19

I'm using node.js on EC2

I type

EXPORT PORT=80

in terminal, and i see that it correctly saves it when i type EXPORT

But when I run my node.js app with the following:

...
console.log(process.env);
...

PORT is not listed in the object when I'm running it with sudo:

sudo node app.js

How do I set PORT so that I can access it from the process.env object while running node with sudo?

3 Answers 3

25

To set process.env variable use the following code:

sudo PORT=80 node server.js

Of course, you can set multiple process.env variables:

sudo PORT=80 HOST=localhost node server.js

Normally, EXPORT should work too. But sudo creates its own environments and then starts your program as root. So, you shall either add PORT to sudo's environment or force it to preserve your own environment.

To change sudo's environment you shall modify /root/.profile.

To force it to preserve your own environment use -E key:

sudo -E node app.js
10
  • 1
    Is there no way to set it up permanently so I don't have to set them up every time I run the server? Jan 11, 2013 at 18:52
  • EXPORT should work too. It works for me, though I prefer not to change the global environment. Jan 11, 2013 at 19:48
  • If you want to configure your environment for production then its better to write simple upstart script. Jan 11, 2013 at 19:54
  • Yes, I've been using both a forever script and setting it up every time I run node. But I want to change the global env to include PORT. EXPORT should work, but it's not for me. I'm trying to figure out why. Jan 11, 2013 at 19:57
  • If export PORT=8080 && node -e "console.log(process.env.PORT);" prints undefined for you, then I have no idea why its happening. If it prints 8080, then include more details about the way you starting your script and I'll try to help you. Jan 11, 2013 at 20:05
0

I know it is an old post but I have the same permission problem running node.js on port 80. I made a workaround to avoid running with sudo and having to define the PORT in node run command (sudo PORT=80 node server.js). What I did was redirect the traffic for the PORT 80 to another allowed port, in my case 3000.

sudo iptables -t nat -A PREROUTING -i eth0 -p tcp --dport 80 -j REDIRECT --to-port 3000
0

you can use cross-env to set up env and add to your scripts. eg.

scripts: {
"build": "cross-env PORT=3000 <any_command>"
}

You can also set multiple variables . eg.

scripts: {
    "build": "cross-env PORT=3000 NODE_ENV=production <any_command>"
    }

Process this using process.env.PORT and process.env.NODE_ENV

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