Is there a command to remove all global npm modules? If not, what do you suggest?
31 Answers
The following command removes all global npm modules. Note: this does not work on Windows. For a working Windows version, see Ollie Bennett's Answer.
npm ls -gp --depth=0 | awk -F/ '/node_modules/ && !/\/npm$/ {print $NF}' | xargs npm -g rm
Here is how it works:
npm ls -gp --depth=0
lists all global top level modules (see the cli documentation for ls)awk -F/ '/node_modules/ && !/\/npm$/ {print $NF}'
prints all modules that are not actually npm itself (does not end with/npm
)xargs npm -g rm
removes all modules globally that come over the previous pipe
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6Not to be the awk golf guy, this can be done in a single awk command without grep:
awk -F' |@' '/@/ {if ($(NF-1) != "npm") {print $(NF-1)}}'
Explanation: split on spaces or @, only match lines with @, the module name will be the second to last match ($(NF-1)
), so only print if it's notnpm
– FotiosJul 11, 2013 at 18:14 -
31Warning: the new version doesn't filter out the npm module. You don't want to remove that one.– neverfoxMar 20, 2014 at 6:06
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11I also ran the new version without reading the comments. ALWAYS READ THE COMMENTS. Here is how to restore NPM: curl npmjs.org/install.sh | sh Jul 8, 2014 at 22:12
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16Wow. NPM doesn't make it easy to uninstall things. With bundler and gems, it's trivial to uninstall everything, the fact that you have to use grep and such is a horrible design. Is there a simpler way to do this? Who actually remembers the code required in the answer? Aug 31, 2015 at 11:23
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16@neverfox and others: Fixed, npm itself is no longer removed. Sorry for the inconvenience May 4, 2016 at 16:42
For those using Windows, the easiest way to remove all globally installed npm packages is to delete the contents of:
C:\Users\username\AppData\Roaming\npm
You can get there quickly by typing %appdata%/npm
in either the explorer, run prompt, or from the start menu.
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7
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4
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3I was reinstalling all packages, I ran into EINTEGRITY errors when running
npm install
again. I had to delete mypackage-lock.json
file as well. Apr 25, 2018 at 16:00 -
1
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1If you are using nvm for windows, then your node_modules folder will be located at
C:\Users\[username]\AppData\Roaming\nvm\[version]\node_modules
Mar 8, 2021 at 15:07
I tried Kai Sternad's solution but it seemed imperfect to me. There was a lot of special symbols left after the last awk
from the deps tree itself.
So, I came up with my own modification of Kai Sternad's solution (with a little help from cashmere's idea):
npm ls -gp --depth=0 | awk -F/node_modules/ '{print $2}' | grep -vE '^(npm|)$' | xargs -r npm -g rm
npm ls -gp --depth=0
lists all globally-installed npm modules in parsable format:
/home/leonid/local/lib
/home/leonid/local/lib/node_modules/bower
/home/leonid/local/lib/node_modules/coffee-script
...
awk -F/node_modules/ '{print $2}'
extracts module names from paths, forming the list of all globally-installed modules.
grep -vE '^(npm|)$'
removes npm itself and blank lines.
xargs -r npm -g rm
calls npm -g rm
for each module in the list.
Like Kai Sternad's solution, it'll only work under *nix.
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1Where are these files stored, I hate this method. Isn't there just a global package.json somewhere? Apr 7, 2014 at 19:24
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2@EvanCarroll Nope, there is no such file, but
npm
installs all its global modules to the same directory. The exact location may vary, but typically it's/usr/local/lib/node_modules
. Apr 7, 2014 at 20:16 -
3
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11This command works on OSX and doesn't remove npm
npm ls -gp --depth=0 | awk -F/node_modules/ '{print $2}' | grep -vE '^(npm)$' | xargs npm -g rm
– real_ateJul 3, 2015 at 15:55 -
4This command failed to handle scoped package (like
@angular/cli
). I add another matcher forawk
and the working command for me looks like this:npm ls -gp --depth=0 | awk -F/ '/node_modules\/@/ {print $(NF-1)"/"$NF} /node_modules\/[^@]/ && !/\/npm$/ {print $NF}' | xargs npm -g rm
– Jack QJul 17, 2017 at 17:32
sudo npm list -g --depth=0. | awk -F ' ' '{print $2}' | awk -F '@' '{print $1}' | sudo xargs npm remove -g
worked for me
sudo npm list -g --depth=0.
