Contents
Installs n
, the Node.js version manager, on Unix-like platforms, without needing to install Node.js first.
Additionally, installs scripts n-update
for later on-demand updating of n
, and n-uninstall
for uninstalling.
The simplest case is installation of n
with confirmation prompt, with subsequent installation of the latest stable Node.js version:
curl -L https://git.io/n-install | bash
This is by far the simplest way to get started with both n
and Node.js - even if you're looking to install only the latest stable Node.js version, with no (immediate) plans to install multiple versions.
n
is installed as follows:
- The installation target is a dedicated directory, which defaults to
~/n
and can be overridden with environment variableN_PREFIX
; n itself as well as the active Node.js version are placed there.- When overriding, it is advisable to choose a user location - typically, a subfolder of
~
(at any level) - so as to avoid the need to usesudo
for installation of globalnpm
packages. - Either way, the target directory must either not exist yet or be empty.
- Using a dedicated directory to hold both
n
and the Node.js versions greatly simplifies later uninstallation.
- When overriding, it is advisable to choose a user location - typically, a subfolder of
- If your shell is
bash
,ksh
, orzsh
, the relevant shell initialization file is modified:- Environment variable
N_PREFIX
is defined to point to the installation directory. - Directory
$N_PREFIX/bin
is appended to the$PATH
, unless already present. - For other shells, these modification must be performed manually; instructions are provided during installation.
- You can also explicitly suppress modification with the
-n
option.
- Environment variable
- By default, the latest stable Node.js version is installed; you can suppress that or even specify multiple Node.js versions to install.
- Note that any preexisting
n
, Node.js installation must be removed before using this installation method. - All installation prerequisites are met by default on OSX and some Linux distros; notably,
git
andcurl
must be present - see Installing n for details. - After installation, be sure to open a new terminal tab or window or reload your shell initialization file before attempting to use
n
/ Node.js - see
See examples below, and Installing n for prerequisites and installation options.
See Installation options for details.
- Installation with confirmation prompt to default location
$HOME/n
and installation of the latest stable Node.js version:
curl -L https://git.io/n-install | bash
- Automated installation to default location
$HOME/n
and installation of the latest stable Node.js version:
curl -L https://git.io/n-install | bash -s -- -y
- Automated, quiet installation to default location
$HOME/n
and installation of the latest stable Node.js version; no status information is displayed:
curl -sL https://git.io/n-install | bash -s -- -q
- Automated installation to the default location, with subsequent installation of the latest LTS (Long Term Support) version, and the latest 0.10.x release:
curl -L https://git.io/n-install | bash -s -- -y lts 0.10
- Automated installation to custom location
~/util/n
, with subsequent installation of the latest stable Node.js version:
curl -L https://git.io/n-install | N_PREFIX=~/util/n bash -s -- -y
Supported platforms and prerequisites
Among the platforms supported by n
, any Unix-like platform with the following is supported:
These prerequisites are met by default on OSX and on at least some Linux platforms.
What's missing from some by default is git
and/or curl
, which, however, are easy to install from the respective package managers (e.g., sudo apt-get install git curl
on Debian, or sudo yum install git
on Fedora).
bash
and curl
are required by n
itself as well.
Irrespective of the installation method chosen below, no further steps are required if your default shell is either Bash, Ksh, or Zsh.
For other shells, manual updating of the relevant initialization file is required; detailed instructions are provided during installation.
curl -L https://git.io/n-install | [N_PREFIX=<dir>] bash [-s -- [-y] [<version>...]]
See below for an explanation of the options; -s --
is required by Bash itself in order to pass options through to the script piped from stdin.
Before you can use n
and any installed Node.js versions, you must open a new terminal tab/window or reload your shell initialization file.
For instance, if your shell is Bash and you're on Linux, you'd use . ~/.bashrc
; on OSX, you'd use . ~/.bash_profile
;
the installer will tell you the specific file to reload on successful installation.
Caveat: If you reload the initialization file from a script (rather than interactively) - so that you can make use of n
or Node.js in the remainder of the script, e.g.,
in order to preinstall global npm packages -
make sure that you account for initialization files that prevent (re)sourcing from a non-interactive shell.
