ChatGPT解决这个技术问题 Extra ChatGPT

How to clean node_modules folder of packages that are not in package.json?

Assume I install project packages with npm install that looks into package.json for modules to be installed. After a while I see that I don't need some specific module and remove its dependency from package.json. Then I remove some other modules from package.json because they are not needed anymore and others are replaced with alternatives.

Now I want to clean node_modules folder so that only modules listed in package.json stay there and the rest must go, something like npm clean. I know I can remove them manually but would like to have some nice ready to use sugar functionality for that.

One thing all answers below and OP did not mention is: Make sure you have package lock before deleting node_modules, otherwise npm will re-evaluate the package.json and gives you the latest package versions, which with package that does not follow semver properly can become a nightmare

D
David Sherret

I think you're looking for npm prune

npm prune [ [

See the docs: https://docs.npmjs.com/cli/prune


As far as I know, in new NPM version, all the dependencies are located at the root node_modules folder, and not as before, where each dependency had it's own dependencies install in their own node_modules folders..with countless copies of the same dependencies... so does npm prune takes this into consideration? because those deep-dependencies aren't written on the main package.json of your project.. prune must look recursively.
@vsync Duplication reduction is achieved with the command npm dedupe docs.npmjs.com/cli/dedupe . It tries to simplify the node tree by moving dependencies up the tree.
I've seen NPM prune fail to delete things usually screwing up when my corporate repository has something borked in it. Then I have to rm-rf. It would be nice if there was a "blow everythin away then reget everything all in one go" command
NPM 7 and Yarn 2+ will automatically prune on install, this command is not needed anymore normally
a
adamduren

You could remove your node_modules/ folder and then reinstall the dependencies from package.json.

rm -rf node_modules/
npm install

This would erase all installed packages in the current folder and only install the dependencies from package.json. If the dependencies have been previously installed npm will try to use the cached version, avoiding downloading the dependency a second time.


Yes, I know I can use this method but I am curious why there is still no more elegant solution for that.
On windows platform, it fails while deleting node_modules thru Explorer or command line (since the path to some modules are longer than 256). There should be npm command to do it in a cleaner way.
Or using rmdir node_modules /s /q on Windows. superuser.com/a/179661/440976
I think, this answer is missing a very important point: if you are constrained by the traffic (i.e. you have the expensive per-megabyte-paid connection like mobile) and you have a lot of modules, this may cost you, while the prune option does require you to have internet connection at all.
rm -rf node_modules && npm install is slower but the only actual reliable way. npm update && npm prune will, e.g., not remove packages referenced by peerDependencies.
u
user3844078

Due to its folder nesting Windows can’t delete the folder as its name is too long. To solve this, install RimRaf:

npm install rimraf -g

rimraf node_modules

Or just rm -rf node_modules
rm -rf node_modules will not work on windows. See this solution: superuser.com/a/179661/440976
win7 x64 rimraf worked great through PowerShell.. thanks
Best solution for Windows 10 64-bit via CMD
rm -rf node_modules didnt work for me on Windows 10. But rimraf worked for me
S
Sergey Vyacheslavovich Brunov

From version 6.5.0 npm supports the command clean-install (ci) to hard refresh all the packages.

Please, see the references:

npm 6.x: npm-ci | npm Docs.

npm 7.x: npm-ci | npm Docs.

npm Blog Archive: Introducing npm ci for faster, more reliable builds.


This is exactly what I needed. When I update node, the first thing that happens is "looks like you you've changed your environment since running 'npm install'". Since I'm already in the console, it's easiest to just do clean-install rather than messing around deleting folders first etc.
This should be the accepted answer. npm ci is also great for continuous integration. It runs faster if you don't have a node_modules directory, so on our servers we backup the previous build by renaming node_modules to something else (for example, node_modules_backup. If a backup already exists, delete it first and then rename). We then run npm install as a hassle-free swift package update solution.
thanks @Nadav, but to be fair the question was asked in 2014 and at the time there was no such a thing, so the author approved the best-at-the-time answer :)
H
Hkachhia

simple just run

rm -r node_modules

in fact, you can delete any folder with this.

like rm -r AnyFolderWhichIsNotDeletableFromShiftDeleteOrDelete.

just open the gitbash move to root of the folder and run this command

Hope this will help.


