51

I am developing an external component (let's say my-component, which I link to the project with npm link (as it is in process and I need the package to reflect changes).

In the my-component folder there are node_modules/react and node_modules/react-dom as they are its dependencies. However they are peerDependences, so I did not suppose to bring them into the project linking this package.

However when using npm link, it link the whole directory, including node_modules. So, when the project builds, it includes packages 2 times: from node_modules/* and from node_modules/my-component/node_modules/*.

This begins to affect when the component is using ReactDOM.findDOMNode, it causes this error:

Warning: React can't find the root component node for data-reactid value `.0.2.0`. If you're seeing this message, it probably means that you've loaded two copies of React on the page. At this time, only a single copy of React can be loaded at a time.

Also, it may help to understand what's happening: the problem only appears if there are both node_modules/my-component/node_modules/react and node_modules/my-component/node_modules/react-dom. If there is only one of them, there is no error message.

The usual package installation does not bring such error as there is no node_modules/react-dom there.

How is it supposed to develop an external component and the project at the same time?

5
  • I've been having the same problem and have resorted to using React.render and React.findDOMNode and ignoring the deprecation warnings. As long as I don't require/import react-dom, I don't get this error.
    – ericsoco
    Oct 29, 2015 at 17:02
  • Also, this is not specific to npm link, it will happen to you once you npm install that component you're developing as well.
    – ericsoco
    Oct 29, 2015 at 17:10
  • So my problem ended up being much different than yours -- I was rolling up my deps separate from the rest of my assets, and missed react-dom in my list of deps to roll up separately. Since react-dom depends on react, I ended up with two copies, one in my deps rollup and one in my main application bundle. More here.
    – ericsoco
    Oct 31, 2015 at 6:03
  • @Varvara Stephanova: Have you found a solution to this? It seems like i'm having the same problem.
    – kioopi
    Jan 27, 2016 at 12:45
  • @Varvara Stephanova stackoverflow.com/questions/33398396/… Mar 16, 2016 at 23:57

10 Answers 10

21

The issue is twofold:

  1. You cannot have 2 copies of react loaded.
  2. npm link creates a symlink, however the "require" doesnt respect the symlink and when it tries to navigate up the directory, it never finds the react of the parent project.

Solution:

All you have to do is link the react and react-dom in your component to that of parent project's node_modules folder.

Go to your component project and remove the react and react-dom then do

npm link ../myproject/node_modules/react
npm link ../myproject/node_modules/react-dom
3
  • It works. But it's confusing on number 2 of your statement. Based on my understanding, when you load the package in the main project, it will create a React instance which is different to main project and this is not allowed. Please correct me if I'm wrong.
    – hiveer
    Jun 5, 2021 at 3:06
  • Had the same problem but with yarn, doing similar yarn links to the original repos react/react-dom also solved my problem. Thanks!
    – Bruce
    Apr 15, 2023 at 23:07
  • This solution works. Pay attention to: you link from external component to main project /node_modules. Other way around this doesn't work.
    – Sonny D
    Nov 9, 2023 at 17:01
8

Fixed it by adding react-dom as an alias to my webpack config

alias: {

    react$: require.resolve(path.join(constants.NODE_MODULES_DIR, 'react')),
    'react-dom': require.resolve(path.join(constants.NODE_MODULES_DIR, 'react-dom'))

}
3
  • This seems like a dirty hack, but it worked for me. Thanks! :) Aug 26, 2016 at 14:20
  • any idea why name it the keys react$ and 'react-dom'? would it make sense to name them React and ReactDOM?
    – Coty Embry
    Aug 24, 2018 at 13:30
  • This works great. In my case, the parent project is only linking this development purposes, so it won't be there in production, but even if it was, it would still work great. Apr 21, 2019 at 3:12
6

Someone clevererer than I (@mojodna) came up with this solution: remove the duplicate dependencies from the external component, and resolve them with your project's copies of those deps.

Step 1: Remove the dependencies from your external component's node_modules

As @cleong noted, you can't just remove the deps from the external component's node_modules, because your project's build step will fail when it hits the now-missing dependencies in the external component.

