The reason you should not install grunt and grunt plugins globally is because then you could only have 1 version of each installed at a time. While working with a team, it also means every single member of your team must be running the same version of grunt and each grunt plugin.
Coordinating these versions with a team and switching versions as you jump to different projects is a nightmare. The solution, install everything locally. It's just file space and most modules don't take a whole lot of space.
Most people don't commit their node_modules
folder into github. Each dependency listed in your package.json
can be installed again by typing: npm install
in the same folder.
Use npm install grunt --save-dev
to save to your package.json
as you install plugins and modules.
The only sensible reason to commit node_modules
, IMO, is with a private application and repo intended to be deployed to production. Where you want to be sure your dependencies are locked down and not breaking something upon push. There are still other strategies to avoid committing node_modules
, even with this use case though (such as npm shrinkwrap).
In short:
- If you're deploying an app and paranoid about locking down your deps, commit your node_modules.
- Everything else, dont commit your node_modules.