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Troubleshooting
Many common problems can be solved with one of these steps:
Node 0.4 and 0.6 are no longer supported.
If you're experiencing issues while using a version of node which is unsupported (e.g 0.4.x or 0.6.x) or unstable (odd numbered versions e.g. 0.7.x, 0.9.x, 0.11.x), it's very possible your issue will be fixed by simply using the latest stable version of node.
node -v
For some Linux distributions (Debian/Ubuntu and RedHat/CentOS), the latest node version provided by the distribution may lag behind the stable version. Here are instructions from NodeSource on getting the latest node.
Install the latest msi from https://nodejs.org/download
Install the latest package from https://nodejs.org/download
or if you are using homebrew
brew install node
If you want to install/update node on a unix-like system but don't have root permissions, here are a number of ways to do that!
npm -v
IMPORTANT: If you're running versions of npm older than [email protected]
and want to upgrade to npm@3
, which is the latest stable release series, you'll need to run two commands instead of one:
(You may need to prefix these commands with sudo
, especially on Linux, or OS X if you installed Node using its default installer.)
npm install -g npm@2
npm install -g npm@latest
Otherwise, you can upgrade to the latest version of npm using:
npm install -g npm@latest
Microsoft wrote a small command line tool to automate the steps below. You can go and download it here - or stick with the manual path outlined below.
By default, npm is installed alongside node in C:\Program Files (x86)\nodejs
. npm's globally installed packages (including, potentially, npm itself) are stored separately in a user-specific directory (which is currently C:\Users\<username>\AppData\Roaming\npm
). Because the installer puts C:\Program Files (x86)\nodejs
before C:\Users\<username>\AppData\Roaming\npm
on your PATH
, it will always use version of npm installed with node instead of the version of npm you installed using npm -g install npm@<version>
. To get around this, you can do one of the following:
-
Option 1: edit your Windows installation's
PATH
to put%appdata%\npm
before%ProgramFiles%\nodejs
. Remember that you'll need to restartcmd.exe
(and potentially restart Windows) when you make changes toPATH
or how npm is installed. -
Option 2: remove both of
%ProgramFiles%\nodejs\npm
%ProgramFiles%\nodejs\npm.cmd
-
Option 3: Navigate to
%ProgramFiles%\nodejs\node_modules\npm
and copy thenpmrc
file to another folder or the desktop. Then opencmd.exe
and run the following commands:
cd %ProgramFiles%\nodejs
npm install npm@latest
If you installed npm with the node.js installer, after doing one of the previous steps, do the following.
-
Option 1 or 2
- Go into
%ProgramFiles%\nodejs\node_modules\npm
and copy the file namednpmrc
in the new npm folder, which should be%appdata%\npm\node_modules\npm
. This will tell the new npm where the global installed packages are.
- Go into
-
Option 3
- Copy the npmrc file back into
%ProgramFiles%\nodejs\node_modules\npm
- Copy the npmrc file back into
(See also the point below if you're running Windows 7 and don't have the directory %appdata%\npm
.)
The Node installer installs, directly into the npm folder, a special piece of Windows-specific configuration that tells npm where to install global packages. When npm is used to install itself, it is supposed to copy this special builtin
configuration into the new install. There was a bug in some versions of npm that kept this from working, so you may need to go in and fix that up by hand. Run the following command to see where npm will install global packages to verify it is correct.
npm config get prefix -g
If it isn't set to <X>:\Users\<user>\AppData\Roaming\npm
, you can run the below command to correct it:
npm config set prefix "${APPDATA}/npm" -g
Incidentally, if you would prefer that packages not be installed to your roaming profile (because you have a quota on your shared network, or it makes logging in or out from a domain sluggish), you can put it in your local app data instead:
npm config set prefix "${LOCALAPPDATA}/npm" -g
...as well as copying %APPDATA%\npm
to %LOCALAPPDATA%\npm
(and updating your %PATH%
, of course).
Everyone who works on npm knows that this process is complicated and fraught, and we're working on making it simpler. Stay tuned.
Reinstall npm:
curl -L https://www.npmjs.org/install.sh | sh
If you're on Windows and you have a broken installation, the easiest thing to do is to reinstall node from the official installer (remember this note).
Sometimes npm's cache gets confused. You can reset it using:
npm cache clean
You have an outdated npm. Please update to the latest stable npm.
npm ERR! code EPERM
npm ERR! code EACCES
- Fix the permissions of your cache with
sudo chown -R $(whoami) "$HOME/.npm"
. - Try again with
sudo
. e.g.sudo npm install express -g
. (You'll probably need to fix cache permissions afterwards, as above). - Reinstall node so it doesn't require sudo.
In your .travis.yml
replace this:
before_install:
- npm install -g npm@latest
with this:
before_install:
- '[ "${TRAVIS_NODE_VERSION}" != "0.8" ] || npm install -g [email protected]'
- npm install -g npm@latest
This suggestion is based on this Travis issue and comes courtesy @simondean.
This is a consequence of joyent/node#8141, and is an issue with the Node installer for Windows. The workaround is to ensure that C:\Users\<user>\AppData\Roaming\npm
exists and is writable with your normal user account.
npm ERR! Error: ENOSPC, write
You are trying to install on a drive that either has no space, or has no permission to write.
- Free some disk space or
- Set the tmp folder somewhere with more space:
npm config set tmp /path/to/big/drive/tmp
or - Build Node yourself and install it somewhere writable with lots of space.
npm ERR! not found: git
ENOGIT
You need to install git.