Step 2: Add your project's node_modules to NODE_PATH

To fix this, you can append the project's node_modules to the NODE_PATH environment variable when running your build step. Something like e.g. this:

NODE_PATH=$(pwd)/node_modules/ npm start

(where npm start is your script that bundles your external component, via e.g. Browserify, Webpack, etc.)

In fact, you could always append that NODE_PATH addition to your build scripts, and it would work whether or not you've npm linked anything. (Makes me wonder if it shouldn't be default npm behavior...)

Note: I left my existing answer because there's some conversation there, and this is a different (and better) solution.

1
  • This is genius. It really should become a part of npm.
    – oztune
    May 18, 2016 at 15:59
4

I believe the answer is to specify react and react-dom as peerDependencies in your external component's package.json. As best as I can follow here and here, npm link should (as of npm@3) no longer install peerDependencies (or `devDependencies either).

Aaaand I just read your post more carefully and realized that you already are specifying them as peerDependencies. Therefore, I think the answer boils down to:

Upgrade to npm@3:

npm install -g [email protected]

2
  • If react and react-dom aren't in the component's node_modules, browserify will fail to find them (for some reason). You have to create symlinks to the project's copies.
    – cleong
    Nov 12, 2015 at 4:11
  • Of course, if the linked component is shared by different projects though, then the symlinks will only be correct for one of them. You can't even have two copies of the component, since npm only lets you link to one copy. The situation is kinda fubar at the moment. The only good solution is to use npm private module.
    – cleong
    Nov 23, 2015 at 18:02
3

The problem is with npm link. https://github.com/npm/npm/issues/5875

npm doesn't treat the linked directory as a child of the parent project.

Try alternatives to npm link:

1) Use relative path dependencies in package.json

2) Manually include your dependencies in your projects node_modules directory

3) Use url path

Basically anything but npm link

2

Adding the following in my webpack.config.js worked for me:

resolve: {
    alias: {
        react: path.resolve(__dirname, 'node_modules', 'react')
    }
}

I also experimented with DedupePlugin (mentioned as a possible remedy here) but I couldn't get it to work.

What's also interesting is that I've encountered different (and perhaps more insidious) manifestations of the same problem when a module is found in multiple places in the dependency graph.

One such case was that my React.PropTypes.instanceOf(SomeType) constraints would emit warnings even though the type I passed in was correct. That was due to the module being present in multiple places in the node_modules directory tree. Due to duck-typing the code would still work, but my console was cluttered with these warnings. Going the resolve.alias way silenced those too.

YMMV

1

I am using ReactJS.net and setup webpack from the tutorial there and started using react-bootstrap aswell when i started getting this error. I found adding 'react-dom': 'ReactDOM' to the list of externals in webpack.config.js fixed the problem, the list of externals then looked like this:

  externals: {
    // Use external version of React (from CDN for client-side, or
    // bundled with ReactJS.NET for server-side)
      react: 'React',
      'react-dom': 'ReactDOM'

This seems to be the first stack overflow link on google for this error, so i thought this answer might help someone here.

1

Strongly recommend using https://github.com/mweststrate/relative-deps.

Installs dependencies from a local checkout, and keeps them in sync, without the limitations of link.

This fixes the issue as it installs the local library just as npm install would, satisfying any dependency versions, etc.

0

If you're using Webpack in the main project, this solution may work. In my case, project-a requires project-b. Both require React and ReactDOM 0.14.x

I have this in project-a/webpack.config.js:

resolve: {
  modulesDirectories: ['node_modules'],
  fallback: path.join(__dirname, 'node_modules')
},
resolveLoader: {
  fallback: path.join(__dirname, 'node_modules')
},
  • project-b requires React and ReactDOM as peerDependencies in project-b/package.json
  • project-a requires project-b as a devDependency (should also work required as a dependency) in project-a/package.json
  • local project-b is linked to project-a like so: cd project-a; npm link ../project-b

Now when I run npm run build within project-b, the changes appear immediately in project-a

1
  • Have you updated this in 2022 ? Seems like the webpack config changed a bit Dec 8, 2022 at 14:13
0

I was getting this because I had already included react and react-dom as external scripts in my HTML markup.

The error was caused by adding an import ReactDOM from 'react-dom' to a component module. The error went away once I removed the import, and the module worked fine since the components were already available.

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