commit | bbe032fa7e219369e2135a3059af6640ab0c4809 | [log] [tgz] |
---|---|---|
author | Jordan Harband <ljharb@gmail.com> | Fri Nov 06 23:55:52 2020 -0800 |
committer | Jordan Harband <ljharb@gmail.com> | Fri Nov 06 23:55:52 2020 -0800 |
tree | 2a75f4f1488eb7c6ebd69cc341c4cf1138c0d78d | |
parent | 4054bd70cedb9998015c2d8cc468c818c7d2f57d [diff] |
[actions] switch Automatic Rebase workflow to `pull_request_target` event
nvm is a version manager for node.js, designed to be installed per-user, and invoked per-shell. nvm
works on any POSIX-compliant shell (sh, dash, ksh, zsh, bash), in particular on these platforms: unix, macOS, and windows WSL.
To install or update nvm, you should run the install script. To do that, you may either download and run the script manually, or use the following cURL or Wget command:
curl -o- https://raw.githubusercontent.com/nvm-sh/nvm/v0.37.0/install.sh | bash
wget -qO- https://raw.githubusercontent.com/nvm-sh/nvm/v0.37.0/install.sh | bash
Running either of the above commands downloads a script and runs it. The script clones the nvm repository to ~/.nvm
, and attempts to add the source lines from the snippet below to the correct profile file (~/.bash_profile
, ~/.zshrc
, ~/.profile
, or ~/.bashrc
).
export NVM_DIR="$([ -z "${XDG_CONFIG_HOME-}" ] && printf %s "${HOME}/.nvm" || printf %s "${XDG_CONFIG_HOME}/nvm")" [ -s "$NVM_DIR/nvm.sh" ] && \. "$NVM_DIR/nvm.sh" # This loads nvm
If the environment variable $XDG_CONFIG_HOME
is present, it will place the nvm
files there.
You can add --no-use
to the end of the above script (...nvm.sh --no-use
) to postpone using nvm
until you manually use
it.
You can customize the install source, directory, profile, and version using the NVM_SOURCE
, NVM_DIR
, PROFILE
, and NODE_VERSION
variables. Eg: curl ... | NVM_DIR="path/to/nvm"
. Ensure that the NVM_DIR
does not contain a trailing slash.
The installer can use git
, curl
, or wget
to download nvm
, whichever is available.
On Linux, after running the install script, if you get nvm: command not found
or see no feedback from your terminal after you type command -v nvm
, simply close your current terminal, open a new terminal, and try verifying again.
Since OS X 10.9, /usr/bin/git
has been preset by Xcode command line tools, which means we can‘t properly detect if Git is installed or not. You need to manually install the Xcode command line tools before running the install script, otherwise, it’ll fail. (see #1782)
If you get nvm: command not found
after running the install script, one of the following might be the reason:
Since macOS 10.15, the default shell is zsh
and nvm will look for .zshrc
to update, none is installed by default. Create one with touch ~/.zshrc
and run the install script again.
If you use bash, the previous default shell, run touch ~/.bash_profile
to create the necessary profile file if it does not exist.
You might need to restart your terminal instance or run . ~/.nvm/nvm.sh
. Restarting your terminal/opening a new tab/window, or running the source command will load the command and the new configuration.
If the above doesn't fix the problem, you may try the following:
If you use bash, it may be that your .bash_profile
(or ~/.profile
) does not source your ~/.bashrc
properly. You could fix this by adding source ~/<your_profile_file>
to it or follow the next step below.
Try adding the snippet from the install section, that finds the correct nvm directory and loads nvm, to your usual profile (~/.bash_profile
, ~/.zshrc
, ~/.profile
, or ~/.bashrc
).
For more information about this issue and possible workarounds, please refer here
You can use a task:
- name: nvm shell: > curl -o- https://raw.githubusercontent.com/nvm-sh/nvm/v0.37.0/install.sh | bash args: creates: "{{ ansible_env.HOME }}/.nvm/nvm.sh"
To verify that nvm has been installed, do:
command -v nvm
which should output nvm
if the installation was successful. Please note that which nvm
will not work, since nvm
is a sourced shell function, not an executable binary.
