398

For example, when I install Angular2:

npm install --save angular2
[email protected] /Users/doug/Projects/dougludlow/temp
├── [email protected] 
├── UNMET PEER DEPENDENCY es6-promise@^3.0.2
├── UNMET PEER DEPENDENCY es6-shim@^0.33.3
├── UNMET PEER DEPENDENCY [email protected]
├── UNMET PEER DEPENDENCY [email protected]
└── UNMET PEER DEPENDENCY [email protected]

npm WARN [email protected] requires a peer of es6-promise@^3.0.2 but none was installed.
npm WARN [email protected] requires a peer of es6-shim@^0.33.3 but none was installed.
npm WARN [email protected] requires a peer of [email protected] but none was installed.
npm WARN [email protected] requires a peer of [email protected] but none was installed.
npm WARN [email protected] requires a peer of [email protected] but none was installed.

Is there a magic flag that I can pass to npm that will install the peer dependencies as well? I haven't been able to find one... It's tedious to manually copy and paste the peer dependencies and make sure I have the correct versions.

In other words, I'd rather not have to do:

npm install --save [email protected] es6-promise@^3.0.2 es6-shim@^0.33.3 [email protected] [email protected] [email protected]

What is the better way?

5
  • Have you already solved that problem? I have the same issue installing angular2. Even after manually install es6-promise with -g flag and re-trying npm install -g angular2 I do get the same Error/Warning of 5 unmet peer dependencies es6-promise, es6-shim, reflect-metadata, rxjs and zone.js
    – nttakr
    Commented Feb 4, 2016 at 17:27
  • 5
    @nttakr - yes, installing the exact versions that it wants as peer dependencies gets rid of the warning. You don't want to install them globally (with the -g flag). You want to install them locally (-S flag), but as I said, they need to be the exact versions (ie: [email protected] requires es6-promise@^3.0.2). However, I want to know if there is a command/flag which automatically installs the peer dependencies. Commented Feb 4, 2016 at 17:31
  • @DouglasLudlow what version of NPM are you using?
    – peteb
    Commented Feb 4, 2016 at 17:37
  • @peteb: npm -v => 3.5.3 Commented Feb 4, 2016 at 17:42
  • Running npm install [PACKAGE] for the package that misses a peer did the trick for me. Obviously, that won't solve the OP's issue, but I spent quite a bit of time researching that, so if this helps somebody... Commented Mar 16, 2019 at 21:03

9 Answers 9

292

npm version 7 and newer

npm v7 has reintroduced the automatic peerDependencies installation. Now in V7, as in versions before V3, you only need to do an npm i and all peerDependences should be automatically installed.

They had made some changes to fix old problems as version compatibility across multiple dependants. You can see the discussion and the announcement.

Older Answer

The automatic install of peer dependencies was explicitly removed with npm 3, as it cause more problems than it tried to solve. You can read about it here for example:

So no, for the reasons given, you cannot install them automatically with npm 3 upwards.

11
  • 4
    Yeah, I saw this: github.com/npm/npm/issues/6565... I was just hoping that you could still optionally install them with a flag or something. Guess I'll have to open an issue or something. Commented Feb 4, 2016 at 17:46
  • 201
    How do you deal with this sort of problem? I'm not an npm expert so when I read "x requires a peer of y but none was found", I ask myself, "which peer?" and "how can i just make everything work again?" Is there a process? Do you dig into the code of x and y until you find out what's missing? Once you find out what's missing, what do you do next? Thanks!
    – Dan Cancro
    Commented Aug 22, 2016 at 16:07
  • 107
    Ah, it's an English problem: "x requires a peer of y but none was installed" should be "x requires the peer, y, but y was not installed". I understood it as "x requires one of y's peers but that peer was not installed and we're not telling you which of y's peers you need".
    – Dan Cancro
    Commented Aug 22, 2016 at 18:43
  • 4
    There are "extraneous" because you need to add them to you package dependencies.
    – Dinoboff
    Commented Mar 8, 2017 at 11:45
  • 6
    I thought I would add here that you should consider this a bug in angular2, and the real solution is for the authors of that package to stop listing things that are clearly dependencies as peer dependencies. Commented Apr 30, 2017 at 3:25
45

I solved it by rewriting package.json with the exact values warnings were about.

Warnings when running npm:

npm WARN [email protected] requires a peer of es6-shim@^0.33.3 but none was installed.
npm WARN [email protected] requires a peer of [email protected]

In package.json, write

"es6-shim": "^0.33.3",
"reflect-metadata": "0.1.2",

Then, delete node_modules directory.

Finally, run the command below:

npm install
4
  • 25
    Perhaps an npm cache clean, npm install may be better than wiping node_modules? I always refrain from deleting node_modules, I like to find out what the issue is rather than blowing away the directory.
    – Bruno
    Commented May 5, 2016 at 13:40
  • 3
    I don't think this is a very safe idea for people to just get it to work. They have higher changes of worsening their conflicts: having code that doesn't match it's library.
    – zoomlar
    Commented Jun 27, 2018 at 13:22
  • Got the following error messag while trying to run npm clean cache: npm ERR! 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. On the other hand, if you're debugging an issue with the installer, you can use npm install --cache /tmp/empty-cache to use a temporary cache instead of nuking the actual one. npm ERR! npm ERR! If you're sure you want to delete the entire cache, rerun this command with --force.
    – Tarun
    Commented Nov 2, 2019 at 3:55
  • 1
    In which section of package.json? In which package.json? The one from the package or the one from the app? Commented Jul 27, 2021 at 4:44
24

Cheat code helpful in this scenario and some others...