Doesn't work, I get a "permission denied" error (using gitbash.
open gitbash in administrator mode. i guess that will help. or change folder permission level settings
This would delete all packages. The OP clearly says "I want to clean node_modules folder so that only modules listed in package.json stay there".
in that case my friend you can simply do "npm uninstall package_name " or --save as sufix that will delete its entry from package.json file as well. npm uninstall package_name (delete package) npm uninstall package_name --save (delete package and remove entry from dependencies in package json) npm uninstall package_name --save-dev (delete package and remove entry from devdependencies in package json)
S
Stephen Rauch

First globally install rimraf

npm install rimraf -g

go to the path using cmd where your node_modules folder and apply below command

rimraf node_modules

good answer, but installing a package to uninstall other ones is not a good idea though. npm prune is an ideal solution.
Yes, but if you want to remove the node_module folder from your project this is the best and easy way.
p
parkourkarthik

Just in-case somebody needs it, here's something I've done recently to resolve this:

npm ci - If you want to clean everything and install all packages from scratch:

-It does a clean install: if the node_modules folder exists, npm deletes it and installs a fresh one.

-It checks for consistency: if package-lock.json doesn’t exist or if it doesn’t match the contents of package.json, npm stops with an error.

https://docs.npmjs.com/cli/v6/commands/npm-ci

npm-dedupe - If you want to clean-up the current node_modules directory without deleting and re-installing all the packages

Searches the local package tree and attempts to simplify the overall structure by moving dependencies further up the tree, where they can be more effectively shared by multiple dependent packages.

https://docs.npmjs.com/cli/v6/commands/npm-dedupe


C
Christoffer Bo Petersen

Have you tried npm prune?

it should uninstall everything not listed in your package file

https://npmjs.org/doc/cli/npm-prune.html


r
robertovg

The best article I found about it is this one: https://trilon.io/blog/how-to-delete-all-nodemodules-recursively

All from the console and easy to execute from any folder point.

But as a summary of the article, this command to find the size for each node_module folder found in different projects.

find . -name "node_modules" -type d -prune -print | xargs du -chs

And to actually remove them:

find . -name 'node_modules' -type d -prune -print -exec rm -rf '{}' \;

The article contains also instructions for windows shell.


R
Ravi B

I have added few lines inside package.json:

"scripts": {
  ...
  "clean": "rmdir /s /q node_modules",
  "reinstall": "npm run clean && npm install",
  "rebuild": "npm run clean && npm install && rmdir /s /q dist && npm run build --prod",
  ...
}

If you want to clean only you can use this rimraf node_modules or rm -rf node_modules.

It works fine


O
Osify

For Windows User, alternative solution to remove such folder listed here: http://ask.osify.com/qa/567

Among them, a free tool: Long Path Fixer is good to try: http://corz.org/windows/software/accessories/Long-Path-Fixer-for-Windows.php


J
Johannes

You can also use npx in combination with rimraf to remove all node modules with one command, so you don't have to install rimraf first.

So go to the path where your node_modules folder is located by using cmd (in case you are not there already) and run the following command

npx rimraf node_modules

h
hamid_reza hobab

rimraf is an package for simulate linux command [rm -rf] in windows. which is useful for cross platform support. for install its CLI:

npm install rimraf -g

T
Tiko

For all of those who use Yarn, no need to rm -rf node_modules, you can just remove package from dependency list, and run yarn


J
Jasmin Mistry

Use following command instead of npm install

npm ci

npm ci installs the packages listed in shrinkwrap.json