If you‘re running a system without prepackaged binary available, which means you’re going to install nodejs or io.js from its source code, you need to make sure your system has a C++ compiler. For OS X, Xcode will work, for Debian/Ubuntu based GNU/Linux, the build-essential
and libssl-dev
packages work.
Note: nvm
does not support Windows (see #284), but may work in WSL (Windows Subsystem for Linux) depending on the version of WSL. For Windows, two alternatives exist, which are neither supported nor developed by us:
Note: nvm
does not support Fish either (see #303). Alternatives exist, which are neither supported nor developed by us:
Note: We still have some problems with FreeBSD, because there is no official pre-built binary for FreeBSD, and building from source may need patches; see the issue ticket:
Note: On OS X, if you do not have Xcode installed and you do not wish to download the ~4.3GB file, you can install the Command Line Tools
. You can check out this blog post on how to just that:
Note: On OS X, if you have/had a “system” node installed and want to install modules globally, keep in mind that:
nvm
you do not need sudo
to globally install a module with npm -g
, so instead of doing sudo npm install -g grunt
, do instead npm install -g grunt
~/.npmrc
file, make sure it does not contain any prefix
settings (which is not compatible with nvm
)nvm
will only be available to your user account (the one used to install nvm). This might cause version mismatches, as other users will be using /usr/local/lib/node_modules/*
VS your user account using ~/.nvm/versions/node/vX.X.X/lib/node_modules/*
Homebrew installation is not supported. If you have issues with homebrew-installed nvm
, please brew uninstall
it, and install it using the instructions below, before filing an issue.
Note: If you're using zsh
you can easily install nvm
as a zsh plugin. Install zsh-nvm
and run nvm upgrade
to upgrade.
Note: Git versions before v1.7 may face a problem of cloning nvm
source from GitHub via https protocol, and there is also different behavior of git before v1.6, and git prior to v1.17.10 can not clone tags, so the minimum required git version is v1.7.10. If you are interested in the problem we mentioned here, please refer to GitHub's HTTPS cloning errors article.
If you have git
installed (requires git v1.7.10+):
cd ~/
from anywhere then git clone https://github.com/nvm-sh/nvm.git .nvm
cd ~/.nvm
and check out the latest version with git checkout v0.37.0
nvm
by sourcing it from your shell: . nvm.sh
Now add these lines to your ~/.bashrc
, ~/.profile
, or ~/.zshrc
file to have it automatically sourced upon login: (you may have to add to more than one of the above files)
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
For a fully manual install, execute the following lines to first clone the nvm
repository into $HOME/.nvm
, and then load nvm
:
export NVM_DIR="$HOME/.nvm" && ( git clone https://github.com/nvm-sh/nvm.git "$NVM_DIR" cd "$NVM_DIR" git checkout `git describe --abbrev=0 --tags --match "v[0-9]*" $(git rev-list --tags --max-count=1)` ) && \. "$NVM_DIR/nvm.sh"
Now add these lines to your ~/.bashrc
, ~/.profile
, or ~/.zshrc
file to have it automatically sourced upon login: (you may have to add to more than one of the above files)
export NVM_DIR="$HOME/.nvm" [ -s "$NVM_DIR/nvm.sh" ] && \. "$NVM_DIR/nvm.sh" # This loads nvm
For manual upgrade with git
(requires git v1.7.10+):
$NVM_DIR
( cd "$NVM_DIR" git fetch --tags origin git checkout `git describe --abbrev=0 --tags --match "v[0-9]*" $(git rev-list --tags --max-count=1)` ) && \. "$NVM_DIR/nvm.sh"
To download, compile, and install the latest release of node, do this:
nvm install node # "node" is an alias for the latest version
To install a specific version of node:
nvm install 6.14.4 # or 10.10.0, 8.9.1, etc
The first version installed becomes the default. New shells will start with the default version of node (e.g., nvm alias default
).
