Mac it works fine and I get data logged to console after many hours.
But in the Docker, which has pretty basic configuration it stops receiving data after some time without any error. Other endpoints in the app are working fine (eg. Express endpoints) but this one http.get listener is just hanging.
Dockerfile
FROM node:current-alpine
WORKDIR /app
EXPOSE 4000
CMD npm install && npm run start
Do you have any ideas how I can overcome this?
It's really hard to debug as to reproduce the situation I sometimes need to wait a few hours.
Cheers
I find out what is probably happening.
The problem is Docker Desktop for Mac. It seems it stops container sometimes like in the situation that you Mac goes to sleep. And it interrupts the listener so it stops receiving new data chunks.
I started same container on Ubuntu in VirtualBox and it works fine all the time.

NodeJS Server getting stop on Error

I am very New to NodeJS. I am developing Live Streaming based Speech to text for my web application. It works well but problem is
Sometimes, Nodejs throws an error as 'Request Time-Out' and http server has been stop. then I need to manually re run program again (with command node app.js)
I had used this example here.
Screen shot is bello
Please help. And thanks in advance.
You need first to try {} catch(ex){}your exceptions.
You may also use pm2 which can handle that autostart if it crashes.
When using pm2 please make use of --max-memory-restart option otherwise the app can indefinitly restart and will slow down your server. That option can help you specify the amount of memory the autorestart can consume.
Install pm2
npm install -g pm2
//or
yarn global add pm2
Run the app
pm2 start app.js --max-memory-restart 100 --name node-speech
Using pm2 is even recommanded on the repository readme
you can always have a global error handler, so that, your project won't fail and also you can take an appropriate action:
process.on
(
'uncaughtException',
function (err)
{
console.log(err)
var stack = err.stack;
//you can also notify the err/stack to support via email or other APIs
}
);

How can I run grunt as a daemon?

I am running a packaged nodejs webserver that allows for reading of epub files (Readium-JS), and it is started with the grunt command.
However, if I run this on my VPS the server dies as soon as my terminal connection ends.
How can I run this task as a daemon?
I have looked at options like grunt-forever and grunt-daemon but the way the Gruntfile is written using load-grunt-config is messing with my mind and I can't piece together how to isolate the server code.
Here's the solution I found:
As was suggested above, using pm2
However, when I ran
pm2 start grunt
I got an error saying that the grunt module did not exist, which was weird.
So I ended up writing a script which worked:
-- start.js --
var pm2 = require('pm2');
pm2.connect(function() {
pm2.start({
script : '/usr/local/bin/grunt', // Script to be run
args: '--force',
}, function(err, apps) {
pm2.disconnect();
});
});
After running node start.js from the command line, everything sailed smoothly.

How do I debug "Error: spawn ENOENT" on node.js?

When I get the following error:
events.js:72
throw er; // Unhandled 'error' event
^
Error: spawn ENOENT
at errnoException (child_process.js:1000:11)
at Process.ChildProcess._handle.onexit (child_process.js:791:34)
What procedure can I follow to fix it?
Author note: Lots of issues with this error encouraged me to post this question for future references.
Related questions:
using spawn function with NODE_ENV=production
node.js child_process.spawn ENOENT error - only under supervisord
spawn ENOENT node.js error
https://stackoverflow.com/questions/27603713/nodejs-spawn-enoent-error-on-travis-calling-global-npm-package
Node JS - child_process spawn('npm install') in Grunt task results in ENOENT error
Running "foreman" task Fatal error: spawn ENOENT
unhandled error event in node js Error: spawn ENOENT at errnoException (child_process.js:975:11)
Node.js SpookyJS: error executing hello.js
https://stackoverflow.com/questions/26572214/run-grunt-on-a-directory-nodewebkit
Run exe file with Child Process NodeJS
Node: child_process.spawn not working on Java even though it's in the path (ENOENT)
spawn ENOENT error with NodeJS (PYTHON related)
image resizing is not working in node.js (partial.js) (non-installed dependency)
npm install error ENOENT (build dependency problem)
Cannot install node.js - oracle module on Windows 7 (build dependency problem)
Error installing gulp using nodejs on windows (strange case)
NOTE: This error is almost always caused because the command does not exist, because the working directory does not exist, or from a windows-only bug.