lists all top level installedawk -F ' ' '{print $2}'
gets rid of ├──awk -F '@' '{print $1}'
gets the part before '@'sudo xargs npm remove -g
removes the package globally
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This version worked best for me as of June '14. The only addition could be to filter out "UNMET" dependencies from the list, but that's not critical, as
npm remove UNMET
simply does NOOP.– kangaxJun 8, 2014 at 15:30 -
7would add
grep -v npm
so that npm itself don't get removed:sudo npm list -g --depth=0. | grep -v npm | awk -F ' ' '{print $2}' | awk -F '@' '{print $1}' | sudo xargs npm remove -g
Mar 22, 2015 at 21:30 -
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Even here in 2023 on a new M2 this helped me sort out some weird problems trying to build a project.– StuartJun 8 at 10:54
For those using Powershell:
npm -gp ls --depth=0 | ForEach-Object { Get-Item $_ } | Where { $_.Name -ne 'npm' } | ForEach-Object { npm rm -g $_.Name }
To clear the cache:
npm cache clear
Just switch into your %appdata%/npm
directory and run the following...
for package in `ls node_modules`; do npm uninstall $package; done;
EDIT: This command breaks with npm 3.3.6 (Node 5.0). I'm now using the following Bash command, which I've mapped to npm_uninstall_all in my .bashrc file:
npm uninstall `ls -1 node_modules | tr '/\n' ' '`
Added bonus? it's way faster!
https://github.com/npm/npm/issues/10187
How do you uninstall all dependencies listed in package.json (NPM)?
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Love this. Faster and simple :) I just used grep -v
npm
andn
before thetr
– apnerveJan 12, 2018 at 9:59
If you would like to remove all the packages that you have installed, you can use the npm -g ls
command to find them, and then npm -g rm
to remove them.
in windows go to "C:\Users{username}\AppData\Roaming" directory and manually remove npm folder
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2
If you have jq installed, you can go even without grep/awk/sed:
npm ls -g --json --depth=0 |
jq -r '.dependencies|keys-["npm"]|join("\n")' |
xargs npm rm -g
On Debian and derived you can install jq with:
sudo apt-get install jq
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1If sudo is required then:
npm ls -g --json --depth=0 | jq -r '.dependencies|keys-["npm"]|join("\n")' | xargs sudo npm rm -g
– RogerDec 18, 2019 at 14:26
OS not specified by OP. For Windows, this script can be used to nuke the local and the user's global modules and cache.
I noticed on linux that the global root is truly global to the system instead of the given user. So deleting the global root might not be a good idea for a shared system. That aside, I can port the script to bash if interested.
For Windows, save to a cmd file to run.
@ECHO OFF
SETLOCAL EnableDelayedExpansion
SETLOCAL EnableExtensions
SET /A ecode=0
:: verify
SET /P conf="About to delete all global and local npm modules and clear the npm cache. Continue (y/[n])?
IF /I NOT "%conf%"=="y" (
ECHO operation aborted
SET /A ecode=!ecode!+1
GOTO END
)
:: wipe global and local npm root
FOR %%a IN ("" "-g") DO (
:: get root path into var
SET cmd=npm root %%~a
FOR /f "usebackq tokens=*" %%r IN (`!cmd!`) DO (SET npm_root=%%r)
:: paranoid
ECHO validating module path "!npm_root!"
IF "!npm_root:~-12!"=="node_modules" (
IF NOT EXIST "!npm_root!" (
ECHO npm root does not exist "!npm_root!"
) ELSE (
ECHO deleting "!npm_root!" ...
:: delete
RMDIR /S /Q "!npm_root!"
)
) ELSE (
ECHO suspicious npm root, ignoring "!npm_root!"
)
)
:: clear the cache
ECHO clearing the npm cache ...
call npm cache clean
:: done
ECHO done
:END
ENDLOCAL & EXIT /b %ecode%
All you done good job. This is combined suggestions in to one line code.
npm rm -g `npm ls -gp --depth=0 | awk -F/node_modules/ '{print $2}' | tr '/\n' ' '`
What is different? Uninstall will be done in single command like: npm rm -g *** *** ***
For yarn global
nano ~/.config/yarn/global/package.json
<Manually remove all packages from package.json>
yarn global add
Or, if you don't care about what is actually inside package.json
echo {} > ~/.config/yarn/global/package.json && yarn global add
This should apply to NPM too, but I am not exactly sure where NPM global is stored.
You can locate your all installed npm packages at the location:
C:\Users\username\AppData\Roaming\npm
and delete the content of npm which you want to remove.
If AppData is not showing, it means it is hidden and you can go to View in file explorer and checked the Hidden items then there you can see all the hidden folders.
