i just deployed a git repo to my Openshift app. The game runs locally on my computer by running
gulp
Trying this on Openshift after ssh'ing
I just installed a local bower
npm install bower
and then tried bower install but get this:
Error: EACCES, permission denied '/var/lib/openshift/53dd22222e0b8cdd07d00026f/.config'
at Object.fs.mkdirSync (fs.js:642:18)
npm install works fine
How do I run the bower?
Also another issue is that after deploying with app-deploy inside my directory with .git, the deployed files seem to be several commits behind what I had on my computer. How do I get the latest files on there with rhc app-deploy
I can't even see the git repo on there. in cd app-root/repo/
Bower expects to be able to write some of its config files in $HOME/.bower/ (or inside .config), but OpenShift does not provide write access to $HOME.
You can work around this issue by prepending HOME=$OPENSHIFT_DATA_DIR before the bower command whenever you run it:
HOME=$OPENSHIFT_DATA_DIR bower
Related
I have a project that I'm working on for a client where I have two private packages (which I can't get access to npm install) are inside the package.json.
I do however have access to clone the repos for those said packages. If I simply run an npm install I'll get a permission denied error. Same if I run npm link to the packages.
I've been working around this by removing the packages from the package.json then running npm install ../some-package. This works but isn't a great solution because if I wanted to add a new package I'd have to deal with a bit of a mess with the package.json.
Is there a better way than this?
I have tried running npm link ../some-package but I still get access denied. The only way I've managed to complete an install is by removing the packages then installing them from a local dir.
I don't know the details of your situation, but I see at least two potential solutions to explore.
Option 1: Install the package from the repo
I do however have access to clone the repos for those said packages.
You can install from a git repo and package.json will record that git repo as the source of the package rather than the npm registry.
From the docs at https://docs.npmjs.com/cli/v8/commands/npm-install:
npm install :
Installs the package from the hosted git provider, cloning it with git. For a full git remote url, only that URL will be attempted.
Option 2: Install from the local file system with --no-save
If that approach doesn't work for you, you can try npm install --no-save ../some-package as a build step. The --no-save makes it so it doesn't modify package.json.
How do I move Verdaccio from my development machine that has internet into an environment that has no connection? I tried install from a tarball but was still trying to reach out to npm to install? Wish there was an exe installer.
Also when I do npm install -g verdaccio I get a python error node-gyp. Is Python required to use Verdaccio? I don't see that in the documentation
I figured it out. I installed verdaccio with the --no-optional flag and then just copied the files over. I build the storage while online and set cache to true so all the packages copy and all works offline.
I would like to install repos to a parent repo and specify by branch name.
I have tried the following:
npm install username/repo#branchName --save
npm install username/repo#branchName --save
npm install username/repo#tag --save
npm install username/repo#tag --save
I'm getting an error that says:
Could not install from {theRepoWithBranch} as it does not contain a package.json file.
The repo definitely contains a package.json file.
I'm wondering if this is a permissions issue given I'm using an enterprise npm registry.
npm/npm issue 19788 does mention:
Currently, npm does not support installation of modules from git services hosted on private domain names.
That includes both Github for Enterprise on custom domains as well as instances of gitlab, gitea, gogs, bitbucket and many others, basically anything hosted on a custom domain name.
With the comment:
So, obviously you reference installing via an http(s):// URL directly, but just as an fyi, our GitLab Enterprise instance allows us to install using a slightly different format.
We have 2FA enabled, so it requires SSH to be used.
From the docs.
npm install <git-host>:<git-user>/<repo-name>
npm install <git repo url>
We were able to actually install our repos like this:
npm install git+ssh://git#gitlab.mydomain.com:user/repo.git
So this is more a URL format combined with permission issue.
Regarding the branch, as seen here, your syntax is correct.
And:
if I prepend git+ on the HTTPS URL it works (I run gitea which accepts basic auth)
See also npm/hosted-git-info PR 30
I ve setup the nexus oss 3 and it looks cool. All my projects are installed by using yarn because of the --pure-lockfile option.
Steps to reproduce the issue:
1. Setup nexus oss 3 with a private npm registry (as in documentation)
2. Disable anonymous access from nexus oss 3 admin panel
3. On a linux server with alpine try to yarn install --pure-lockfile (you must have a package that is hosted on the private repo in package.json)
4. Does not work, return 401 error
I tried everything but i could not manage to make yarn to login to get those packages.
If i use npm install, it works.
Can someone tell me how to make yarn work nexus oss3 using the setup from above?
If npm install is working, then you must have login credentials and repository correctly defined.
Open terminal and run npm login, give your username and password for nexus account. This will create a file ~/.npmrc. Open this file nano ~/.npmrc, output look like
//<repository>:_authToken=NpmToken.<token>
A dummy example:
//test.server.com/repository/npm-group/:_authToken=NpmToken.123456-12345-12345-tok-en0onum
Go to the project directory cd <project_dir>, create a new file .yarnrc, open it nano .yarnrc. Insert the following line, save and exit (Ctrl+O, Ctrl+X) it.
registry "<repository>"
Create another file .npmrc in the same directory <project_dir>. Open, add the following line, save and exsit.
registry=<repository>
always-auth=true
//<repository>:_authToken=NpmToken.<token>
Delete the .npmrc at home directory rm ~/.npmrc.
Now you can download node_modules with yarn or yarn install.
I had same issue with nexus 3 and use this configuration on my .npmrc file:
registry=https://your.nexus.com/repository/some-npm/
always-auth=true
/* basic-auth-token: your user:password in base64 */
_auth=<basic-auth-token>
Hope this help you!
The fact that your requests returns 401 (Unauthorized) means that you should supply credentials when connecting to Nexus.
It is far from being a nice solution but I got it working using
yarn set registry https://user:pwd#your.nexus.host/nexus3/repository/npmjs/
I use yarn 1.4.0 (release candidate). It should also work on 1.3.2, but I cannot test that because 1.3.2 has issues with HTTPS_PROXY env vars.
Can i run something like: npm install passport from expressjs itself?
I want to check if i'm using a non installed module and install it before running the application.
To answer your question, yes, you should be able to check the FileSystem for specific files/folders using fs. I imagine you would need to parse your package.json and check the local node_modules or the global install path.
I would recommend a shell script to run npm install and then fire up your app from within the same script.
npm install .
node <server> &