185

I am trying to globally install an npm module I just published. Every time I try to install, either from npm or the folder, I get this error.

npm ERR! Error: ENOENT, chmod '/usr/local/lib/node_modules/takeapeek/lib/cmd.js'
npm ERR! If you need help, you may report this log at:
npm ERR!     <http://github.com/isaacs/npm/issues>
npm ERR! or email it to:
npm ERR!     <[email protected]>

npm ERR! System Linux 3.8.0-19-generic
npm ERR! command "node" "/usr/local/bin/npm" "install" "-g" "takeapeek"
npm ERR! cwd /home/giodamlio
npm ERR! node -v v0.10.6
npm ERR! npm -v 1.3.6
npm ERR! path /usr/local/lib/node_modules/takeapeek/lib/cmd.js
npm ERR! code ENOENT
npm ERR! errno 34
npm ERR! 
npm ERR! Additional logging details can be found in:
npm ERR!     /home/giodamlio/npm-debug.log
npm ERR! not ok code 0

I am using sudo and I have triple checked everything in the package everything should work. I did some searching around, and saw a couple of similer cases none of which have been resolved. Here is what I tried.

  • Upgrade npm (sudo npm install -g npm)
  • Clear the global npm cache (sudo npm cache clear)
  • Clear the user npm cache (npm cache clear)

I noticed that the error had to do with the file I am linking to the path, specifically when npm tried to do a chmod. That shouldn't be a problem, my lib/cli.js has normal permissions, and npm has superuser permissions during this install.

After digging through the npm docs I found an option that would stop npm from making the bin links(--no-bin-links), when I tried the install with it, it worked fine.

So what's the deal? Is this some weird fringe case bug that has no solution yet?

Edit: For reference, here is the module I uploaded

10
  • is your package using node-gyp? I think that no-bin-links call is related if so.
    – jcollum
    Aug 1, 2013 at 20:22
  • Nope, no native code in the module. Here is the module source for reference.
    – giodamelio
    Aug 1, 2013 at 20:59
  • 1
    The --no-bin-links just stops npm from symlinking files in the package.json's bin hash to the path on global install.
    – giodamelio
    Aug 1, 2013 at 21:10
  • Argh, I've definitely run into this before but I can't remember why... will let you know if it pops into my head.
    – jcollum
    Aug 1, 2013 at 21:11
  • @jcollum Thanks, its really quite frustrating, I have checked everything a billion times, but I still can't help feeling I've missed something stupid simple. That or maybe it is some weird bug.
    – giodamelio
    Aug 1, 2013 at 21:17

48 Answers 48

179

Ok it looks like NPM is using your .gitignore as a base for the .npmignore file, and thus ignores /lib. If you add a blank .npmignore file into the root of your application, everything should work.

A better, more explicit approach is to use an allow-list rather than a disallow-list, and use the "files" field in package.json to specify the files in your package.

[edit] - more info on this behaviour here: https://docs.npmjs.com/cli/v7/using-npm/developers#keeping-files-out-of-your-package

8
  • Darn, that must be it. That seems like a bit of a confusing way of doing things. Not at a computer now, but I will try it in a few hours.
    – giodamelio
    Aug 2, 2013 at 15:35
  • 9
    3 hours of frustration came down to one line in my .gitignore that was freaking out the npm install -g. Insane.
    – bryan
    Dec 2, 2013 at 3:37
  • 2
    'type NUL > .npmignore' for windows
    – Kabir
    Jul 26, 2014 at 14:47
  • 1
    As of npm@5, the npm cache self-heals from corruption issues and data extracted from the cache is guaranteed to be valid. If you want to make sure everything is consistent, use 'npm cache verify' instead. Mar 23, 2018 at 1:05
  • 6
    remove package-lock.json file
    – FennRussel
    Jul 31, 2019 at 13:21
130

I ran into a similar problem,

npm cache clean

solved it.