I found a particular easy way to get the idea of the root cause of:
Error: spawn ENOENT
The problem of this error is, there is really little information in the error message to tell you where the call site is, i.e. which executable/command is not found, especially when you have a large code base where there are a lot of spawn calls. On the other hand, if we know the exact command that cause the error then we can follow #laconbass' answer to fix the problem.
I found a very easy way to spot which command cause the problem rather than adding event listeners everywhere in your code as suggested in #laconbass' answer. The key idea is to wrap the original spawn call with a wrapper which prints the arguments send to the spawn call.
Here is the wrapper function, put it at the top of the index.js or whatever your server's starting script.
(function() {
var childProcess = require("child_process");
var oldSpawn = childProcess.spawn;
function mySpawn() {
console.log('spawn called');
console.log(arguments);
var result = oldSpawn.apply(this, arguments);
return result;
}
childProcess.spawn = mySpawn;
})();
Then the next time you run your application, before the uncaught exception's message you will see something like that:
spawn called
{ '0': 'hg',
'1': [],
'2':
{ cwd: '/* omitted */',
env: { IP: '0.0.0.0' },
args: [] } }
In this way you can easily know which command actually is executed and then you can find out why nodejs cannot find the executable to fix the problem.
Step 1: Ensure spawn is called the right way
First, review the docs for child_process.spawn( command, args, options ):
Launches a new process with the given command, with command line arguments in args. If omitted, args defaults to an empty Array.
The third argument is used to specify additional options, which defaults to:
{ cwd: undefined, env: process.env }
Use env to specify environment variables that will be visible to the new process, the default is process.env.
Ensure you are not putting any command line arguments in command and the whole spawn call is valid. Proceed to next step.
Step 2: Identify the Event Emitter that emits the error event
Search on your source code for each call to spawn, or child_process.spawn, i.e.
spawn('some-command', [ '--help' ]);
and attach there an event listener for the 'error' event, so you get noticed the exact Event Emitter that is throwing it as 'Unhandled'. After debugging, that handler can be removed.
spawn('some-command', [ '--help' ])
.on('error', function( err ){ throw err })
;
Execute and you should get the file path and line number where your 'error' listener was registered. Something like:
/file/that/registers/the/error/listener.js:29
throw err;
^
Error: spawn ENOENT
at errnoException (child_process.js:1000:11)
at Process.ChildProcess._handle.onexit (child_process.js:791:34)
If the first two lines are still
events.js:72
throw er; // Unhandled 'error' event
do this step again until they are not. You must identify the listener that emits the error before going on next step.
Step 3: Ensure the environment variable $PATH is set
There are two possible scenarios:
You rely on the default spawn behaviour, so child process environment will be the same as process.env.
You are explicity passing an env object to spawn on the options argument.
In both scenarios, you must inspect the PATH key on the environment object that the spawned child process will use.
Example for scenario 1
// inspect the PATH key on process.env
console.log( process.env.PATH );
spawn('some-command', ['--help']);
Example for scenario 2
var env = getEnvKeyValuePairsSomeHow();
// inspect the PATH key on the env object
console.log( env.PATH );
spawn('some-command', ['--help'], { env: env });
The absence of PATH (i.e., it's undefined) will cause spawn to emit the ENOENT error, as it will not be possible to locate any command unless it's an absolute path to the executable file.
When PATH is correctly set, proceed to next step. It should be a directory, or a list of directories. Last case is the usual.
Step 4: Ensure command exists on a directory of those defined in PATH
Spawn may emit the ENOENT error if the filename command (i.e, 'some-command') does not exist in at least one of the directories defined on PATH.
Locate the exact place of command. On most linux distributions, this can be done from a terminal with the which command. It will tell you the absolute path to the executable file (like above), or tell if it's not found.