You can list available versions using ls-remote
:
nvm ls-remote
And then in any new shell just use the installed version:
nvm use node
Or you can just run it:
nvm run node --version
Or, you can run any arbitrary command in a subshell with the desired version of node:
nvm exec 4.2 node --version
You can also get the path to the executable to where it was installed:
nvm which 5.0
In place of a version pointer like “0.10” or “5.0” or “4.2.1”, you can use the following special default aliases with nvm install
, nvm use
, nvm run
, nvm exec
, nvm which
, etc:
node
: this installs the latest version of node
iojs
: this installs the latest version of io.js
stable
: this alias is deprecated, and only truly applies to node
v0.12
and earlier. Currently, this is an alias for node
.unstable
: this alias points to node
v0.11
- the last “unstable” node release, since post-1.0, all node versions are stable. (in SemVer, versions communicate breakage, not stability).Node has a schedule for long-term support (LTS) You can reference LTS versions in aliases and .nvmrc
files with the notation lts/*
for the latest LTS, and lts/argon
for LTS releases from the “argon” line, for example. In addition, the following commands support LTS arguments:
nvm install --lts
/ nvm install --lts=argon
/ nvm install 'lts/*'
/ nvm install lts/argon
nvm uninstall --lts
/ nvm uninstall --lts=argon
/ nvm uninstall 'lts/*'
/ nvm uninstall lts/argon
nvm use --lts
/ nvm use --lts=argon
/ nvm use 'lts/*'
/ nvm use lts/argon
nvm exec --lts
/ nvm exec --lts=argon
/ nvm exec 'lts/*'
/ nvm exec lts/argon
nvm run --lts
/ nvm run --lts=argon
/ nvm run 'lts/*'
/ nvm run lts/argon
nvm ls-remote --lts
/ nvm ls-remote --lts=argon
nvm ls-remote 'lts/*'
/ nvm ls-remote lts/argon
nvm version-remote --lts
/ nvm version-remote --lts=argon
/ nvm version-remote 'lts/*'
/ nvm version-remote lts/argon
Any time your local copy of nvm
connects to https://nodejs.org, it will re-create the appropriate local aliases for all available LTS lines. These aliases (stored under $NVM_DIR/alias/lts
), are managed by nvm
, and you should not modify, remove, or create these files - expect your changes to be undone, and expect meddling with these files to cause bugs that will likely not be supported.
To get the latest LTS version of node and migrate your existing installed packages, use
nvm install 'lts/*' --reinstall-packages-from=current
If you want to install a new version of Node.js and migrate npm packages from a previous version:
nvm install node --reinstall-packages-from=node
This will first use “nvm version node” to identify the current version you're migrating packages from. Then it resolves the new version to install from the remote server and installs it. Lastly, it runs “nvm reinstall-packages” to reinstall the npm packages from your prior version of Node to the new one.
You can also install and migrate npm packages from specific versions of Node like this:
nvm install 6 --reinstall-packages-from=5 nvm install v4.2 --reinstall-packages-from=iojs
Note that reinstalling packages explicitly does not update the npm version — this is to ensure that npm isn't accidentally upgraded to a broken version for the new node version.
To update npm at the same time add the --latest-npm
flag, like this:
nvm install lts/* --reinstall-packages-from=default --latest-npm
or, you can at any time run the following command to get the latest supported npm version on the current node version:
nvm install-latest-npm
If you‘ve already gotten an error to the effect of “npm does not support Node.js”, you’ll need to (1) revert to a previous node version (nvm ls
& nvm use <your latest _working_ version from the ls>
, (2) delete the newly created node version (nvm uninstall <your _broken_ version of node from the ls>
), then (3) rerun your nvm install
with the --latest-npm
flag.
If you have a list of default packages you want installed every time you install a new version, we support that too -- just add the package names, one per line, to the file $NVM_DIR/default-packages
. You can add anything npm would accept as a package argument on the command line.
# $NVM_DIR/default-packages rimraf object-inspect@1.0.2 stevemao/left-pad
If you want to install io.js:
nvm install iojs
If you want to install a new version of io.js and migrate npm packages from a previous version:
nvm install iojs --reinstall-packages-from=iojs
The same guidelines mentioned for migrating npm packages in node are applicable to io.js.