1
  • 29
    I tried npm cache verify and it worked. thanks for hint.
    – Jaikrat
    Dec 14, 2017 at 18:11
25

I was getting this error on npm install and adding .npmignore did not solve it.

Error: ENOENT, stat 'C:\Users\My-UserName\AppData\Roaming\npm'

I tried going to the mentioned folder and it did not exist. The error was fixed when I created npm folder in Roaming folder.

This is on Windows 8.1

2
  • 1
    Thx you for saving people time!
    – dovstone
    Jan 23 at 11:18
  • On Windows 10 THIS was also the answer ! THX Feb 13 at 9:07
16

This problem somehow arose for me on Mac when I was trying to run npm install -g bower. It was giving me a number of errors for not being able to find things like graceful-fs. I'm not sure how I installed npm originally, but it looks like perhaps it came down with node using homebrew. I first ran

brew uninstall node

This removed both node and npm from my path. From there I just reinstalled it

brew install node

When it completed I had node and npm on my path and I was able to run

rm -rf ~/.npm
npm install -g bower

This then installed bower successfully.

Updating the brew formulas and upgrading the installs didn't seem to work for me, I'm not sure why. The removal of the .npm folder was something that had worked for other people, and I had tried it without success. I did it this time just in case. Note also that neither of the following solved the problem for me, although it did for others:

npm cache clean
sudo npm cache clean
0
12

I encountered similar behavior after upgrading to npm 6.1.0. It seemed to work once, but then I got into a state with this error while trying to install a package that was specified by path on the filesystem:

npm ERR! code ENOENT
npm ERR! errno -2
npm ERR! syscall rename

The following things did not fix the problem:

  • rm -rf node_modules
  • npm cache clean (gave npm ERR! As of npm@5, the npm cache self-heals....use 'npm cache verify' instead.)
  • npm cache verify
  • rm -rf ~/.npm

How I fixed the problem:

  • rm package-lock.json
10

I got this error while trying to install a grunt plugin. i found i had an outdated version of npm and the error went away after updating npm to the latest version

npm install -g npm
6

Delete package-lock.json file then run npm install

5

I had the same problem, and just found a handling not mentioned here. Though I'd contribute to the community:

npm install -g myapp was not copying the bin directory. I found this to be because I did not include it in the files in my package.json

"files": [
  "lib",
  "bin" // this was missing
]
3
  • Got the same issue and this answer was the only good fix for me. The reason was I got the files key in my package.json with some entries like index.js and LICENSE, but not the bin folder. So it works if there is no files key at all, or if there is a files key AND the bin folder into. Mar 22, 2017 at 11:10
  • Thanks, this helped me get unstuck. Once you pointed out that the bin directory wasn't included in files I thought "oh! of course!". Then I went back to the docs to see if I missed it and it's not mentioned (at least not in the npm blog post I was reading through). At least I'm not crazy :P. Thanks for the help! Jul 20, 2017 at 22:32
  • Thanks. I've updated my answer to mention the "files" approach which imo is a better approach.
    – badsyntax
    Jun 10, 2021 at 6:21
4

I was getting a similar error on npm install on a local installation:

npm ERR! enoent ENOENT: no such file or directory, stat '[path/to/local/installation]/node_modules/grunt-contrib-jst'

I am not sure what was causing the error, but I had recently installed a couple of new node modules locally, upgraded node with homebrew, and ran 'npm update -g'.

The only way I was able to resolve the issue was to delete the local node_modules directory entirely and run npm install again:

cd [path/to/local/installation]
npm rm -rdf node_modules
npm install
4

I have a similar problem specifucally : ERR! enoent ENOENT: no such file or directory, chmod 'node_modules/npm/node_modules/request/node_modules/http-signature/node_modules/sshpk/bin/sshpk-conv I tried all above solutions but no luck. I was using vagrant box, and the project was in a shared folder. The problems seems to be only there, when I move the project to another not shared folder (woth host), voila! problem solved. Just in case another person was using also vagrant