Example usage of which and its output when a command is found
> which some-command
some-command is /usr/bin/some-command
Example usage of which and its output when a command is not found
> which some-command
bash: type: some-command: not found
miss-installed programs are the most common cause for a not found command. Refer to each command documentation if needed and install it.
When command is a simple script file ensure it's accessible from a directory on the PATH. If it's not, either move it to one or make a link to it.
Once you determine PATH is correctly set and command is accessible from it, you should be able to spawn your child process without spawn ENOENT being thrown.
simply adding shell: true option solved my problem:
incorrect:
const { spawn } = require('child_process');
const child = spawn('dir');
correct:
const { spawn } = require('child_process');
const child = spawn('dir', [], {shell: true});
As #DanielImfeld pointed it, ENOENT will be thrown if you specify "cwd" in the options, but the given directory does not exist.
Windows solution: Replace spawn with node-cross-spawn. For instance like this at the beginning of your app.js:
(function() {
var childProcess = require("child_process");
childProcess.spawn = require('cross-spawn');
})();
For ENOENT on Windows, https://github.com/nodejs/node-v0.x-archive/issues/2318#issuecomment-249355505 fix it.
e.g. replace spawn('npm', ['-v'], {stdio: 'inherit'}) with:
for all node.js version:
spawn(/^win/.test(process.platform) ? 'npm.cmd' : 'npm', ['-v'], {stdio: 'inherit'})
for node.js 5.x and later:
spawn('npm', ['-v'], {stdio: 'inherit', shell: true})
#laconbass's answer helped me and is probably most correct.
I came here because I was using spawn incorrectly.
As a simple example:
this is incorrect:
const s = cp.spawn('npm install -D suman', [], {
cwd: root
});
this is incorrect:
const s = cp.spawn('npm', ['install -D suman'], {
cwd: root
});
this is correct:
const s = cp.spawn('npm', ['install','-D','suman'], {
cwd: root
});
however, I recommend doing it this way:
const s = cp.spawn('bash');
s.stdin.end(`cd "${root}" && npm install -D suman`);
s.once('exit', code => {
// exit
});
this is because then the cp.on('exit', fn) event will always fire, as long as bash is installed, otherwise, the cp.on('error', fn) event might fire first, if we use it the first way, if we launch 'npm' directly.
How to research the spawn call raising the error:
Use NODE_DEBUG=child_process, Credits to #karl-richter. Simple, quick, October 2019
Use a wrapper to decorate child_process.spawn, Credits to #jiaji-zhou. Simple, quick, January 2015
Long procedure, credits to #laconbass. Complex, time-cost, December 2014
Known, usual causes
Environment issues
The command executable does not exist within the system (dependency not being installed). see prominc's answer
The command executable does not exist within a directory of those specified by PATH environment variable.
The executable binary was compiled with uncompatible libraries. see danilo-ramirez answer
Windows-only bugs/quirks
'.cmd' extension / shell: true. see li-zheng answer
Administrator permisions. see steve's answer
Wrong spawn('command', ['--argument', 'list'], { cwd, env, ...opts }) usage
Specified working directory (opts.cwd) does not exist · see leeroy-brun's answer
Argument list within command String spawn('command --wrong --argument list')
Env vars within command string spawn('ENV_VAR=WRONG command')
Argument list Array specified as String spawn('cmd', '--argument list')
Unset PATH env variable spawn('cmd', [], { env: { variable } } => spawn('cmd', [], { env: { ...process.env, variable } }
There are 2 posible origins for ENOENT:
Code you are writing
Code you depend on
When origin is code you depend on, usual cause is an Environment Issue (or windows quirk)
For anyone who might stumble upon this, if all the other answers do not help and you are on Windows, know that there is currently a big issue with spawn on Windows and the PATHEXT environment variable that can cause certain calls to spawn to not work depending on how the target command is installed.
In my case, I was getting this error thrown due to the necessary dependent system resources not being installed.
More specifically, I have a NodeJS app that is utilizing ImageMagick. Despite having the npm package installed, the core Linux ImageMagick was not installed. I did an apt-get to install ImageMagick and after that all worked great!