├── UNMET PEER DEPENDENCY @angular/[email protected]
├── UNMET PEER DEPENDENCY @angular/[email protected]
├── UNMET PEER DEPENDENCY @angular/[email protected]
├── UNMET PEER DEPENDENCY @angular/[email protected]
├── UNMET PEER DEPENDENCY @angular/[email protected]
├── UNMET PEER DEPENDENCY @angular/[email protected]
├── UNMET PEER DEPENDENCY @angular/[email protected]
├── UNMET PEER DEPENDENCY @angular/[email protected] >
  1. copy & paste your error into your code editor.
  2. Highlight an unwanted part with your curser. In this case ├── UNMET PEER DEPENDENCY
  3. Press command + d a bunch of times.
  4. Press delete twice. (Press space if you accidentally highlighted ├── UNMET PEER DEPENDENCY )
  5. Press up once. Add npm install
  6. Press down once. Add --save
  7. Copy your stuff back into the cli and run
npm install @angular/[email protected] @angular/[email protected] @angular/[email protected] @angular/[email protected] @angular/[email protected] @angular/[email protected] @angular/[email protected] @angular/[email protected] --save
3
  • 9
    The option --save is evidently no longer required as of npm 5.0.0: stackoverflow.com/a/19578808/12484 Commented Jan 25, 2019 at 18:48
  • 5
    This is unhelpful, as it relies on shortcuts where it's not clear what you're actually doing. Shortcuts are different by platform and editor.
    – mbomb007
    Commented Jan 13, 2022 at 14:42
  • Fair point. What he seems to be doing is taking the log output and zapping the complaints at the front of the lines so he can parse the rest into a single "npm install" command.
    – Mike K
    Commented Apr 19, 2022 at 17:50
13

I experienced these errors when I was developing an npm package that had peerDependencies. I had to ensure that any peerDependencies were also listed as devDependencies. The project would not automatically use the globally installed packages.

0
11

The project npm-install-peers will detect peers and install them.

As of v1.0.1 it doesn't support writing back to the package.json automatically, which would essentially solve our need here.

Please add your support to issue in flight: https://github.com/spatie/npm-install-peers/issues/4

3
  • 42
    On running, It gave me this message. This package doesn't seem to have any peerDependencies Commented Feb 21, 2017 at 7:42
  • 11
    As I understand it, npm-install-peers will install peerDependencies registered in package.json. It will not install peerDependencies of dependencies such as angular2.
    – drizzd
    Commented May 26, 2018 at 14:44
  • 1
    Yes, to second @drizzd comment: npm-install-peers is only intended for installing the "peerDependencies" listed in your project's package.json. You are trying to install the "peerDependencies" listed in each one of you node_modules/<package>/package.json files, not your direct peer dependencies. Commented Dec 18, 2018 at 20:17
7

I was facing the same issue, lucky I found an alternative way to install peer dependencies along with the install command.

Step 1: $ npm i npm-install-peers -D

for more clarity about the plugin: https://www.npmjs.com/package/npm-install-peers

Step 2: Update package.json for magical script

  ....
   "scripts": {
    ...
    "postinstall": "npm-install-peers"
  },
  ....

Step 3: Just need to hit the install command to get installed all plugins

$ npm install

0

Here's a one liner for version 6.14.12 of npm:

npm install $(cut -d ' ' -f 6 <(npm ls 2>&1 | grep "npm ERR! peer dep missing:" | sed 's/\^.*|| //') | sed 's/,*$//' | sort | uniq | tr '\n' ' ')

It takes the error output from npm ls and installs everything listed there.

0

I had the same issue with npm not installing peer dependencies of packages. I had tried so many solutions, this worked for me.
1. make sure you're using the correct versions of node, npm, ng:

node -v
npm -v
ng v

My versions were these: enter image description here

2. enter this command, to see where you have .npmrc files on your PC:

npm config ls -l 

It will list your npm configuration, and you will see next to settings if it's overridden by some configuration.
In my case ;legacy-peer-deps = false; overridden by global config, making it to true.
for ex. enter image description here

at the end of generated settings, you will see a locations of .npmrc files that are overriding something. enter image description here
Go to that config, and remove the legacy-peer-deps setting. I had to remove this line in 2 different .npmrc files.
3. delete node_modules of that project
I simply selected everything from node_modules, and hit delete. Previously closed visual studio for that project. And then removed empty node_modules folder.
4. clean cache with npm cache clean --force
5. if you made any changes to package-lock.json file, revert it.
6. Hit npm install.

Peer dependencies should be installed correctly!

  1. When I was trying to do ng serve I was getting errors such as Error: export 'fontHelper' (imported as 'fontHelper') was not found in '@cometchat/chat-uikit-angular' (possible exports:.. Angular Library: Error: export 'X' (imported as 'X') was not found in 'my-pkg/my-lib' (possible exports MyLibComponent, MyLibModule, MyLibService)
    so I had to delete .angular folder, and do ng build, and ng serve. enter image description here
    And finally, everything worked!
-6

Install yarn and then run:

yarn global add install-peerdeps
2
  • 3
    It is not necessary to install yarn in order to install npm packages. Also, the install-peerdeps package gives an error when there are no peer dependencies.
    – Jeff
    Commented Apr 20, 2021 at 21:46
  • A code-only answer is not high quality. While this code may be useful, you can improve it by saying why it works, how it works, when it should be used, and what its limitations are. Please edit your answer to include explanation and link to relevant documentation.
    – ray
    Commented Nov 6, 2022 at 1:58

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