For a more manual approach that doesn't involve an file explorers, doesn't care where the installation is, is very unlikely to break at a later date, and is 100% cross-platform compatible, and feels a lot safer because of the extra steps, use this one.
npm ls -g --depth=0
- Copy output
- Paste into favorite code editor (I use vsCode. Great multi-cursor editing)
- Check for any packages you'd like to keep (nodemon, yarn, to name a few) Remove those lines
- Remove every instance of
+--
or other line decorators - Remove all the version information (eg '
@2.11.4
') - Put all items on same line, space separated
- Add
npm uninstall -g
to beginning of that one line.- Mine looks like
npm uninstall -g @angular/cli @vue/cli express-generator jest mocha typescript bindings nan nodemon yarn
, but I didn't install many packages globally on this machine.
- Mine looks like
- Copy line
- Paste in terminal, hit enter if not already added from the copy/paste
- Look for any errors in the terminal.
- Check
npm ls -g
to make sure it's complete. If something got reinstalled, rinse and repeat
The other cli-only approaches are great for computer administrators doing something for 100 near-identical computers at once from the same ssh, or maybe a Puppet thing. But if you're only doing this once, or even 5 times over the course of a year, this is much easier.
Well if you are on windows, and want to remove/uninstall all node_modules then you need to do following steps.
- Go to windows command prompt
- Navigate to node_modules directory (Not inside node_modules folder)
Type below command and give it for 1-2 minutes it will uninstall all directories inside node_module
rmdir /s /q node_modules
Hope this will help some one on windows
if you have Intellij Webstorm you can use its built-in graphical package manager.
open it as root and create an emtpy project. go to
File > Settings > Language and Frameworks > Node.js and NPM
there you will see all the installed packages. Uninstalling is easy, you can select and deselect any package you want to uninstall, Ctrl+a woks as well.
Simply use below for MAC,
sudo rm -rf /usr/local/{bin/{node,npm},lib/node_modules/npm,lib/node,share/man//node.}
Try this and tell me what you think
npx npkill
npm ls -gp | awk -F/ '/node_modules/&&!/node_modules.*node_modules/&&!/npm/{print $NF}' | xargs npm rm -g
Use this code to uninstall any package:
npm rm -g <package_name>
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7
Since this is the top answer in search I'm posting this here as it was the solution I used in the past to clean the computer switching laptops.
cd ~/Documents # or where you keep your projects
find . -name "node_modules" -exec rm -rf '{}' +
source: https://winsmarts.com/delete-all-node-modules-folders-recursively-on-windows-edcc9a9c079e
Here is a more elegant solution that I tried where I let npm do all the work for me.
# On Linux Mint 19.1 Cinnamon
# First navigate to where your global packages are installed.
$ npm root # returns /where/your/node_modules/folder/is
$ cd /where/your/node_modules/folder/is # i.e for me it was cd /home/user/.npm-packages/lib/node_modules
Then if you do npm uninstall
or npm remove
these modules will be treated as if they were normal dependencies of a project. It even generates a package-lock.json file when it is done:
$ npm remove <package-name> # you may need sudo if it was installed using sudo
The npm README.md states:
If you would like to remove all the packages that you have installed, then you can use the
npm ls
command to find them, and thennpm rm
to remove them.To remove cruft left behind by npm 0.x, you can use the included
clean-old.sh
script file. You can run it conveniently like this:npm explore npm -g -- sh scripts/clean-old.sh
In macOS, I believe you can simply delete the .npm-global folder in your User directory.
npm list -g
will show you the location of globally installed packages.
If you want to output them to a file:
npm list -g > ~/Desktop/npmoutputs.txt
npm rm -g
will remove them
sudo npm uninstall npm -g
Or, if that fails, get the npm source code, and do:
sudo make uninstall
To remove everything npm-related manually:
rm -rf /usr/local/{lib/node{,/.npm,_modules},bin,share/man}/npm*
If you're using NVM for Windows, you need to delete all the modules that you don't want inside node_modules
of the Node.js with the version that contains the global modules you want to remove. Do not remove corepack
and npm
packages as they are necessary for Node.js.
The folder can be located in:
%USERPROFILE%\.nvm\{version}\node_modules
.%USERPROFILE%
is your user folder.{version}
is the version of Node.js where you want to delete its global modules.
Example:
C:\Users\Cappuccino\.nvm\19.8.1\node_modules
.{installationPath}\{version}\node_modules
.{installationPath}
is where you have installed NVM for Windows.{version}
is the version of Node.js where you want to delete its global modules. Example:D:\Programs\NVM\v19.8.1\node_modules
.
sed solution
npm -gp ls | sed -r '/npm$|(node_modules.*){2,}/d; s:.*/([^/]+)$:\1:g' | xargs npm rm -g