1
  • You waked me from a nightmare, tnx! I have 2 additions: 1.) Stop using npm, use Yarn. 2.) Run npm from your HOST machine and not the VM.
    – Arron
    May 19, 2020 at 18:49
4

I got the simple solution, just clear the npm cache.

sudo npm cache clear --force

then remove the node_modules & package-lock.json

sudo rm -rf node_modules
sudo rm -rf package-lock.json

Now install the dependencies module using npm and start the server

npm install && npm start
3

I got a similar error message when trying to npm install a bunch of dependencies. Turns out some of them fail to install on Debian/Ubuntu because they expect /usr/bin/node to be the node executable. To fix, you need do

sudo ln -s nodejs /usr/bin/node 

or better yet,

sudo apt-get install nodejs-legacy

For more info: https://stackoverflow.com/a/21171188/7581

2

I think your compiled coffee script is missing from the published npm package. Try writing a prepublish command.

2
  • Nope, the lib folder was there when I published it. Besides, I get the same error when I try to install from the local folder. Even when the lib folder is there.
    – giodamelio
    Aug 2, 2013 at 11:32
  • 1
    @giodamelio I agree with ryan on this one. The error is saying takeapeek/lib/cmd.js does not exist. Even though the lib folder might be 'there' when you publish, it's not going to be 'there' when you install via npm unless it's part of the repository, or unless you use prepublish to create it.
    – badsyntax
    Aug 2, 2013 at 11:44
2

In my case (multiple code ENOENT errno 34) problem was with ~/.npm/ directory access. Inside it there were some subdirs having root:root rights, which were causing problems while I run commands as normal user (without sudo). So I changed ownership of all subdirs and files inside ~/.npm/ dir into my local user and group. That did the trick on my Ubuntu (on Mac should work too).

$ sudo chown yourusername.yourgroupname ~/.npm/ -R

You should know your user name, right? If no then run $ whoami and substitute your group name with it too, like this:

$ sudo chown johnb.johnb ~/.npm/ -R

EDIT:

Test case:

From my local account /home/johnb I npm-installed globally some generator for yeoman, like this:

$ sudo npm install -g generator-laravel

Problem nature:

Above action caused some dependencies being installed inside ~/.npm/ dir, having root:root ownership (because of sudo ...). Evidently npm does not run as local user (or change dependencies subdirs ownership afterwards) when pulling dependencies and writing them to a local user subdir ~/.npm/. As long as npm would be so careless against fundamental unix filesystem security issues the problem would reoccur.

Solution:

  1. Continuosly check if ~/.npm/ contains subdirs with ownership (and/or permissions) other than your local user account, especially when you install or update something with sodo (root). If so, change the ownership inside ~/.npm/ to a local user recursively.

  2. Ask npm, bower, grunt, ... community that they address this issue as I described it above.

2

Had a similar Issue but I was in wrong directory please cross check the path of thee file & the run npm start

1
  • 1
    Your answer could be improved with additional supporting information. Please edit to add further details, such as citations or documentation, so that others can confirm that your answer is correct. You can find more information on how to write good answers in the help center.
    – Amit
    May 3, 2022 at 12:09
1

I tried all the stuff I found on the net (npm cache clear and rm -rf ~/.npm), but nothing seems to work. What solved the issue was updating node (and npm) to the latest version. Try that.

1

In Windows I had a similar error. Search paste App Data and search for the string npm.

I replaced the string 'npm' (including quotes) with 'npm.cmd' in both atlasboard\lib\package-dependency-manager.js and atlasboard\lib\cli\commands.js. That fixed the problem.

1

The same error during global install (npm install -g mymodule) for package with a non-existing script.

In package.json:

    ...
    "bin": {
      "module": "./bin/module"
    },
    ...

But the ./bin/module did not exist, as it was named modulejs.

0
1
  1. Install latest version of node
  2. Run: npm cache clean
  3. Run: npm install cordova -g
1

You can get this error if your node.js is corrupted somehow as well. I fixed this error by uninstall/restart/install node.js completely and it fixed this error, along with the three other mysterious errors that are thrown.