If you want to use the system-installed version of node, you can use the special default alias “system”:
nvm use system nvm run system --version
If you want to see what versions are installed:
nvm ls
If you want to see what versions are available to install:
nvm ls-remote
nvm ls
, nvm ls-remote
and nvm alias
usually produce colorized output. You can disable colors with the --no-colors
option (or by setting the environment variable TERM=dumb
):
nvm ls --no-colors TERM=dumb nvm ls
To restore your PATH, you can deactivate it:
nvm deactivate
To set a default Node version to be used in any new shell, use the alias ‘default’:
nvm alias default node
To use a mirror of the node binaries, set $NVM_NODEJS_ORG_MIRROR
:
export NVM_NODEJS_ORG_MIRROR=https://nodejs.org/dist nvm install node NVM_NODEJS_ORG_MIRROR=https://nodejs.org/dist nvm install 4.2
To use a mirror of the io.js binaries, set $NVM_IOJS_ORG_MIRROR
:
export NVM_IOJS_ORG_MIRROR=https://iojs.org/dist nvm install iojs-v1.0.3 NVM_IOJS_ORG_MIRROR=https://iojs.org/dist nvm install iojs-v1.0.3
nvm use
will not, by default, create a “current” symlink. Set $NVM_SYMLINK_CURRENT
to “true” to enable this behavior, which is sometimes useful for IDEs. Note that using nvm
in multiple shell tabs with this environment variable enabled can cause race conditions.
You can create a .nvmrc
file containing a node version number (or any other string that nvm
understands; see nvm --help
for details) in the project root directory (or any parent directory). Afterwards, nvm use
, nvm install
, nvm exec
, nvm run
, and nvm which
will use the version specified in the .nvmrc
file if no version is supplied on the command line.
For example, to make nvm default to the latest 5.9 release, the latest LTS version, or the latest node version for the current directory:
$ echo "5.9" > .nvmrc $ echo "lts/*" > .nvmrc # to default to the latest LTS version $ echo "node" > .nvmrc # to default to the latest version
[NB these examples assume a POSIX-compliant shell version of echo
. If you use a Windows cmd
development environment, eg the .nvmrc
file is used to configure a remote Linux deployment, then keep in mind the "
s will be copied leading to an invalid file. Remove them.]
Then when you run nvm:
$ nvm use Found '/path/to/project/.nvmrc' with version <5.9> Now using node v5.9.1 (npm v3.7.3)
nvm use
et. al. will traverse directory structure upwards from the current directory looking for the .nvmrc
file. In other words, running nvm use
et. al. in any subdirectory of a directory with an .nvmrc
will result in that .nvmrc
being utilized.
The contents of a .nvmrc
file must be the <version>
(as described by nvm --help
) followed by a newline. No trailing spaces are allowed, and the trailing newline is required.
You can use avn
to deeply integrate into your shell and automatically invoke nvm
when changing directories. avn
is not supported by the nvm
development team. Please report issues to the avn
team.
If you prefer a lighter-weight solution, the recipes below have been contributed by nvm
users. They are not supported by the nvm
development team. We are, however, accepting pull requests for more examples.
nvm use
Put the following at the end of your $HOME/.bashrc
:
find-up() { path=$(pwd) while [[ "$path" != "" && ! -e "$path/$1" ]]; do path=${path%/*} done echo "$path" } cdnvm() { cd "$@"; nvm_path=$(find-up .nvmrc | tr -d '\n') # If there are no .nvmrc file, use the default nvm version if [[ ! $nvm_path = *[^[:space:]]* ]]; then declare default_version; default_version=$(nvm version default); # If there is no default version, set it to `node` # This will use the latest version on your machine if [[ $default_version == "N/A" ]]; then nvm alias default node; default_version=$(nvm version default); fi # If the current version is not the default version, set it to use the default version if [[ $(nvm current) != "$default_version" ]]; then nvm use default; fi elif [[ -s $nvm_path/.nvmrc && -r $nvm_path/.nvmrc ]]; then declare nvm_version nvm_version=$(<"$nvm_path"/.nvmrc) declare locally_resolved_nvm_version # `nvm ls` will check all locally-available versions # If there are multiple matching versions, take the latest one # Remove the `->` and `*` characters and spaces # `locally_resolved_nvm_version` will be `N/A` if no local versions are found locally_resolved_nvm_version=$(nvm ls --no-colors "$nvm_version" | tail -1 | tr -d '\->*' | tr -d '[:space:]') # If it is not already installed, install it # `nvm install` will implicitly use the newly-installed version if [[ "$locally_resolved_nvm_version" == "N/A" ]]; then nvm install "$nvm_version"; elif [[ $(nvm current) != "$locally_resolved_nvm_version" ]]; then nvm use "$nvm_version"; fi fi } alias cd='cdnvm' cd $PWD
This alias would search ‘up’ from your current directory in order to detect a .nvmrc
file. If it finds it, it will switch to that version; if not, it will use the default version.
nvm use
automatically in a directory with a .nvmrc
filePut this into your $HOME/.zshrc
to call nvm use
automatically whenever you enter a directory that contains an .nvmrc
file with a string telling nvm which node to use
:
# place this after nvm initialization! autoload -U add-zsh-hook load-nvmrc() { local node_version="$(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
nvm use
automatically in a directory with a .nvmrc
fileThis requires that you have bass installed.