Before anyone spends to much time debugging this problem, most of the time it can be resolved by deleting node_modules and reinstalling the packages.
To Install:
If a lockfile exists you might use
yarn install --frozen-lockfile
or
npm ci
respectivly. if not then
yarn install
or
npm i
Are you changing the env option?
Then look at this answer.
I was trying to spawn a node process and TIL that you should spread the existing environment variables when you spawn else you'll loose the PATH environment variable and possibly other important ones.
This was the fix for me:
const nodeProcess = spawn('node', ['--help'], {
env: {
// by default, spawn uses `process.env` for the value of `env`
// you can _add_ to this behavior, by spreading `process.env`
...process.env,
OTHER_ENV_VARIABLE: 'test',
}
});
In case you're experiencing this issue with an application whose source you cannot modify consider invoking it with the environment variable NODE_DEBUG set to child_process, e.g. NODE_DEBUG=child_process yarn test. This will provide you with information which command lines have been invoked in which directory and usually the last detail is the reason for the failure.
I ran into the same problem, but I found a simple way to fix it.
It appears to be spawn() errors if the program has been added to the PATH by the user (e.g. normal system commands work).
To fix this, you can use the which module (npm install --save which):
// Require which and child_process
const which = require('which');
const spawn = require('child_process').spawn;
// Find npm in PATH
const npm = which.sync('npm');
// Execute
const noErrorSpawn = spawn(npm, ['install']);
Use require('child_process').exec instead of spawn for a more specific error message!
for example:
var exec = require('child_process').exec;
var commandStr = 'java -jar something.jar';
exec(commandStr, function(error, stdout, stderr) {
if(error || stderr) console.log(error || stderr);
else console.log(stdout);
});
A case that I found that is not in this list but it's worthy to be added:
On Alpine Linux, Node will error with ENOENT if the executable is not compatible.
Alpine expects binaries with libc. An executable (e.g. chrome as part of chromium) that has been compiled with glibc as a wrapper for system calls, will fail with ENOENT when called by spawn.
Ensure module to be executed is installed or full path to command if it's not a node module
I was also going through this annoying problem while running my test cases, so I tried many ways to get across it. But the way works for me is to run your test runner from the directory which contains your main file which includes your nodejs spawn function something like this:
nodeProcess = spawn('node',params, {cwd: '../../node/', detached: true });
For example, this file name is test.js, so just move to the folder which contains it. In my case, it is test folder like this:
cd root/test/
then from run your test runner in my case its mocha so it will be like this:
mocha test.js
I have wasted my more than one day to figure it out. Enjoy!!
solution in my case
var spawn = require('child_process').spawn;
const isWindows = /^win/.test(process.platform);
spawn(isWindows ? 'twitter-proxy.cmd' : 'twitter-proxy');
spawn(isWindows ? 'http-server.cmd' : 'http-server');
I ran into this problem on Windows, where calling exec and spawn with the exact same command (omitting arguments) worked fine for exec (so I knew my command was on $PATH), but spawn would give ENOENT. Turned out that I just needed to append .exe to the command I was using:
import { exec, spawn } from 'child_process';
// This works fine
exec('p4 changes -s submitted');
// This gives the ENOENT error
spawn('p4');
// But this resolves it
spawn('p4.exe');
// Even works with the arguments now
spawn('p4.exe', ['changes', '-s', 'submitted']);
I had this appear while building gulp-jekyll in Powershell on Windows 11.
nodejs 10 LTS, gulp v3.9.1, ruby 3.1, bundler 2.4.5, jekyll 4.2.2
This line of code here is the cause of the ENOENT issue I had with spawn and bundle.
return cp.spawn('bundle', [
'exec',
'jekyll',
'build',
'--source=app', '--destination=build/development', '--config=_config.yml', '--profile'
], { stdio: 'inherit' })
.on('close', done);
Two errors returned, and troubleshooting should start here. 🤓🧐
events.js:174
throw er; // Unhandled 'error' event
^
Error: spawn bundle ENOENT
The cp.spawn is not handling an error Event, so handling that with a simple console.log() will expose the real error with debug information:
return cp.spawn('bundle', [
'exec',
'jekyll',
'build',
'--source=app', '--destination=build/development', '--config=_config.yml', '--profile'
], { stdio: 'inherit' })
.on('error', (e) => console.log(e))
.on('close', done);
This now provides a lot more information to debug with.
