The kerberos
package is a C++ extension that requires a build environment to be installed on your system. You must be able to build Node.js itself in order to compile and install the kerberos
module. Furthermore, the kerberos
module requires the MIT Kerberos package to correctly compile on UNIX operating systems. Consult your UNIX operation system package manager for what libraries to install.
Windows already contains the SSPI API used for Kerberos authentication. However, you will need to install a full compiler tool chain using Visual Studio C++ to correctly install the Kerberos extension.
If you don’t have the build-essentials, this module won’t build. In the case of Linux, you will need gcc, g++, Node.js with all the headers and Python. The easiest way to figure out what’s missing is by trying to build the Kerberos project. You can do this by performing the following steps.
git clone https://github.com/mongodb-js/kerberos
cd kerberos
npm install
If all the steps complete, you have the right toolchain installed. If you get the error "node-gyp not found," you need to install node-gyp
globally:
npm install -g node-gyp
If it correctly compiles and runs the tests, you are golden. We can now try to install the mongod
driver by performing the following command.
cd yourproject
npm install mongodb --save
If it still fails, the next step is to examine the npm log. Rerun the command but in this case in verbose mode.
npm --loglevel verbose install mongodb
This will print out all the steps npm is performing while trying to install the module.
A compiler tool chain known to work for compiling kerberos
on Windows is the following.
- Visual Studio C++ 2010 (do not use higher versions)
- Windows 7 64bit SDK
- Python 2.7 or higher
Open the Visual Studio command prompt. Ensure node.exe
is in your path and install node-gyp
.
npm install -g node-gyp
Next, you will have to build the project manually to test it. Clone the repo, install dependencies and rebuild:
git clone https://github.com/christkv/kerberos.git
cd kerberos
npm install
node-gyp rebuild
This should rebuild the driver successfully if you have everything set up correctly.
Your Python installation might be hosed making gyp break. Test your deployment environment first by trying to build Node.js itself on the server in question, as this should unearth any issues with broken packages (and there are a lot of broken packages out there).
Another tip is to ensure your user has write permission to wherever the Node.js modules are being installed.