Node.js

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Revision as of 06:43, 5 September 2024 by Onny (talk | contribs) (Cleanup page)

Node.js is an open-source, cross-platform JavaScript runtime environment that allows developers to execute JavaScript code on the server side. Built on the V8 JavaScript engine, it enables the creation of scalable and high-performance applications, particularly for real-time web services.

Setup

Adapt or add following line to your system configuration:

  environment.systemPackages = with pkgs; [ nodejs ];

See nix search nixpkgs nodejs for additional versions like nodejs-12_x, etc.

Troubleshooting

Using npm install -g fails

The following errors are to be expected.

npm ERR! Error: EACCES: permission denied, access '/nix/store/00000000000000000000000000000000-nodejs-6.14.3/lib/node_modules'
npm ERR!     at Error (native)
npm ERR!  { Error: EACCES: permission denied, access '/nix/store/00000000000000000000000000000000-nodejs-6.14.3/lib/node_modules'
npm ERR!     at Error (native)
npm ERR!   errno: -13,
npm ERR!   code: 'EACCES',
npm ERR!   syscall: 'access',
npm ERR!   path: '/nix/store/00000000000000000000000000000000-nodejs-6.14.3/lib/node_modules' }
npm ERR!
npm ERR! Please try running this command again as root/Administrator.

The store is read-only as it should be. Purity in Nix and NixOS makes it right not to allow installation using -g.

There are a couple solutions, none of them are strictly wrong. You can either configure npm so it installs globally to your home, or avoid using -g entirely. It is also possible, for node versions 8 and greater, to use npx.

Install to your home

This is done through configuring npm and amending your PATH.[1]

 $ npm set prefix ~/.npm-global

Then, amend your PATH so it looks into $HOME/.npm-global.

Avoid using -g

This is a bit harder to implement, but creates a bit more strictness in your environment; it will be impossible accidentally make use of what would have been a globally installed package. The idea is to install it to either a temporary transitory folder or to the project folder, then run the locally installed instance of the package, the binaries are found under node_packages/.bin/.[2]

 $ npm install uglify-es
[ ... ]

 $ ls -l node_modules/.bin/
total 0
lrwxrwxrwx 1 user users 25 Jul 17 15:34 uglifyjs -> ../uglify-es/bin/uglifyjs

 $ node_modules/.bin/uglifyjs --help
  Usage: uglifyjs [options] [files...]
direnv

If calling the executables with full path is too cumbersome, another elegant solution is to leverage direnv. Direnv is a shell-hook that can set directory-specific environment-variables. You basically add a file ".envrc" next to your "package.json" with the following content:

layout node

direnv then adds your "node_modules/.bin" to your path whenever you enter the directory. Please follow direnv's setup instructions on how to activate setup direnv in general.

Using npx

 $ nix-shell -p nodejs-8_x

 $ npx create-react-app --help
npx: installed 67 in 1.671s
  Usage: create-react-app <project-directory> [options]
[...]

Using npx with binaries

Some binaries obtained via npm will not work out of the box with NixOS, as they're dynamically linked to things that don't exist in NixOS (for good reason!)

They'll typically give some kind of ENOENT error. For example, npx cypress open might give an error like:

$ npx cypress open

Cypress failed to start.
This is usually caused by a missing library or dependency.
The error below should indicate which dependency is missing.
https://on.cypress.io/required-dependencies
If you are using Docker, we provide containers with all required dependencies installed.
----------
spawn /home/rkb/.cache/Cypress/4.10.0/Cypress/Cypress ENOENT

One quick workaround for this is to use steam-run to provide a placeholder FHS environment that *should* work; e.g. for the Cypress example above:

$ nix-env -iA nixos.steam-run

$ steam-run npx cypress open

-- Cypress opens successfully!

(Inspired by this discussion on discourse.nixos.org)

Google-fonts fetch failure with NextJS

Nextjs is a popular React framework and comes with built-in support with support for Google fonts. If a NPM project uses it,

npm run build # which calls "next build"

will try to fetch and optimize the Google fonts during a nix build run, which will fail in Nix's isolated sandbox without internet:

...
Running phase: buildPhase
Executing npmBuildHook

> nextjs-ollama-local-ai@0.1.0 build
> next build

    Next.js 14.1.0

   Creating an optimized production build ...
request to https://fonts.googleapis.com/css2?family=Inter:wght@100..900&display=swap failed, reason: getaddrinfo EAI_AGAIN fonts.googleapis.com
    at ClientRequest.<anonymous> (/build/source/node_modules/next/dist/compiled/node-fetch/index.js:1:66160)
    at ClientRequest.emit (node:events:518:28)
    at TLSSocket.socketErrorListener (node:_http_client:500:9)
    at TLSSocket.emit (node:events:518:28)
    at emitErrorNT (node:internal/streams/destroy:169:8)
    at emitErrorCloseNT (node:internal/streams/destroy:128:3)
    at process.processTicksAndRejections (node:internal/process/task_queues:82:21) {
  type: 'system',
  errno: 'EAI_AGAIN',
  code: 'EAI_AGAIN'
}
Failed to compile.

src/app/layout.tsx
`next/font` error:
Failed to fetch `Inter` from Google Fonts.

