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browserify error /usr/bin/env: node: No such file or directory

I installed node js and npm via apt-get install and all of the dependencies, then I installed browserify

npm install browserify -g

it goes through the process and it seems like it installed correctly, but when I try to do a simple bundle per this walkthrough

I get the error:

/usr/bin/env: node: No such file or directory

https://i.stack.imgur.com/XsFs9.png

hmm you should check if the node executable is in /usr/bin or /usb/bin/env at least this is a operating specific problem. You may be able to solve this by installing browserify local.
my browserfy executable is in the /usr/local/bin/ but is it calling something else thats the path is messed up ?
ah you have to symlink nodejs to node on ubuntu. Ubuntu installs node as nodejs then you have to do something like "ln -s /usr/bin/nodejs /usr/bin/node" so that the systems also finds it as node
that solved it :-P I have been breaking my head over this for the past hour, can you please put in answer format to accept ?
glad it worked was not sure if it really is this problems thats why I commented first :)

b
bodokaiser

Some linux distributions install nodejs not as "node" executable but as "nodejs".

In this case you have to manually link to "node" as many packages are programmed after the "node" binary. Something similar also occurs with "python2" not linked to "python".

In this case you can do an easy symlink. For linux distributions which install package binaries to /usr/bin you can do

ln -s /usr/bin/nodejs /usr/bin/node

This is not the solution for Ubuntu 14.04 because /usb/sbin/node is ax24-node (unrelated to nodejs). Just symbolic linking to /usr/bin/node will not work because /usr/sbin/node comes first in the $PATH
the correct way to solve this is to use update-alternatives. see my answer here stackoverflow.com/a/24592328/454615
actually thinking more about this... symlinking binaries around like this is a great habit to adopt if you're looking to break your system.
yea I have noticed it does break it in subtle ways, have you found a better solution ?
@EduardoDennis yes, use update-alternatives. it exists for these exact situations.
a
airtonix

New Answer:

Uninstall any nodejs package you've installed via your system package manager (dnf, apt-get, etc), delete any silly symlinks you've been recreating every upgrade (lol). Install NVM, use nvm to install nodejs: nvm install 6

Old Answer:

Any talk of creating symlinks or installing some other node-package are spurious and not sustainable.

The correct way to solve this is to :

simple install the nodejs package with apt-get like you already have use update-alternatives to indicate your nodejs binary is responsible for #!/usr/bin/env node

Like so :

sudo apt-get install nodejs
sudo update-alternatives --install /usr/bin/node nodejs /usr/bin/nodejs 100

This now becomes sustainable throughout package upgrades, dist-upgrades and so forth.


This is a solution for my problem stackoverflow.com/questions/26155795/…
Thanks, great solution, the trick with symlinks is the one most repeated over the net but didn't work for me.
The actual correct answer now is to use NVM on Linux, and Nodist on Windows.
2022 update: nvm is nice, but you should really look into using ASDF
a
alex

Run apt-get install nodejs-legacy.

Certain linux distributions have changed node.js binary name making it uncompatible with a lot of node.js packages. Package nodejs-legacy provides a symlink to resolve this.


This is the solution for Ubuntu 14.04 because /usb/sbin/node is ax24-node (unrelated to nodejs). Just symbolic linking to /usr/bin/node will not work because /usr/sbin/node comes first in the $PATH
Helped me out. Thanks!
apt-get install nodejs-legacy. says for windows user 'apt-get' is not recognized as an internal or external command, operable program or batch file.
E
Eduardo Dennis

You can also install Nodejs using NVM or Nodejs Version Manager. There are a lot of benefits to using a version manager. One of them being you don't have to worry about this issue.

Instructions:

sudo apt-get update
sudo apt-get install build-essential libssl-dev

Once the prerequisite packages are installed, you can pull down the nvm installation script from the project's GitHub page. The version number may be different, but in general, you can download and install it with the following syntax:

curl https://raw.githubusercontent.com/creationix/nvm/v0.16.1/install.sh | sh

This will download the script and run it. It will install the software into a subdirectory of your home directory at ~/.nvm. It will also add the necessary lines to your ~/.profile file to use the file.

To gain access to the nvm functionality, you'll need to log out and log back in again, or you can source the ~/.profile file so that your current session knows about the changes:

source ~/.profile

Now that you have nvm installed, you can install isolated Node.js versions.

To find out the versions of Node.js that are available for installation, you can type:

nvm ls-remote
. . .

v0.11.10
v0.11.11
v0.11.12
v0.11.13
v0.11.14

As you can see, the newest version at the time of this writing is v0.11.14. You can install that by typing:

nvm install 0.11.14

Usually, nvm will switch to use the most recently installed version. You can explicitly tell nvm to use the version we just downloaded by typing:

nvm use 0.11.14

When you install Node.js using nvm, the executable is called node. You can see the version currently being used by the shell by typing:

node -v

The comeplete tutorial can be found here


yep, plus one for environment version managers. definitely a much better answer than mine despite ours being both the correct way to do this. I will say that nvm is more aimed at interactive workstations not production servers (but I can't see why one couldn't use it there)... personally I'm more inclined to use docker images in production.
k
kamikater
sudo apt-get install nodejs-legacy

This creates the symlink /usr/bin/node -> nodejs.

Source: https://lists.debian.org/debian-devel-announce/2012/07/msg00002.html


@Swift Mac OS X doesn't have apt-get. See stackoverflow.com/questions/37369363/…
k
kangear

I seem the same problem when I build atom in Linux.

sudo apt-get install nodejs-dev

Fix my question.hope helpful to you.


u
user2290820

If you don't want to symlink you could do this. works in ubuntu

#!/usr/local/bin/node --harmony

harmony tag is for the new ECMAscript harmony


M
Moh .S

run the command which node the result will be something /home/moh/.nvm/versions/node/v8.9.4/bin/node Copy the path that you have got above then run the command in step 3. ln -s /home/moh/.nvm/versions/node/v8.9.4/bin/node /usr/bin/node


Z
ZyX

You have to call "nodejs" and not "node". To verify this, type node -v on the shell: if nothing is found try nodejs -v. If that displays a version number, then the command you should be using is nodejs and not node. Therefore, you have to change the call to browserify in your script from node to nodejs (as shown below): replace

#!/usr/bin/env node

with

#!/usr/bin/env nodejs

You might also have to open the script as the superuser.