@Jorge Issa's answer is good if you are installing Meteor from scratch, on a system that never had Meteor installed, however it's subject to change since versions change all the time, so you need to adapt the sed
line.
If you have any version of Meteor already installed, as Michel Floyd mentioned, you can always create a project with a specific version by adding the --release
flag.
meteor update --release xxxx
works fine with you're actually upgrading, but downgrading is a different story.
My recommendation when it comes to upgrading and eventually downgrading, is to use version control (git
).
Attempt upgrade and if all is fine, you're in good shape, if not and you want to downgrade, simply clear the file changes in your version control system and use meteor reset
to clean your project and rebuild with the previous version.
!Note! meteor reset
clears the local mongo database too, so be sure to back that up first if you're going to do that (check mongodump
and mongorestore
for that)
finally, if you're looking to clean up the clutter from the .meteor
folder, you can delete the folder and then run meteor reset
in your project: the meteor executable will detect you don't have the needed packages will re-download the packages for the version needed by your project. (This takes a while and if you have many project, can be cumbersome as you need to do this in each project, but if like me you are looking to clear some space, this works fine.)