Node.js plugin for rtx version manager
After installing rtx, install the plugin by running:
rtx plugin install nodejs
Check rtx readme for instructions on how to install & manage versions of Node.js at a system and project level.
Behind the scenes, rtx-nodejs
utilizes node-build
to install pre-compiled binaries and compile from source if necessary. You can check its README for additional settings and some troubleshooting.
When compiling a version from source, you are going to need to install all requirements for compiling Node.js (be advised that different versions might require different configurations). That being said, node-build
does a great job at handling edge cases and compilations rarely need a deep investigation.
node-build
already has a handful of settings, in additional to that rtx-nodejs
has a few extra configuration variables:
RTX_NODEJS_VERBOSE_INSTALL
: Enables verbose output for downloading and building. Any value different from empty is treated as enabled.RTX_NODEJS_FORCE_COMPILE
: Forces compilation from source instead of preferring pre-compiled binariesRTX_NODEJS_NODEBUILD_HOME
: Home for the node-build installation, defaults to$RTX_DATA_DIR/plugins/nodejs/.node-build
, you can install it in another place or share it with your systemRTX_NODEJS_NODEBUILD
: Path to the node-build executable, defaults to$RTX_NODEJS_NODEBUILD_HOME/bin/node-build
RTX_NODEJS_CONCURRENCY
: How many jobs should be used in compilation. Defaults to half the computer coresNODEJS_ORG_MIRROR
: (Legacy) overrides the default mirror used for downloading the distibutions, alternative to theNODE_BUILD_MIRROR_URL
node-build env var
In the past rtx-nodejs
checked for signatures and integrity by querying live keyservers. node-build
, on the other hand, checks integrity by precomputing checksums ahead of time and versioning them together with the instructions for building them, making the process a lot more streamlined.
rtx uses a .tool-versions
file for auto-switching between software versions. To ease migration, you can have it read an existing .nvmrc
or .node-version
file to find out what version of Node.js should be used.
We provide a command for running the installed node-build
command:
rtx nodejs nodebuild --version
node-build
has some additional variations aside from the versions listed in rtx ls-remote nodejs
(chakracore/graalvm branches and some others). As of now, we weakly support these variations. In the sense that they are available for install and can be used in a .tool-versions
file, but we don't list them as installation candidates nor give them full attention.
Some of them will work out of the box, and some will need a bit of investigation to get them built. We are planning in providing better support for these variations in the future.
To list all the available variations run:
rtx nodejs nodebuild --definitions
Note that this command only lists the current node-build
definitions. You might want to update the local node-build
repository before listing them.
Every new node version needs to have a definition file in the node-build
repository. rtx-nodejs
already tries to update node-build
on every new version installation, but if you want to update node-build
manually for some reason we provide a command just for that:
rtx nodejs update-nodebuild
rtx-nodejs
can automatically install a set of default set of npm package right after installing a Node.js version. To enable this feature, provide a $HOME/.default-npm-packages
file that lists one package per line, for example:
lodash
request
express
You can specify a non-default location of this file by setting a RTX_NPM_DEFAULT_PACKAGES_FILE
variable.