260

When I execute npm install I get this error

npm ERR! Error: EPERM: operation not permitted, rename C:\projects******\node_modules\react-async-script' -> 'C:\projects*******\node_modules.react-async-script.DELETE'

  • I am running the cmd as administrator
  • I ran npm cache clean before
  • I made sure all the other applications don't have anything related to node_modules open
6
  • 6
    running the cmd as administrator worked for me
    – Homer
    Feb 4, 2019 at 19:19
  • In my case I had to run it as normal user (not administrator) and it worked, it appears to be user permissions conflict. But it seems all other solutions given here npm clean, npm install are not required. Its a user permission issue. If more people can confirm, I can post a new answer. Feb 12, 2020 at 17:09
  • in my case, I wasnt using Node.js command prompt. Once I changed it, it works.
    – a3rxander
    Jan 2, 2022 at 20:45
  • deleted the node_modules folder and it worked
    – Luv33preet
    Jun 4, 2022 at 9:16
  • I have faced this a number of times on macOS. I have read all the over 30 answers on this question and others. Finally, I took a folder, just as it is and copied it to a drive that does not have any system or admin permission requirements. That would be drive D:\ or E:\ for Windows users. npm install - reinstallation for updates happened. npm run dev - everything worked as it should.
    – Afrowave
    Jun 8, 2023 at 5:10

49 Answers 49

341

In my situation this helped:

Before proceeding to execute these commands close all VS Code instances.

  1. clean cache with

     npm cache clean --force
    
  2. install the latest version of npm globally as admin:

     npm install -g npm@latest --force
    
  3. clean cache with

     npm cache clean --force
    
  4. Try to install your component once again.

I hope this fix your issue. If not, you may temporarily disable your antivirus program and try again.

9
  • 77
    Same comment applies to VS Code on Windows … close it and the problem goes away Sep 5, 2018 at 10:27
  • 6
    For me, I had another node process running, json-server in my case. Once I stopped that the package installed without error.
    – EddieB
    Feb 4, 2019 at 23:19
  • For me, errors like " ERR! enoent This is related to npm not being able to find a file" got resolved by terminating all the instances for visual studio code.
    – Abhishek
    Jul 15, 2019 at 10:22
  • 71
    npm WARN using --force I sure hope you know what you are doing. . . . I have no idea what I'm doing.
    – Fusseldieb
    Aug 3, 2021 at 18:38
  • 8
    mine was so simple, I closed all vscode projects and restarted it, after that everything started to work fine, but thanks though because after reading this answer and comments I thought of doing that. Nov 29, 2021 at 15:05
92

For me i just closed the Code editor (VS Code) and then run the same command. And that solves the issue for me.

3
  • For me this was caused when I tried to install from VS while ng serve was running. Cancelling ng serve and installing from the command line solved the problem.
    – Jon Vote
    Nov 30, 2022 at 23:43
  • 1
    @Sifat Haque this worked for me
    – Jishnu V S
    Sep 30, 2023 at 5:31
  • My issue was inside VS Code. When I noticed running ls caused the error, I restarted VS Code. On next open, Mac had a security dialog to confirm access to my documents folder. It's like the access VS Code had expired.
    – efreed
    Nov 9, 2023 at 14:40
47

Not package.json, but for whatever reason, my node_modules/ had become read-only. Resetting that fixed this.

4
  • "Resetting" for me meant 1. Closing VS, 2. Deleting node_modules from FileExplorer 3. Restarting my PC 4. Running npm install --force. Then FINALLY it worked.
    – EGC
    Feb 6, 2020 at 3:58
  • 2
    node_modules folder >> Properties >> uncheck read only worked for me. It happened after copying the folder to the new location. Hope this helps somebody.
    – brianc
    Nov 12, 2021 at 10:48
  • 1
    Was running 'npm update', EPERM error using Visual Studio 2022 and Git. Had to remove read-only attribute from node_modules folders and children and also from the package-lock.json file. Mar 2, 2022 at 7:19
  • In my case, as far I can tell npm kept resetting the "node_modules" to read-only after each build error. I moved to yarn, it is mostly drop in replacement.
    – user158037
    Apr 12, 2023 at 9:42
41

I got it working when tried npm install with a force option to fetch remote resources even if a local copy exists on disk. Try running

npm install --force

Updated For some of my colleagues this solution was not working. But we tried using yarn instead of npm. It works (faster as well) without any issues all the time

yarn install [package-name]
3
  • Other people suggested turning off AV software. For me, on the network I am on, this was not an option. The --force flag solved this problem for me Aug 15, 2017 at 22:46
  • 4
    I only solved my problem using yarn, so I recommend give a shot to him. Jun 21, 2018 at 14:13
  • Spent lots of time trying to fix the issues with npm (problem global installs not being recognized). Followed your advice of using yarn, did yarn global and now the package I was trying works great! Lateral thinking approach! Thank you! Jun 10, 2022 at 14:11
33