# ~/.config/fish/functions/nvm.fish function nvm bass source ~/.nvm/nvm.sh --no-use ';' nvm $argv end # ~/.config/fish/functions/nvm_find_nvmrc.fish function nvm_find_nvmrc bass source ~/.nvm/nvm.sh --no-use ';' nvm_find_nvmrc end # ~/.config/fish/functions/load_nvm.fish function load_nvm --on-variable="PWD" set -l default_node_version (nvm version default) set -l node_version (nvm version) set -l nvmrc_path (nvm_find_nvmrc) if test -n "$nvmrc_path" set -l nvmrc_node_version (nvm version (cat $nvmrc_path)) if test "$nvmrc_node_version" = "N/A" nvm install (cat $nvmrc_path) else if test nvmrc_node_version != node_version nvm use $nvmrc_node_version end else if test "$node_version" != "$default_node_version" echo "Reverting to default Node version" nvm use default end end # ~/.config/fish/config.fish # You must call it on initialization or listening to directory switching won't work load_nvm
nvm is released under the MIT license.
Copyright (C) 2010 Tim Caswell and Jordan Harband
Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining a copy of this software and associated documentation files (the “Software”), to deal in the Software without restriction, including without limitation the rights to use, copy, modify, merge, publish, distribute, sublicense, and/or sell copies of the Software, and to permit persons to whom the Software is furnished to do so, subject to the following conditions:
The above copyright notice and this permission notice shall be included in all copies or substantial portions of the Software.
THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED “AS IS”, WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY, FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE AND NONINFRINGEMENT. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHORS OR COPYRIGHT HOLDERS BE LIABLE FOR ANY CLAIM, DAMAGES OR OTHER LIABILITY, WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT, TORT OR OTHERWISE, ARISING FROM, OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER DEALINGS IN THE SOFTWARE.
Tests are written in Urchin. Install Urchin (and other dependencies) like so:
npm install
There are slow tests and fast tests. The slow tests do things like install node and check that the right versions are used. The fast tests fake this to test things like aliases and uninstalling. From the root of the nvm git repository, run the fast tests like this:
npm run test/fast
Run the slow tests like this:
npm run test/slow
Run all of the tests like this:
npm test
Nota bene: Avoid running nvm while the tests are running.
nvm exposes the following environment variables:
NVM_DIR
- nvm's installation directory.NVM_BIN
- where node, npm, and global packages for the active version of node are installed.NVM_INC
- node's include file directory (useful for building C/C++ addons for node).NVM_CD_FLAGS
- used to maintain compatibility with zsh.NVM_RC_VERSION
- version from .nvmrc file if being used.Additionally, nvm modifies PATH
, and, if present, MANPATH
and NODE_PATH
when changing versions.
To activate, you need to source bash_completion
:
[[ -r $NVM_DIR/bash_completion ]] && \. $NVM_DIR/bash_completion
Put the above sourcing line just below the sourcing line for nvm in your profile (.bashrc
, .bash_profile
).
nvm:
$ nvm Tab
alias deactivate install list-remote reinstall-packages uninstall version cache exec install-latest-npm ls run unload version-remote current help list ls-remote unalias use which
nvm alias:
$ nvm alias Tab
default iojs lts/* lts/argon lts/boron lts/carbon lts/dubnium lts/erbium node stable unstable
$ nvm alias my_alias Tab
v10.22.0 v12.18.3 v14.8.0
nvm use:
$ nvm use Tab
my_alias default v10.22.0 v12.18.3 v14.8.0
nvm uninstall:
$ nvm uninstall Tab
my_alias default v10.22.0 v12.18.3 v14.8.0
nvm
will encounter some issues if you have some non-default settings set. (see #606) The following are known to cause issues:
Inside ~/.npmrc
:
prefix='some/path'
Environment Variables:
$NPM_CONFIG_PREFIX
$PREFIX
Shell settings:
set -e
In order to provide the best performance (and other optimisations), nvm will download and install pre-compiled binaries for Node (and npm) when you run nvm install X
. The Node project compiles, tests and hosts/provides these pre-compiled binaries which are built for mainstream/traditional Linux distributions (such as Debian, Ubuntu, CentOS, RedHat et al).