For instance, Debian and Ubuntu come with a default ~/.bashrc
file that - needlessly - categorically prevents sourcing (loading) if the shell is not interactive, using the following line at the start of the script:
[ -z "$PS1" ] && return
To bypass that:
-
In
bash
, precede the reload (sourcing) command withset -i
to simulate an interactive environment:set -i # turn on interactive mode . ~/.bashrc # reload (source) the initialization file set +i # turn interactive mode back off
-
Alternatively, invoke your script as a whole with
bash --norc --noprofile -i <script>
, which processes it in interactive (-i
) mode.- This would work analogously for
ksh
andzsh
as well.
- This would work analogously for
- Download this
bash
script asn-install
. - Make it executable with
chmod +x
. - Move or symlink it to a directory in your
$PATH
. - Invoke
n-install
as detailed below. - Open a new terminal tab/window or reload your shell initialization file before using
n
and any installed Node.js versions - see GitHub instructions above.
Note: Even when executing n-install
locally, downloading from this repository
occurs; specifically, helper scripts n-update
and n-uninstall
are downloaded - see below.
$ n-install --help
SYNOPSIS
n-install [-t] [-y|-q] [-n] [<version>...]
DESCRIPTION
Directly installs n, the Node.js version manager, which bypasses the need to
manually install a Node.js version first.
Additionally, installs n-update for updating n,
and n-uninstall for uninstallation.
On successful installation of n, the specified Node.js <version>(s)
are installed; by default, this is the latest stable Node.js version.
To opt out, specify '-' as the only version argument.
Supported version specifiers:
* stable ... installs the latest stable version
* latest ... the latest version available overall
* lts ... the LTS (long-term stability) version
* otherwise, specify an explicit version numer, such as '0.12' or '0.10.35'
If multiple versions are specified, the first one will be made active.
The default installation directory is:
~/n
which can be overridden by setting environment variable N_PREFIX to an
absolute path before invocation; either way, however, the installation
directory must either not exist yet or be empty.
If your shell is Bash, Ksh, or Zsh, the relevant initialization file will be
modified so as to:
- export environment variable $N_PREFIX to point to the installation dir.
- ensure that the directory containing the n executable, $N_PREFIX/bin,
is in the $PATH.
Note that you either have to open a new terminal tab/window or re-source
the relevant initialization file before you can use n and Node.js.
For any other shell you'll have to make these modifications yourself.
You can also explicitly opt out of the modification with -n.
Options:
-t
Merely tests if all installation prerequisites are met, which is signaled
with an exit code of 0.
-y
Assumes yes as the reply to all prompts; in other words: runs unattended
by auto-confirming the confirmation prompt.
-q
Like -y, except that, additionally, all status messages are suppressed,
including the information and progress bar normally displayed by n while
installing Node.js versions.
-n
Suppresses updating of the relevant shell initialization file.
For instance, this allows for custom setups where all exports are
"out-sourced" to an external file that is then sourced from the
shell-initialization file; however, note that you'll then have to edit
the out-sourced file *manually* - instructions will be printed.
For more information, see https://git.io/n-install-repo
PREREQUISITES
bash ... to run this script and n itself.
curl ... to download helper scripts from GitHub and run n itself.
git ... to clone n's GitHub repository and update n later.
GNU make ... to run n's installation procedure.
EXAMPLES
# Install n and the latest stable Node.js version, with
# interactive prompt:
n-install
# Only test if installation to the specified location would work.
N_PREFIX=~/util/n n-install -t
# Automated installation of n, without installing the latest
# stable Node.js version.
n-install -y -
# Automated installation of n, followed by automated installation
# of the LTS and the latest stable Node.js versions, as well
# as the latest 0.8.x version.
n-install -y lts latest 0.8
Run n-update
on demand to update n
itself to the latest version.
n-update -y
skips the confirmation prompt.
If, for some reason, n-update
doesn't work or isn't available, run the following to update n
:
cd "$N_PREFIX/n/.repo" && git fetch --depth 1 --quiet && git reset --hard origin/master --quiet && PREFIX="$N_PREFIX" make install && cd -
Run n-uninstall
to uninstall n
as well as the Node.js versions that were installed with it.
n-uninstall -y
skips the confirmation prompt - use with caution.
