Can someone tell me where can I find the Node.js modules, which I installed using npm
?
23 Answers
Global libraries
You can run npm list -g
to see which global libraries are installed and where they're located. Use npm list -g | head -1
for truncated output showing just the path. If you want to display only main packages not its sub-packages which installs along with it - you can use - npm list --depth=0
which will show all packages and for getting only globally installed packages, just add -g i.e. npm list -g --depth=0
.
On Unix systems they are normally placed in /usr/local/lib/node
or /usr/local/lib/node_modules
when installed globally. If you set the NODE_PATH
environment variable to this path, the modules can be found by node.
Windows XP - %USERPROFILE%\AppData\npm\node_modules
Windows 7, 8 and 10 - %USERPROFILE%\AppData\Roaming\npm\node_modules
Non-global libraries
Non-global libraries are installed the node_modules
sub folder in the folder you are currently in.
You can run npm list
to see the installed non-global libraries for your current location.
When installing use -g option to install globally
npm install -g pm2
- pm2 will be installed globally. It will then typically be found in /usr/local/lib/node_modules
(Use npm root -g
to check where.)
npm install pm2
- pm2 will be installed locally. It will then typically be found in the local directory in /node_modules
-
43If you're using nvm, then your global modules may be in one of several places depending on the version of node you're using at the time. The best way is to use
npm list -g
as suggested in another answer. Commented Nov 7, 2014 at 19:05 -
82does not work for me, shows only bin folder. "npm root -g" does work. Commented Sep 19, 2015 at 13:24
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8under Arch linux, the global modules are under /usr/lib. "npm --help" shows the exact location as last line of the output, e.g.: [email protected] /usr/lib/node_modules/npm– GregorCommented Feb 2, 2016 at 13:48
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28for windows 10,placed in
%USERPROFILE%\AppData\Roaming\npm\node_modules
Commented Oct 23, 2016 at 11:43 -
13"npm root -g" is correct - list might work but is far too much info, where as the other command just gives you the exact location you are looking for. stackoverflow.com/a/24295332/174965 Commented Feb 13, 2017 at 15:36
The command npm root
will tell you the effective installation directory of your npm packages.
If your current working directory is a node package or a sub-directory of a node package, npm root
will tell you the local installation directory. npm root -g
will show the global installation root regardless of current working directory.
Example:
$ npm root -g
/usr/local/lib/node_modules
-
Follow up question: does npm install -g do anything besides move these files to that location (I am using Red Hat if that matters), such as run a chmod command? I am trying to make a docker container that uses these modules, but does not use npm install (long story)– FlotolkCommented Jan 19, 2022 at 0:18
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Very helpful if you use
nvm
as you may have multiple locations per node version, e.g.~/.nvm/versions/node/v14.20.0/lib/node_modules
Commented Jun 8, 2023 at 15:26
For globally-installed modules:
The other answers give you platform-specific responses, but a generic one is this:
When you install global module with npm install -g something
, npm looks up a config variable prefix
to know where to install the module.
You can get that value by running npm config get prefix
To display all the global modules available in that folder use npm ls -g --depth 0
(depth 0
to not display their dependencies).
If you want to change the global modules path, use npm config edit
and put prefix = /my/npm/global/modules/prefix
in the file or use npm config set prefix /my/npm/global/modules/prefix
.
When you use some tools like nodist, they change the platform-default installation path of global npm modules.
-
3You answered my follow-up question: "Can someone tell me how I can change the location of the Node.js modules?" Note: The reason why this was important to me was so that I didn't have to change my PATH yet again. I uncommented the default suggestion in the npmrc file that {npm config get prefx} opens.– HeyZikoCommented Oct 3, 2016 at 20:22
On windows I used npm list -g
to find it out. By default my (global) packages were being installed to C:\Users\[Username]\AppData\Roaming\npm
.
-
10
If you are looking for the executable that npm installed, maybe because you would like to put it in your PATH, you can simply do
npm bin
or
npm bin -g
-
3If you've globally installed npm packages where node was installed with homebrew and then npm updated with npm itself, you may be getting
command not found
errors. If so, add the aboveto your PATH:export PATH=$PATH:$(npm bin -g)
voila Commented Nov 5, 2018 at 11:20 -
8
-
If a module was installed with the global (-g
) flag, you can get the parent location by running:
npm get prefix
or
npm ls -g --depth=0
which will print the location along with the list of installed modules.