Alpine Linux, unlike mainstream/traditional Linux distributions, is based on BusyBox, a very compact (~5MB) Linux distribution. BusyBox (and thus Alpine Linux) uses a different C/C++ stack to most mainstream/traditional Linux distributions - musl. This makes binary programs built for such mainstream/traditional incompatible with Alpine Linux, thus we cannot simply nvm install X
on Alpine Linux and expect the downloaded binary to run correctly - you'll likely see “...does not exist” errors if you try that.
There is a -s
flag for nvm install
which requests nvm download Node source and compile it locally.
If installing nvm on Alpine Linux is still what you want or need to do, you should be able to achieve this by running the following from you Alpine Linux shell:
apk add -U curl bash ca-certificates openssl ncurses coreutils python2 make gcc g++ libgcc linux-headers grep util-linux binutils findutils curl -o- https://raw.githubusercontent.com/nvm-sh/nvm/v0.37.0/install.sh | bash
The Node project has some desire but no concrete plans (due to the overheads of building, testing and support) to offer Alpine-compatible binaries.
As a potential alternative, @mhart (a Node contributor) has some Docker images for Alpine Linux with Node and optionally, npm, pre-installed.
To remove nvm
manually, execute the following:
$ rm -rf "$NVM_DIR"
Edit ~/.bashrc
(or other shell resource config) and remove the lines below:
export NVM_DIR="$HOME/.nvm" [ -s "$NVM_DIR/nvm.sh" ] && \. "$NVM_DIR/nvm.sh" # This loads nvm [[ -r $NVM_DIR/bash_completion ]] && \. $NVM_DIR/bash_completion
To make the development and testing work easier, we have a Dockerfile for development usage, which is based on Ubuntu 14.04 base image, prepared with essential and useful tools for nvm
development, to build the docker image of the environment, run the docker command at the root of nvm
repository:
$ docker build -t nvm-dev .
This will package your current nvm repository with our pre-defined development environment into a docker image named nvm-dev
, once it's built with success, validate your image via docker images
:
$ docker images REPOSITORY TAG IMAGE ID CREATED SIZE nvm-dev latest 9ca4c57a97d8 7 days ago 650 MB
If you got no error message, now you can easily involve in:
$ docker run -h nvm-dev -it nvm-dev nvm@nvm-dev:~/.nvm$
Please note that it‘ll take about 8 minutes to build the image and the image size would be about 650MB, so it’s not suitable for production usage.
For more information and documentation about docker, please refer to its official website:
If you try to install a node version and the installation fails, be sure to run nvm cache clear
to delete cached node downloads, or you might get an error like the following:
curl: (33) HTTP server doesn't seem to support byte ranges. Cannot resume.
Where's my sudo node
? Check out #43
After the v0.8.6 release of node, nvm tries to install from binary packages. But in some systems, the official binary packages don't work due to incompatibility of shared libs. In such cases, use -s
option to force install from source:
nvm install -s 0.8.6
default
alias does not establish the node version in new shells (i.e. nvm current
yields system
), ensure that the system's node PATH
is set before the nvm.sh
source line in your shell profile (see #658)nvm node version not found in vim shell
If you set node version to a version other than your system node version nvm use 6.2.1
and open vim and run :!node -v
you should see v6.2.1
if you see your system version v0.12.7
. You need to run:
sudo chmod ugo-x /usr/libexec/path_helper
More on this issue in dotphiles/dotzsh.
nvm is not compatible with the npm config “prefix” option
Some solutions for this issue can be found here
There is one more edge case causing this issue, and that‘s a **mismatch between the $HOME
path and the user’s home directory's actual name**.
You have to make sure that the user directory name in $HOME
and the user directory name you'd see from running ls /Users/
are capitalized the same way (See this issue).
To change the user directory and/or account name follow the instructions here