If you want to avoid the --force option (which is always a better approach), I suggest making sure that you have stopped running the project, as this is usually the main reason for locking the files in almost 90% of the cases I have seen

I suggest the following steps in this order:

1- In Angular stopping ng s and in React stopping npm start usually solves this issue because usually this error happens if a development server is running the project as it locks some files & then npm can't update them thus throwing this error

2- If the above doesn't work, then try closing the code editor that has the workspace opened in it (maybe it was locking some files or something)

So try closing the code editor & running:

npm install

3- If still it doesn't work, then maybe you can try the --force option

npm install --force
1
  • 4
    This was my problem, I rimraff'd a node_modules folder through the terminal on VS Code - for some reason it didn't quite remove the node_modules from my file system and had it locked. Wasn't until I closed out that window of VS Code and opened it back up that it actually got removed and I could run npm install again. Mar 21, 2019 at 22:12
22

I am using macOS catalina ,

 npm init 

I got error

 operation not permitted, uv_cwd

in 2021, this is how you can fix this problem.

very simple:

step 1: go to parent folder

 cd ../
         

step 2: go to your project folder again,

 cd  your-project-folder

That is it. It works.

2
  • Just trying to upvote this explanation as it happens to me in 2023. I am using MAC OS Ventura and have the same issue. This explanation by @hoogw resolved it. When I tried simple "ls" command to list directory I got "Error: EPERM: operation not permitted, uv_cwd". Simple "cd .." and again getting back in folder resolved it. Thanks! Oct 13, 2023 at 20:13
  • This worked for me. Jan 6 at 6:36
17

I was getting that same error and according to https://github.com/Medium/phantomjs/issues/19 it could be caused by your antivirus software. I disabled mine for the duration of the install and executed "npm install" on cmd as admin and it worked. Hope this helps.

2
  • 1
    Per github.com/npm/npm/issues/12059 this has been fixed. No word on what release it will make it into. Per comments, disabling AV does not always work. Nov 4, 2016 at 15:05
  • In my case, I had to close SourceTree during the install.
    – Dejan
    May 2, 2018 at 16:14
11

I was getting the same thing. I didn't find this anywhere but it hit me that our VMs tend to change files to a read-only state. So I opened package.json's file properties and deselected Read-only in the "General" tab.

Steps

  1. Go to the package.json file.
  2. Right-click and select Properties.
  3. In the General tab, Attributes section, deselect Read-only.
  4. Click Apply to apply the change.
2
  • Read Only for me though the original issue was that I usually just use code to install. In this one case I opened a new instance of the app in Visual Studio so I could port some changes from an old version and VS promptly started installing itself. I then opened code to run npm install as I would normally and both apps got into a tizzy. After several fails I then mass dropped a node-modules from a working root version of our app to allow me to back port the changes. This folder was read-only so then carried on blocking things.
    – Matrim
    Oct 24, 2019 at 13:19
  • 1
    This method works for me. For anyone wondering how to check your permission do: ls -l Then you will see the access permission, in order to change it, a quick way to enable read, write, and Execute permission to user, group, and others, do: chmod 777 fileName Mar 19, 2023 at 8:37
9

This is a typical error caused by Antivirus. There is a workaround for cases like mine, where I can't disable A/V (Company Policy).

You have to change the polyfills.js inside Npm package:

[NODE_HOME]/node_modules/npm/node_modules/graceful_fs/polyfills.js

Look for this statement:

if (process.platform === "win32") {

Inside of this statement, there is a timeout making a retry in case of error. The problem is that in some cases, after the timeout, the file is still locked by the A/V. The solution is rip out the timeout and let this statement in loop. The change with the previous code commented:

if (platform === "win32") {

fs.rename = (function (fs$rename) { return function (from, to, cb) {
  var start = Date.now()
  var backoff = 0;
  fs$rename(from, to, function CB (er) {
    if (er
        && (er.code === "EACCES" || er.code === "EPERM")
        /*&& Date.now() - start < 60000*/) {
            console.log("Retrying rename file: " + from + " <> " + to)
            fs$rename(from, to, CB);
      /*setTimeout(function() {
        fs.stat(to, function (stater, st) {
          if (stater && stater.code === "ENOENT")
            fs$rename(from, to, CB);
          else
            cb(er)
        })
      }, backoff)*/
      if (backoff < 100)
        backoff += 10;
      return;
    }
    if (cb) cb(er)
  })
}})(fs.rename)
}
2
  • You sir are the real MVP. Apr 16, 2020 at 19:24
  • I faced the similar error and disabling antivirus helped. Thank you very much.
    – Nimish
    Dec 16, 2021 at 9:49
9

As Martin Kearn pointed out in a comment, closing Visual Studio resolved these npm permission issues for me. Evidently VS sometimes locks files in node_modules.