If, for some reason, n-uninstall
doesn't work, do the following:
-
Remove the
N_PREFIX
environment-variable definition and associatedPATH
modification from your shell's initialization file. -
Remove the directory that
N_PREFIX
points to:- Be sure that that directory contains no content unrelated to
n
that you may want to preserve. - If
$N_PREFIX
is not defined, look in the default installation location,~/n
.
- Be sure that that directory contains no content unrelated to
Copyright (c) 2015-2017 Michael Klement [email protected] (http://same2u.net), released under the MIT license.
This project gratefully depends on the following open-source components, according to the terms of their respective licenses.
npm dependencies below have optional suffixes denoting the type of dependency; the absence of a suffix denotes a required run-time dependency: (D)
denotes a development-time-only dependency, (O)
an optional dependency, and (P)
a peer dependency.
Versioning complies with semantic versioning (semver).
-
v0.4.0 (2017-10-26):
- [enhancement] The integrity of helper scripts
n-update
andn-uninstall
, which are downloaded byn-install
from this repo, is now verified via SHA-256 checksums embedded inn-install
.
- [enhancement] The integrity of helper scripts
-
v0.3.7 (2017-10-25):
- [doc] Clarified that even during local execution after having manually downloaded
n-install
helper scripts are downloaded from this repo.
- [doc] Clarified that even during local execution after having manually downloaded
-
v0.3.6 (2017-09-03):
- [enhancement] Installation and updating of
n
now guards against unexpected core.autocrlf settings. - [enhancement] Status and error messages improved to consistently mention version spec. 'lts'
- [enhancement] Installation and updating of
-
v0.3.5 (2017-02-25):
- [doc] Fixed manual
n
update instructions, added LTS version hints to CLI help.
- [doc] Fixed manual
-
v0.3.4 (2017-01-27):
- [fix] for #10:
n-update
could fail to updaten
due to how it updated the local copy of then
repo.
To update an already-installed copy ofn-update
, run the following:cd "$N_PREFIX/bin"
curl https://raw.githubusercontent.com/mklement0/n-install/stable/bin/n-update > n-update
- and then run
n-update
again.
- [fix] for #10:
-
v0.3.3 (2016-06-01):
- [security] Switched to https:// URLs.
-
v0.3.2 (2016-02-20):
- [enhancement] New option
-q
(quiet mode) skips prompts, like-y
, and additionally suppresses all status output.
- [enhancement] New option
-
v0.3.1 (2016-02-05):
- [optimization]
git clone
andgit pull
now use--depth 1
to only get the latest revision ofn
, which is all that is needed; tip of the hat to @steelbrain.
- [optimization]
-
v0.3.0 (2016-01-14):
- [enhancement] Support for
n
's symboliclts
version specifier that installs the latest LTS (Long Term Support) version.
- [enhancement] Support for
-
v0.2.0 (2015-12-24):
- [enhancement] New option
-n
allows suppressing modification of shell-initialization files, to allow for setups where all exports are "out-sourced" to an external file that is then sourced from the shell-initialization file; note that use of-n
therefore requires performing the modifications manually.
- [enhancement] New option
-
v0.1.9 (2015-12-18):
- [fix] Runtime Bash version check fixed; verified to work on at least 3.1.x - unclear, how far back it'll work.
-
v0.1.8 (2015-12-18):
- [enhancement] Added runtime check to ensure that the Bash version running
n-install
is 3.2 or higher.
- [enhancement] Added runtime check to ensure that the Bash version running
-
v0.1.7 (2015-11-23):
- [doc] Removed references to io.js, now the project has merged with Node.js.
- [doc] Added better tip for simulating an interactive environment for reloading a Bash initialization file.
-
v0.1.6 (2015-10-08):
- [doc] CLI usage-help corrections.
-
v0.1.5 (2015-08-09):
- [doc] Improved post-installation instructions.
-
v0.1.4 (2015-07-27):
- [enhancement] Success message now mentions manually re-sourcing the shell initialization file as an alternative to opening a new terminal tab/window.
-
v0.1.3 (2015-07-04):
- [robustness] If
make
is found not to be GNUmake
, an attempt is made to usegmake
instead. - [doc]
--version
now also outputs the project's home URL; read-me improvements.
- [robustness] If
-
v0.1.2 (2015-06-21):
- [doc] Examples revised.
-
v0.1.1 (2015-06-21):
- [doc] Examples revised.
-
v0.1.0 (2015-06-20):
- Initial release.