Not direct answer but may help ....
The npm also has a cache folder, which can be found by running npm config get cache
(%AppData%/npm-cache
on Windows).
The npm modules are first downloaded here and then copied to npm global folder (%AppData%/Roaming/npm
on Windows) or project specific folder (your-project/node_modules
).
So if you want to track npm packages, and some how, the list of all downloaded npm packages (if the npm cache is not cleaned) have a look at this folder. The folder structure is as {cache}/{name}/{version}
This may help also https://docs.npmjs.com/cli/cache
In earlier versions of NPM modules were always placed in /usr/local/lib/node or wherever you specified the npm root within the .npmrc file. However, in NPM 1.0+ modules are installed in two places. You can have modules installed local to your application in /.node_modules or you can have them installed globally which will use the above.
More information can be found at https://github.com/isaacs/npm/blob/master/doc/install.md
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4Something to note- with 1.0 modules are stored in /usr/local/lib/node_modules. Commented May 13, 2011 at 1:23
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As the other answers say, the best way is to do
npm list -g
However, if you have a large number of npm
packages installed, the output of this command could be very long and a big pain to scroll up (sometimes it's not even possible to scroll that far back).
In this case, pipe the output to the more
program, like this
npm list -g | more
The easiest way would be to do
npm list -g
to list the package and view their installed location.
I had installed npm via chololatey, so the location is
C:\MyProgramData\chocolatey\lib\nodejs.commandline.0.10.31\tools\node_modules
C:\MyProgramData\ is chocolatey repo location.
Echo the config:
npm config ls
ornpm config list
Show all the config settings:
npm config ls -l
ornpm config ls --json
Print the effective node_modules folder:
npm root
ornpm root -g
Print the local prefix:
npm prefix
ornpm prefix -g
(This is the closest parent directory to contain a package.json file or node_modules directory)
I was beginning to go mad while searching for the real configuration, so here is the list of all configuration files on linux:
- /etc/npmrc
- /home/youruser/.npmrc
- /root/.npmrc
- ./.npmrc in the current directory next to package.json file (thanks to @CyrillePontvieux)
on windows:
- c/Program\ Files/nodejs/node_modules/npm/npmrc
Then in this file the prefix is configured:
prefix=/usr
The prefix is defaulted to /usr in linux, to ${APPDATA}\npm in windows
The node modules are under $prefix tree, and the path should contain $prefix/bin
There may be a problem :
- When you install globally, you use "sudo su" then the
/root/.npmrc
may be used! - When you use locally without sudo: for your user its the
/home/youruser/.npmrc
. - When your path doesn't represent your prefix
- When you use
npm set -g prefix /usr
it sets the /etc/npmrc global, but doesn't override the local
Here is all the informations that were missing to find what is configured where. Hope I have been exhaustive.
-
1
/root/.npmrc
should never be search for becausesudo
withnpm
is a bad practice even if some tutorial mention it. You forgot to mention.npmrc
in the directory next topackage.json
file. Commented Oct 28, 2020 at 20:43
You can find globally installed modules by the command
npm list -g
It will provide you the location where node.js modules have been installed.
C:\Users\[Username]\AppData\Roaming\npm
If you install node.js modules locally in a folder, you can type the following command to see the location.
npm list
Expanding upon other answers.
npm list -g
will show you the location of globally installed packages.
If you want to output that list to a file that you can then easily search in your text editor:
npm list -g > ~/Desktop/npmfiles.txt
From the docs:
In npm 1.0, there are two ways to install things:
globally —- This drops modules in
{prefix}/lib/node_modules
, and puts executable files in{prefix}/bin
, where{prefix}
is usually something like/usr/local
. It also installs man pages in{prefix}/share/man
, if they’re supplied.locally —- This installs your package in the current working directory. Node modules go in
./node_modules
, executables go in./node_modules/.bin/
, and man pages aren’t installed at all.
You can get your {prefix}
with npm config get prefix
. (Useful when you installed node with nvm).
From the docs:
Packages are dropped into the node_modules folder under the prefix. When installing locally, this means that you can require("packagename") to load its main module, or require("packagename/lib/path/to/sub/module") to load other modules.
Global installs on Unix systems go to {prefix}/lib/node_modules. Global installs on Windows go to {prefix}/node_modules (that is, no lib folder.)
