14

The command grunt imagemin output the following to a random file.

Fatal error: ENOENT, no such file or directory 'app/public/assets/img/epg/recordseries.png'

What's funny is that each time I run the command grunt imagemin again, it manages to process a few more files and ends by outputting the same error about another file.

I'm using

node v0.10.24
npm 1.3.21
[email protected]
[email protected] node_modules/grunt-contrib-imagemin
+-- [email protected]
+-- [email protected]
+-- [email protected] ([email protected], [email protected], [email protected])
+-- [email protected] ([email protected], [email protected], [email protected], [email protected], [email protected], [email protected])

Here is my grunt config for imagemin task:

grunt.config('imagemin', {
    options: {
        optimizationLevel: 3, // 0 to 7, default =7)
        // pngquant: true
    },
    dynamic: {                                          // Multiple target
        files: [{
            expand: true,                               // Enable dynamic expansion
            cwd: '<%= context.source %>/assets/img/',   // equal to app/wesource/assets/img/
            src: ['!**/*-'+arrayToRegexStr(platformIgnoreList)+'**', '**/*.{png,jpg,jpeg,gif}'],                // Actual patterns to match //
            dest: '<%= context.public %>/assets/img/'   // equal to app/public/assets/img/
        }]
    }
});

6 Answers 6

11

Uninstalling version 0.5.0 and going back to version 0.3.0 with the following commands should restore the prior functionality:

npm uninstall grunt-contrib-imagemin

npm install --save-dev [email protected]

There is an issue, https://github.com/gruntjs/grunt-contrib-imagemin/issues/140, that is being worked on, and when it is fixed it should be safe to upgrade.

1
  • 2
    Version 0.6.0 has been released. Mar 29, 2014 at 19:14
3

The following solutions works on...

  • Ubuntu Linux 13.10 x64
  • npm --version = 1.3.11
  • node --version = v0.10.21
  • grunt-contrib-imagemin = 0.5.0

This is a hack of a solution, but I found the task fails when it looks at the the target directory to see if the PNG image already exists and is optimized. The task would consistently finish when I ran it over and over, each time it would complete a few more images. And I could repeat the problem by running grunt clean, then grunt imagemin over and over.

The error I saw was:

bash Fatal error: ENOENT, no such file or directory 'build-production/path-to/some-image.png'

Solution

Copy the images to the target dir immediately before optimizing them. This way, the check passes and unoptimized images that are copied are replaced by their optimized equivalent.

task

grunt.task.run(
    'copy:imagemin',
    'imagemin'
);

copy configuration

copy: {
    imagemin: {
        files: [{
                expand: true,
                cwd: '<%= exponential.client.src %>',
                src: ['images/**/*.{png,jpg,gif}'],
                dest: '<%= exponential.client.buildProduction %>'
        }]
    }
}

imagemin configuration

imagemin: {
    buildProduction: {
        files: [{
            expand: true,
            cwd: '<%= exponential.client.src %>',
            src: ['images/**/*.{png,jpg,gif}'],
            dest: '<%= exponential.client.buildProduction %>'
        }]
    }
}
1
  • That do the trick but I'm ending up with another error Warning: Not a JPEG file: starts with 0x89 0x50 Use --force to continue. on a particular images optimized before that one are empty.
    – svassr
    Jan 21, 2014 at 16:49
2

Try to use cache: false

worked for me.

2

I was able to solve the problem by uninstalling optipngthat I had accidentally installed system wide.

2
  • This was my issue as well. Thanks for the answer, saved me a buttload of time debugging.
    – secondman
    May 15, 2014 at 6:46
  • Same here, thanks. I needed to uninstall optipng-bin as well.
    – Kirk
    Oct 26, 2016 at 15:43
1

I had the same issue with grunt-contrib-imagemin and it was because I was running grunt with sudo.

My fix was to do a chown and a chmod on the entire structure then run grunt without sudo...

0

what worked for me was a clean install of the node modules I remove the node_modules dir and did npm install after that it worked again for me

0

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