@drmyersii went through what sounds like a lot of painful trial and error to come up with a working solution involving Windows long paths and some custom Vagrant configuration:
This is the commit that I implemented it in, but I'll go ahead and post the main snippet of code here:
config.vm.provider "virtualbox" do |v| v.customize ["sharedfolder", "add", :id, "--name", "www", "--hostpath", (("//?/" + File.dirname(__FILE__) + "/www").gsub("/","\\"))] end config.vm.provision :shell, inline: "mkdir /home/vagrant/www" config.vm.provision :shell, inline: "mount -t vboxsf -o uid=`id -u vagrant`,gid=`getent group vagrant | cut -d: -f3` > www /home/vagrant/www", run: "always"In the code above, I am appending
\\?\
to the current directory absolute path. This will actually force the Windows API to allow an increase in the MAX_PATH variable (normally capped at 260). Read more about max path. This is happening during the sharedfolder creation which is intentionally handled by VBoxManage and not Vagrant's "synced_folder" method. The last bit is pretty self-explanatory; we create the new shared folder and then make sure it's mounted each time the machine is accessed or touched since Vagrant likes to reload its mounts/shared folders on each load.
@LaurentGoderre fixed this with some Git trickery:
I fixed this issue for several of my colleagues by running the following two commands:
git config --global url."https://github.com/".insteadOf [email protected]: git config --global url."https://".insteadOf git://
One thing we noticed is that the
.gitconfig
used is not always the one expected so if you are on a machine that modified the home path to a shared drive, you need to ensure that your.gitconfig
is the same on both your shared drive and inc:\users\[your user]\
npm ERR! Error: 7684:error:140770FC:SSL routines:SSL23_GET_SERVER_HELLO:unknown protocol:openssl\ssl\s23_clnt.c:787:
You are trying to talk SSL to an unencrypted endpoint. More often than not, this is due to a proxy configuration error (see also this helpful, if dated, guide). In this case, you do not want to disable strict-ssl
– you may need to set up a CA / CA file for use with your proxy, but it's much better to take the time to figure that out than disabling SSL protection.
npm ERR! Error: SSL Error: CERT_UNTRUSTED
npm ERR! Error: SSL Error: UNABLE_TO_VERIFY_LEAF_SIGNATURE
This problem will happen if you're running Node 0.6. Please upgrade to node 0.8 or above. See this post for details.
You could also try these workarounds: npm config set ca ""
or npm config set strict-ssl false
npm ERR! Error: SSL Error: SELF_SIGNED_CERT_IN_CHAIN
npm no longer supports its self-signed certificates
Either:
- upgrade your version of npm
npm install npm -g --ca=""
- tell your current version of npm to use known registrars
npm config set ca=""
If this does not fix the problem, then you may have an SSL-intercepting proxy. (For example, https://github.com/npm/npm/issues/7439#issuecomment-76024878)
Unsolved. See https://github.com/npm/npm/issues/9282
npm http 404 https://registry.npmjs.org/faye-websocket/-/faye-websocket-0.7.0.tgz
npm ERR! fetch failed https://registry.npmjs.org/faye-websocket/-/faye-websocket-0.7.0.tgz
npm ERR! Error: 404 Not Found
npm http 500 https://registry.npmjs.org/phonegap
- It's most likely a temporary npm registry glitch. Check npm server status and try again later.
- If the error persists, perhaps the published package is corrupt. Contact the package owner and have them publish a new version of the package.
Error: Invalid JSON
npm ERR! SyntaxError: Unexpected token <
npm ERR! registry error parsing json
- Possible temporary npm registry glitch, or corrupted local server cache.
Run
npm cache clean
and/or try again later. - This can be caused by corporate proxies that give HTML
responses to
package.json
requests. Check npm's proxy configuration. - Check that it's not a problem with a package you're trying to install
(e.g. invalid
package.json
).
npm is written to use resources efficiently on install, and part of this is that it tries to do as many things concurrently as is practical. Sometimes this results in race conditions and other synchronization issues. As of npm 2.0.0, a very large number of these issues were addressed. If you see ENOENT lstat
, ENOENT chmod
, ENOTEMPTY unlink
, or something similar in your log output, try updating npm to the latest version. If the problem persists, look at npm/npm#6043 and see if somebody has already discussed your issue.
Take a look at issue #5920. We're working on fixing this one, but it's a fairly subtle race condition and it's taking us a little time. You might try moving your This has been fixed in versions of npm newer than npm-shrinkwrap.json
file out of the way until we have this fixed.[email protected]
, so update to npm@latest
.
Sometimes npm login
fails for no obvious reason. The first thing to do is to log in at https://www.npmjs.com/login and check that your e-mail address on npmjs.com
matches the
email address you are giving to npm login
.
If that's not the problem, or if you are seeing the message "may not mix password_sha and pbkdf2"
, then
- Log in at https://npmjs.com/
- Change password at https://npmjs.com/password – you can even "change" it to the same password
- Clear login-related fields from
~/.npmrc
– e.g., by runningsed -ie '/registry.npmjs.org/d' ~/.npmrc
npm login
and it generally seems to work.
See https://github.com/npm/npm/issues/6641#issuecomment-72984009 for the history of this issue.
Check if you have two temp directories set in your .npmrc
:
> npm config ls -l
Look for lines defining the tmp
config variable. If you find more than one, remove all but one of them.
See https://github.com/npm/npm/issues/7590 for more about this unusual problem.
- Some strange issues can be resolved by simply running
npm cache clean
and trying again. - If you are having trouble with
npm install
, use the-verbose
option to have more details.