> Build failed because of webpack errors

ERROR: `npm build` failed

You have to patch the Javascript code

# In layout.tsx file replace
#
# import {Inter} from "next/font/google"; #or any other Google font like Inter
# const inter = Inter({ subsets: ["latin"] });
# 
# with ("src:" must be relative to the src/app/layout.tsx file):
import localFont from "next/font/local";
const inter = localFont({ src: './Inter.ttf' });

and place the Google fonts from Nixpkgs into the project, e.g. in a preBuild phase:

buildNpmPackage {
  pname = "myproject";
  version = "1.0.0";
  ...

  # see https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/blob/master/pkgs/by-name/cr/crabfit-frontend/package.nix
  preBuild = ''
    cp "${
      google-fonts.override { fonts = [ "Inter" ]; }
    }/share/fonts/truetype/Inter[slnt,wght].ttf" src/app/Inter.ttf
  '';

  ...
}

You can take a look at what fonts are available in the Nix google-fonts package by calling:

ls -ahl $(nix build --no-link --print-out-paths nixpkgs#google-fonts)/share/fonts/truetype/

Take a look at https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/blob/master/pkgs/servers/homepage-dashboard/default.nix for further workarounds for Nextjs in Nix.

Tips and tricks

Packaging with buildNpmPackage

From the Nixpkgs manual: "buildNpmPackage allows you to package npm-based projects in Nixpkgs without the use of an auto-generated dependencies file (as used in node2nix). It works by utilizing npm’s cache functionality – creating a reproducible cache that contains the dependencies of a project, and pointing npm to it."

To better understand what happens under the hood and see the latest features see

https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/blob/master/pkgs/build-support/node/build-npm-package/default.nix

Packaging electron applications

When trying to npm i electron, by default electron will try to download binaries from the internet, which does not work in the Nix sandbox. To stop it from trying to access the internet, set the environment variable ELECTRON_SKIP_BINARY_DOWNLOAD = "1";.

For examples of packaging electron applications, search Nixpkgs for the terms "buildNpmPackage" and "electron".

Packaging with yarn2nix

yarn2nix uses the yarn nodejs tool to create a file called yarn.lock, which in return can be used by yarn2nix to generate a usable yarn expression. This is what was needed to convert a small application server shackspace muellshack:

$ nix-shell -p yarn yarn2nix
$ yarn install
# creates yarn.lock
$ yarn2nix > yarn.nix
$ vim package.json
# add:    "bin": "app.js",
$ cat > default.nix <<EOF
with (import <nixpkgs> {});
rec {
  muellshack = mkYarnPackage {
    name = "muellshack";
    src = ./.;
    packageJSON = ./package.json;
    yarnLock = ./yarn.lock;
    yarnNix = ./yarn.nix;
  };
}
EOF
$ sed -i '1i#!/usr/bin/env node' app.js
$ chmod +x app.js
$ nix-build

$ result/bin/muellshack

The complete diff can be found at the respective diff

Example nix flake shell for Node.js development

`flake.nix` example:

{
  description = "example-node-js-flake";

  inputs = {
    flake-utils.url = "github:numtide/flake-utils";
  };

  outputs = { self, nixpkgs, flake-utils }:
    flake-utils.lib.eachDefaultSystem (system:
      let
        pkgs = import nixpkgs {
          inherit system;
        };

        buildNodeJs = pkgs.callPackage "${<nixpkgs>}/pkgs/development/web/nodejs/nodejs.nix" {
          python = pkgs.python3;
        };

        nodejs = buildNodeJs {
          enableNpm = true;
          version = "20.5.1";
          sha256 = "sha256-Q5xxqi84woYWV7+lOOmRkaVxJYBmy/1FSFhgScgTQZA=";
        };
      in rec {
        flakedPkgs = pkgs;

        # enables use of `nix shell`
        devShell = pkgs.mkShell {
          # add things you want in your shell here
          buildInputs = with pkgs; [
            nodejs
          ];
        };
      }
    );
}

Using nodePackages with a different node version

Packages in nixpkgs.nodePackages are built using nixpkgs.nodejs, so if you overlay that package to a different version, the nodePackages will be built using that:

final: prev: {
      nodejs = prev.nodejs-16_x;
}
$ pnpm node --version
v16.17.1

External Links

References