fnm
)
Fast Node Manager (π Fast and simple Node.js version manager, built in Rust
Features
π Cross-platform support (macOS, Windows, Linux)
β¨ Single file, easy installation, instant startup
π Built with speed in mind
π€ Works with .node-version
and .nvmrc
files
Installation
Using a script (macOS/Linux)
For bash
, zsh
and fish
shells, there's an automatic installation script:
curl -fsSL https://fnm.vercel.app/install | bash
Upgrade
On macOS, it is as simple as brew upgrade fnm
.
On other operating systems, upgrading fnm
is almost the same as installing it. To prevent duplication in your shell config file add --skip-shell
to install command.
Parameters
--install-dir
Set a custom directory for fnm to be installed. The default is $HOME/.fnm
.
--skip-shell
Skip appending shell specific loader to shell config file, based on the current user shell, defined in $SHELL
. e.g. for Bash, $HOME/.bashrc
. $HOME/.zshrc
for Zsh. For Fish - $HOME/.config/fish/conf.d/fnm.fish
--force-install
macOS installations using the installation script are deprecated in favor of the Homebrew formula, but this forces the script to install using it anyway.
Example:
curl -fsSL https://fnm.vercel.app/install | bash -s -- --install-dir "./.fnm" --skip-shell
Manually
Using Homebrew (macOS/Linux)
brew install fnm
Then, set up your shell for fnm
Using Scoop (Windows)
scoop install fnm
Then, set up your shell for fnm
Using Cargo (Linux/macOS/Windows)
cargo install fnm
Then, set up your shell for fnm
Using a release binary (Linux/macOS/Windows)
- Download the latest release binary for your system
- Make it available globally on
PATH
environment variable - Configure your shell profile:
Removing
To remove fnm (π’), just delete the .fnm
folder in your home directory. You should also edit your shell configuration to remove any references to fnm (ie. read Shell Setup, and do the opposite).
Completions
fnm ships its completions with the binary:
fnm completions --shell <SHELL>
Where <SHELL>
can be one of the supported shells:
bash
zsh
fish
powershell
Please follow your shell instructions to install them.
Shell Setup
fnm needs to run some shell commands before you can start using it.
This is done by evaluating the output of fnm env
. Check out the following guides for the shell you use:
Bash
add the following to your .bashrc
profile:
eval "$(fnm env)"
Zsh
add the following to your .zshrc
profile:
eval "$(fnm env)"
Fish shell
create ~/.config/fish/conf.d/fnm.fish
add this line to it:
fnm env | source
PowerShell
Before adding any configuration to your shell, you'd need to enable symlink support for a standard accounts (non-administrator).
You can do it by enabling Developer Mode, or updating the Local Security Policy.
Local Security Policy
Open Local Security Policy
(secpol.msc
) and go to Local Policies
-> User Rights Assignment
, select Create symbolic links
, add your user to the list and reboot.
Use
whoami
if you are not sure what's your user name.
Add the following to the end of your profile file:
fnm env --use-on-cd | Out-String | Invoke-Expression
- On Windows, the profile is located at
~\Documents\PowerShell\Microsoft.PowerShell_profile.ps1
or$PROFILE
- For macOS/Linux, the profile is located at
~/.config/powershell/Microsoft.PowerShell_profile.ps1
Windows Command Prompt aka Batch aka WinCMD
fnm is also supported but is not entirely covered. You can set up a startup script and append the following line:
FOR /f "tokens=*" %i IN ('fnm env --use-on-cd') DO CALL %i
Usage
See the available commands for an extended usage documentation
Contributing
PRs welcome π
Developing:
# Install Rust
git clone https://github.com/Schniz/fnm.git
cd fnm/
cargo build
Running Binary:
cargo run -- --help # Will behave like `fnm --help`
Running Tests:
cargo test