Scoped packages are installed the same way, except they are grouped together in a sub-folder of the relevant node_modules folder with the name of that scope prefix by the @ symbol, e.g. npm install @myorg/package would place the package in {prefix}/node_modules/@myorg/package. See scope for more details.
If you wish to require() a package, then install it locally.
You can get your {prefix}
with npm config get prefix
. (Useful when you installed node with nvm).
Windows 10: When I ran npm prefix -g
, I noticed that the install location was inside of the git shell's path that I used to install. Even when that location was added to the path, the command from the globally installed package would not be recognized. Fixed by:
- running
npm config edit
- changing the prefix to 'C:\Users\username\AppData\Roaming\npm'
- adding that path to the system path variable
- reinstalling the package with -g.
For Windows 7, 8 and 10 -
%USERPROFILE%\AppData\Roaming\npm\node_modules
Note:
If you are somewhere in folder type cd ..
until you are in C:
directory. Then, type cd %USERPROFILE%\AppData\Roaming\npm\node_modules
. Then, magically, %USERPROFILE%
will change into Users\YourUserProfile\
.
I just wanted to clarify on ideas referred by Decko
in the first response. npm list -g
will list all the bits you have globally installed. If you need to find your project related npm package
then cd 'your angular project xyz'
, then run npm list
. It will show list of modules in npm package
. It will also give you list of dependencies
missing, and you may require to effectively run that project.
-
Note that if have a fresh install of npm on a Windows system (not sure about linux), npm won't actually make the %USERPROFILE%\AppData\Roaming\npm\node_modules folder until you install a global package for the first time– GeordieCommented Dec 21, 2023 at 22:05
Btw, npm will look for node_modules in parent folders (up to very root) if can not find in local.
If you're trying to access your global dir from code, you can backtrack from process.execPath
. For example, to find wsproxy
, which is in {NODE_GLOBAL_DIR}/bin/wsproxy
, you can just:
path.join(path.dirname(process.execPath), 'wsproxy')
There's also how the npm
cli works @ ec9fcc1
/lib/npm.js#L254 with:
path.resolve(process.execPath, '..', '..')
See also ec9fcc1
/lib/install.js#L521:
var globalPackage = path.resolve(npm.globalPrefix,
'lib', 'node_modules', moduleName(pkg))
Where globalPrefix
has a default set in ec9fcc1
/lib/config/defaults.js#L92-L105 of:
if (process.env.PREFIX) {
globalPrefix = process.env.PREFIX
} else if (process.platform === 'win32') {
// c:\node\node.exe --> prefix=c:\node\
globalPrefix = path.dirname(process.execPath)
} else {
// /usr/local/bin/node --> prefix=/usr/local
globalPrefix = path.dirname(path.dirname(process.execPath))
// destdir only is respected on Unix
if (process.env.DESTDIR) {
globalPrefix = path.join(process.env.DESTDIR, globalPrefix)
}
}
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How should this work? For instance the Node binary is at
/usr/bin/node
, but obviously (since this is the bin) modules are not there; instead they are at/usr/lib/node_modules
. Commented Sep 8, 2019 at 3:49 -
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Now this is a different story; you bring in the platform (good) and the respective env variables (despite not mentioning what important functions such as moduleName are doing, but I guess the average reader will be able to infer). Thanks for the modification / correction! Commented Sep 14, 2019 at 6:21
If you have Visual Studio installed, you will find it comes with its own copy of node separate from the one that is on the path when you installed node yourself - Mine is in C:\Program Files (x86)\Microsoft Visual Studio\2019\Community\MSBuild\Microsoft\VisualStudio\NodeJs.
If you run the npm command from inside this directory you will find out which node modules are installed inside visual studio.
$HOME/.npm-global/lib/node_modules
-g
option will install a module to you working directory e.g. if you make a directory say~/Desktop/tmp
thencd ~/Desktop/tmp
then donpm install appium
then dols
you will seenode_modules package-lock.json
because you have installed a node moduleappium
to yourworking directory
... super confusing because-g
should essentially be thedefault
but is not.npm config get prefix
(stackoverflow.com/a/32159233/2361131)$HOME/.nvm/versions/node/v15.9.0/lib
where the directory will change depending on what version of node you are using. See github.com/nvm-sh/nvm/blob/master/README.md for more info on nvm. I found this directory withnpm list -g | head -1
as stated in the selected answer.