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Change node_modules location

Tags:

node.js

npm

Is there a way to change the node_modules folder location?

For example:

- dir1 - dir2 - node_modules 

to:

- dir1 - dir2     - node_modules 
like image 380
M K Avatar asked Sep 24 '13 06:09

M K


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How do I change the location of a node module?

js documentation and found that it can be changed very easily using a simple "npm config" command. For example: npm config set prefix "E:\node_modules", From the next time onward, every global installation will save the node modules in "E:\node_modules" folder.

Can I move node_modules folder?

Yes you can copy whole node_modules (have done it multiple times) from one project to another and use same package. json and package-lock (Will only save time in dependencies installation/download)

Where are node_modules located?

On Unix systems they are normally placed in /usr/local/lib/node or /usr/local/lib/node_modules when installed globally. If you set the NODE_PATH environment variable to this path, the modules can be found by node. Non-global libraries are installed the node_modules sub folder in the folder you are currently in.


1 Answers

The following is the code which looks int the node_modules folder by default

Module.prototype.load = function(filename) {   debug('load ' + JSON.stringify(filename) +         ' for module ' + JSON.stringify(this.id));    assert(!this.loaded);   this.filename = filename;   this.paths = Module._nodeModulePaths(path.dirname(filename));    var extension = path.extname(filename) || '.js';   if (!Module._extensions[extension]) extension = '.js';   Module._extensions[extension](this, filename);   this.loaded = true; }; 

So, following is the exact search pattern:

  1. Node.JS looks to see if the given module is a core module. (e.g. http, fs, etc.) Always takes the precedence in the loading modules.

  2. If the given module is not a core modules(e.g. http, fs, etc.), Node.js will then begin to search for a directory named, node_modules.

    It will start in the current directory (relative to the currently-executing file in Node.JS) and then work its way up the folder hierarchy, checking each level for a node_modules folder. Once Node.JS finds the node_modules folder, it will then attempt to load the given module either as a (.js) JavaScript file or as a named sub-directory; if it finds the named sub-directory, it will then attempt to load the file in various ways. So, for example

  3. If you make a request to load the module, "utils" and its a directory not a .js file then:
    Node.JS will search a hierarchical directory for node_modules and utils in the following ways:

    ./node_modules/utils.js ./node_modules/utils/index.js ./node_modules/utils/package.json 
  4. If Node.JS still can't find the file in above steps, Node.js will then start to look into the directory paths from environment variables i.e. NODE_PATH set on your machine(obviously set by Node.JS installer file if you are on windows) Not Found in all the above steps then, prints a stack trace to stder
    E.g.: Error:Cannot find module 'yourfile'
    For more information: link is here even the cyclic require() is explained very well..

like image 175
Amol M Kulkarni Avatar answered Oct 04 '22 08:10

Amol M Kulkarni