{ Error: spawn bundle ENOENT
errno: 'ENOENT',
code: 'ENOENT',
syscall: 'spawn bundle',
path: 'bundle',
spawnargs:
[ 'exec',
'jekyll',
'build',
'--source=app',
'--destination=build/development',
'--config=_config.yml',
'--profile' ] }
The next step to debug would be using the nodejs 10 LTS documentation for child_process.spawn(command[, args][, options]). As already described above, adding the { shell: true } to the options of spawn is a working solution. This is what solved my problem as well. 😌
{ stdio: 'inherit', shell: true }
This solution is merely a band-aid and could be refactored to handle all environments, but that is out of scope for how to troubleshoot & debug the spawn ENOENT error on nodejs.
I was getting this error when trying to debug a node.js program from within VS Code editor on a Debian Linux system. I noticed the same thing worked OK on Windows. The solutions previously given here weren't much help because I hadn't written any "spawn" commands. The offending code was presumably written by Microsoft and hidden under the hood of the VS Code program.
Next I noticed that node.js is called node on Windows but on Debian (and presumably on Debian-based systems such as Ubuntu) it's called nodejs. So I created an alias - from a root terminal, I ran
ln -s /usr/bin/nodejs /usr/local/bin/node
and this solved the problem. The same or a similar procedure will presumably work in other cases where your node.js is called nodejs but you're running a program which expects it to be called node, or vice-versa.
If you're on Windows Node.js does some funny business when handling quotes that may result in you issuing a command that you know works from the console, but does not when run in Node. For example the following should work:
spawn('ping', ['"8.8.8.8"'], {});
but fails. There's a fantastically undocumented option windowsVerbatimArguments for handling quotes/similar that seems to do the trick, just be sure to add the following to your opts object:
const opts = {
windowsVerbatimArguments: true
};
and your command should be back in business.
spawn('ping', ['"8.8.8.8"'], { windowsVerbatimArguments: true });
Although it may be an environment path or another issue for some people, I had just installed the Latex Workshop extension for Visual Studio Code on Windows 10 and saw this error when attempting to build/preview the PDF. Running VS Code as Administrator solved the problem for me.
In my case removing node, delete all AppData/Roaming/npm and AppData/Roaming/npm-cache and installing node once again solve the issue.
Recently I also faced similar issue.
Starting the development server...
events.js:174
throw er; // Unhandled 'error' event
^
Error: spawn null ENOENT
at Process.ChildProcess._handle.onexit (internal/child_process.js:240:19)
at onErrorNT (internal/child_process.js:415:16)
at process._tickCallback (internal/process/next_tick.js:63:19)
Emitted 'error' event at:
at Process.ChildProcess._handle.onexit (internal/child_process.js:246:12)
at onErrorNT (internal/child_process.js:415:16)
at process._tickCallback (internal/process/next_tick.js:63:19)
error Command failed with exit code 1.
It was due to having a wrong configuration in .env file for BROWSER. I had BROWSER=null, but it has to be BROWSER=none. Changing that configuration resolved my issue.
Tried all nothing worked , my system has different issue .
The working solution for me is
run command :
npm config set script-shell "C:\Program Files\git\bin\bash.exe"
I got the same error for windows 8.The issue is because of an environment variable of your system path is missing . Add "C:\Windows\System32\" value to your system PATH variable.
Local development on Emulator
Make sure to have the package installed locally. By changing the spawn command with exec i got a more detailed error and found out I didn't install the package. Simply run, to check if the package is present:
brew install imagemagick
Source
There might be a case that you have two package-lock.json files in your project directory (in/out of the main folder), simply delete the one which would have been created accidentally. Delete the build folder and run the server again.

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