0
8

I have had this issue multiple times only in Windows I try these in the order usually.

  1. npm install --force
  2. Check if node_modules is set to read-only and remove if it is
  3. Delete node_modules/
  4. Check if any editor is opened that could have access to the root folder of the project
  5. Reboot :(

Usually trying npm install after one of those steps will resolve it.

6

just close the VS Code to solve the issue for me

2
  • I tried so many things and this was all it was! Thanks for the tip.
    – Desmond
    Feb 3, 2021 at 4:39
  • Yes, someone wrote this exact answer in 2019. Please don't re-iterate answers
    – Liam
    Mar 4, 2022 at 15:15
5

In my case, something got locked up and a quick reboot resolved it.

0
5

Trying to rename a file to another filename that already exists can cause an EPERM error on Windows.

4
  • 1
    Oh my god. This was the issue.
    – m4heshd
    Feb 11, 2021 at 20:29
  • Any solution for this?
    – Zed
    May 4, 2021 at 23:46
  • 1
    @Zaid avoid renaming files to filenames that already exist. You could, for example, check with fs.stat first. Also, add error catching in case of a race condition. May 5, 2021 at 17:13
  • @ZachBloomquist Thanks, man! I will try your solutions. I was just trying to rename a folder with a name that doesn't exist.
    – Zed
    May 5, 2021 at 19:15
4

Closing PHPStorm fixed the issue for me.

0
3

I'm using the terminal in VSCode and I realized I was using the bash terminal instead of the node terminal.

1
  • I always use bash terminal and never had the problem before. Today i started to got the same error, on all terminals, after antivirus update Oct 24, 2022 at 7:33
2

I did the following:

  1. Upgraded the npm to the latest version: npm install -g [email protected]
  2. deleted the npm-cache folder from: c:/users/[username]/AppData/Roaming/npm-cache
  3. Did cache clean : npm cache clean --force
  4. Ran the npm install.
2

I struggeled with this too. I finaly a solution that works fine if you use nvm:

cd ~/.nvm/versions/node/{your node version}/lib/ npm install npm

and that's it.

2

I came here with the same error, followed all the answers here, and none solved it. I started going through my package.json removing all suspicious packages. Removing this unnecessary one solved our problem. "npm": "^8.3.2"

1

npm was failing for me at scandir for:

npm install -g webpack

...which might be caused by npm attempting to "modify" files that were potentially locked by other processes as mentioned here and in few other github threads. After force cleaning the cache, verifying cache, running as admin, disabling the AV, etc the solution that actually worked for me was closing any thing that might be placing a lock the files (i.e. restarting my computer).

I hope this helps someone struggling.

1

I had the same problem. The reason for the error is unsupported characters in the path to the file. Replaced the cyrillic in English - it helped.

0
1

For some, AppRoot\npm folder could be an issue. Sometimes the AppRoot folder is marked as network shared and thus Antivirus blocks the stuff. Follow below link for complete solution.

https://alastaircrabtree.com/fixing-intermittant-eperm-operation-not-permitted-on-npm-install/

I hope this helps.

1

Open the command prompt as administrator and navigate to the project location and then run npm install. it worked for me.

1

I remounted my window disks with the metadata flag, and instantly helped: https://devblogs.microsoft.com/commandline/chmod-chown-wsl-improvements/

after that no need anymore to use sudo for npm commands as the metadata keeps windows and linux file/directory permissions in check.

1

In my case running npm: v6.9.0 && node: v10.16.1 on Windows, I had to run my CLI (git bash) as administrator. Then packages were installed without any warnings/errors

1

I had the same problem after updating to npm to 5.4.2, npm start giving the same error for most npm commands. Some solution suggest to run it with --no-optional, but it didn't always work.

Others suggested to downgrade, but I didn't want to downgrade.

I suspected that there was a problem with the installation, not sure what it was.

So I re-updated my npm:

npm i -g npm

and worked fine since then.

1
  • npm ERR! Refusing to delete C:\Program Files\nodejs\npm.cmd: is outside C:\Program Files\nodejs\node_modules\npm and not a link
    – john k
    May 31, 2023 at 19:23
1

run the CLI as administrator always solve the problem for me

1

I think it should be related to updating npm issue. As a workaround for now you can specify npm version as 8.3.1.

  - name: Install latest npm version
    run: npm install --global [email protected]
1

I'm updating Angular 13 to 14 and I faced this issue. None of these solutions worked so I just restarted the laptop and the npm i --force worked! It seems like one process on the background is locking the access to certain node_modules files (you may have an ng serve running somewhere, or been launched by a git bash which you close but kept running on the background)

0

My answer is to do npm cache clean --force first. Then run npm install -g [email protected] to install npm 5.3.0 version. for me, this npm version works with no trouble.

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