Node.js version management: no subshells, no profile setup, no convoluted API, just simple.
(Note: n
is not supported natively on Windows.)
Since you probably already have node
, the easiest way to install n
is through npm
:
npm install -g n
Alternatively, you can clone this repo and
make install
to install n
to bin/n
of the directory specified in the environment variable $PREFIX
, which defaults to /usr/local
(note that you will likely need to use sudo
). To install n
in a custom location (such as $CUSTOM_LOCATION/bin/n
), run PREFIX=$CUSTOM_LOCATION make install
.
Once installed, n
caches node
versions in subdirectory n/versions
of the directory specified in environment variable N_PREFIX
, which defaults to /usr/local
; and the active node
version is installed directly in N_PREFIX
.
To avoid requiring sudo
for n
and npm
global installs, it is recommended you either install to your home directory using N_PREFIX
, or take ownership of the system directories:
# make cache folder (if missing) and take ownership
sudo mkdir -p /usr/local/n
sudo chown -R $(whoami) /usr/local/n
# take ownership of node install destination folders
sudo chown -R $(whoami) /usr/local/bin /usr/local/lib /usr/local/include /usr/local/share
On macOS with Homebrew you can install the n formula.
brew install n
On Linux and macOS, n-install allows installation directly from GitHub; for instance:
curl -L https://git.io/n-install | bash
n-install sets both PREFIX
and N_PREFIX
to $HOME/n
, installs n
to $HOME/n/bin
, modifies the initialization files of supported shells to export N_PREFIX
and add $HOME/n/bin
to the PATH
, and installs the latest LTS node
version.
As a result, both n
itself and all node
versions it manages are hosted inside a single, optionally configurable directory, which you can later remove with the included n-uninstall
script. n-update
updates n
itself to the latest version. See the n-install repo for more details.
Simply execute n <version>
to install a version of node
. If <version>
has already been installed (via n
), n
will activate that version.
A leading v
is optional, and a partial version number installs the newest matching version.
n 4.9.1
n 10
n v8.11.3
Execute n
on its own to view your currently installed versions. Use the up and down arrow keys to navigate and press enter to select. Use q
or ^C (control + C) to exit the selection screen.
If you like vim key bindings during the selection of node versions, you can use j
and k
to navigate up or down without using arrows.
$ n
node/4.9.1
ο node/8.11.3
node/10.15.0
Use or install the latest official release:
n latest
Use or install the latest LTS official release:
n lts
(If the active node version does not change after install, try opening a new shell in case seeing a stale version.)
Remove some cached versions:
n rm 0.9.4 v0.10.0
Removing all cached versions except the current version:
n prune
Remove the installed node and npm (does not affect the cached version). This can be useful to revert to the system version of node (if in a different location), or if you no longer wish to use node and npm, or are switching to a different way of managing them.
n uninstall
When running multiple versions of node
, we can target
them directly by asking n
for the binary path:
$ n bin 0.9.4
/usr/local/n/versions/0.9.4/bin/node
Or by using a specific version through n
's use
sub-command:
n use 0.9.4 some.js
Flags also work here:
n as 0.9.4 --debug some.js
Output can also be obtained from n --help
.
Usage: n [options/env] [COMMAND] [args]
Environments:
n [COMMAND] [args] Uses default env (node)
Commands:
n Output versions installed
n latest Install or activate the latest node release
n -a x86 latest As above but force 32 bit architecture
n lts Install or activate the latest LTS node release
n <version> Install node <version>
n use <version> [args ...] Execute node <version> with [args ...]
n bin <version> Output bin path for <version>
n rm <version ...> Remove the given version(s)
n prune Remove all versions except the active version
n --latest Output the latest node version available
n --lts Output the latest LTS node version available
n ls Output the versions of node available
Options:
-V, --version Output version of n
-h, --help Display help information
-q, --quiet Disable curl output (if available)
-d, --download Download only
-a, --arch Override system architecture
Aliases:
which bin
use as
list ls
- rm
stable lts
If you would like to use a different node mirror which has the same layout as the default https://nodejs.org/dist/, you can define NODE_MIRROR
.
The most common example is users in China can define:
export NODE_MIRROR=https://npm.taobao.org/mirrors/node
By default n
picks the binaries matching your system architecture, e.g. n
will download 64 bit binaries for a 64 bit system. You can override this by using the -a
or --arch
option.
Download and use latest 32 bit version of node
:
n --arch x86 latest
Download and use 64 bit LTS version of node
for older Mac Intel Core 2 Duo systems (x86 image is no longer available but x64 runs fine):
n --arch x64 lts
The n
command downloads and installs to /usr/local
by default, but you may override this location by defining N_PREFIX
.
To change the location to say $HOME/.n
, add lines like the following to your shell initialization file:
export N_PREFIX=$HOME/.n
export PATH=$N_PREFIX/bin:$PATH
By default n
downloads archives from the mirror site which have been compressed with gzip
. You can switch to using the xz
compressed archives by defining N_USE_XZ
.
export N_USE_XZ=true
In brief:
NODE_MIRROR
: See Custom source- support for NO_COLOR and CLICOLOR=0 for controlling use of ANSI color codes