1

Be careful with invalid values for keys "directories" and "files" in package.json

If you start with a new application, and you want to start completely blank, you have to either start in a complete empty folder or have a valid package.json file in it.

If you do not want to create a package.json file first, just type: npm i some_package

Package with name "some_package" should be installed correctly in a new sub folder "node_modules".

If you create a package.json file first, type: npm init Keep all the defaults (by just clicking ENTER), you should end up with a valid file.

It should look like this:

{
  "name": "yourfoldername",
  "version": "1.0.0",
  "description": "",
  "main": "index.js",
  "scripts": {
    "test": "echo \"Error: no test specified\" && exit 1"
  },
  "author": "",
  "license": "ISC"
}

Note that the following keys are missing: "directories", "repository" and "files". It looks like if you use incorrect values for "directories" and/or "files", you are not able to install the package. Leaving these keys out, solved the issue for me.

Also note key "main". This one is present, but it does contain an invalid value. No file "index.js" exists (yet). You can safely remove it.

Now type: npm i some_package and package with name "some_package" should be installed correctly in a new sub folder "node_modules".

1

Had a similar error with npm in a docker container for webpack. The issue was caused by the --user command line argument of docker run, because the given user and group in there somehow messed up the rights on the local volume. Hope this helps someone :)

1

Tried nearly everything then finally this:

Simply remove node_modules then run 'npm install' again

1

I had the same problem on ubuntu, and got rid of the problem by closing the terminal and opening a new one.

1
  • this worked with me on widows after I deleted my node_modules and reinstalled it (idk if that was needed), weird error and weird solution Oct 28, 2021 at 17:01
1

It's because there is no package.json and only package-lock.json

Try: npm init --yes

1
  1. npm uninstall -g create-react-app

  2. npx clear-npx-cache

    then

  3. npx create-react-app app-name

0
0

I had a similar issue with a different cause: the yo node generator had added "files": ["lib/"] to my package.json and because my cli.js was outside of the lib/ directory, it was getting skipped when publishing to npm.

(Yeoman issue at https://github.com/yeoman/generator-node/issues/63 it should be fixed soon.)

0

I was getting the error "Error: ENOENT, stat 'C:\Users\userName\AppData\Roaming\npm'. But there was no such directory. Created the directory and the npm install started working

0

I recently upgraded to node 4.2.1 on a Windows 7 x64 machine. When running

npm install -g bower

I got a similar error:

npm ERR! enoent ENOENT: no such file or directory, open 'C:\Users\THE_USERNAME\AppData\Local\Temp\npm-THE_HASH'

Thinking it was related to the AppData path, I played around with

npm config edit

and

npm config edit --global

to change the prefix, cache and tmp fields but received the same error with the new paths:

npm ERR! enoent ENOENT: no such file or directory, open 'C:\Users\THE_USERNAME\npm-temp\npm-THE_HASH'

All commands were run as Administrator, so I had full permissions.

Then I thought there were some issues with existing files so I ran:

npm cache clean

But got the same error. However, there were still some temp files lying around. Manually removing all temp data with cygwin finally fixed the problem for me:

rm -rf bower bower.cmd node_modules etc

If you only have Windows cmd, you could use something like

rmdir /S THE_TEMP_DIR

to remove all subdirectories (although if you have deeply nested node dependencies, this is notoriously problematic)

So, maybe there is some issues with upgrading npm and having versions of bower or other packages hanging around. In my case that seemed to be the problem

0

While installing ionic I got below error

115648 error enoent ENOENT: no such file or directory, rename 'C:\Users\UserName\AppData\Roaming\npm\node_modules.staging\ansi-b11f0c4b' -> 'C:\Users\UserName\AppData\Roaming\npm\node_modules\ionic\node_modules\cordova-lib\node_modules\ansi'

There was no folder called ansi at that path. I created it there and it installed correctly.

0

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