Installs NVM & Node.js on Debian/Ubuntu, RHEL/CentOS systems, and others *nix systems
Ansible weirdness with SSH and (non)interactive shells makes working with NVM and Ansible a bit problematic. This stack overflow post explains some of the things other people have done to get around this particular issue.
Other Ansible roles that install NVM and/or Node.js fall short in a few areas.
-
They use the apt-get or yum packages managers to install Node.js. This often means that the Node.js package is older than what is currently available via the Node.js repo. In some cases, those packages may not be a LTS release and if you need multiple Node.js versions running on the same host, you're out of luck.
-
They will often install NVM and Node.js as
root
user (sudo su
orbecome: true
). This can add to the headache of permissions related to NPM plugin management as well as how Node functions with nvm in addition to being an unneeded privilege escalation security risk -
You cannot run ad hoc nvm, npm, node, bash or shell commands
- You can install NVM via wget, curl or git
- You can use NVM just like you would via your command line in your own Ansible tasks and playbooks
- You can install whatever version or versions of Node.js you want
- Doesn't install NVM or Node.js as root
- Can run arbitrary nvm, npm, node, bash or shell commands potentially eliminating the need for a separate Node Ansible role all together
Ansible version (ansible-core) 2.16.0 +
🚩 For a version of this role that works on older versions of Ansible see the legacy 1.5.X branch
- Clone this repo into your roles folder
- Point the
roles_path
variable to the roles folder i.e.roles_path = ../ansible-roles/
in youransible.cfg
file - Include role in your playbook
DO NOT RUN THIS ROLE AS ROOT! (e.g. become: true|yes|1
)
There are a few reasons for this,
-
It is an unneeded privilege escalation security risk, it is highly unlikely that you need to run every task in every role as
root_user
. If, for whatever reason, you do need to run everything asroot_user
, reconsider what the role is doing and why it needs root access for everything. -
This role installs nvm in the same context/shell/session as you would run NodeJS. You don't run NodeJS as
root
-
Ansible will change the context of the login shell to
root
and nvm will be installed in theroot_user
home directory e.g/root/.bashrc
. This means if your primary user is vagrant, ec2-user, ubuntu etc. the role WILL NOT WORK AS EXPECTED!
BAD 👎
- hosts: all
become: true # THIS RUNS ALL TASKS, FOR ALL HOSTS, AS ROOT_USER
become_method: sudo # THIS RUNS ALL TASKS, FOR ALL HOSTS, AS ROOT_USER
roles:
- role: ansible-role-nvm
nodejs_version: "8.16.0"
nvm_commands:
- "nvm exec default npm install"
- role: some-other-role
...
BETTER 👍
- hosts: all
roles:
- role: ansible-role-nvm
nodejs_version: "8.16.0"
nvm_commands:
- "nvm exec default npm install"
- role: some-other-role
...
become: true # THIS SCOPES ALL TASKS, ONLY FOR THE SOME-OTHER-ROLE, AS ROOT_USER
become_method: sudo # THIS SCOPES ALL TASKS, ONLY FOR THE SOME-OTHER-ROLE, AS ROOT_USER
BEST 🤘
- hosts: all
roles:
- role: ansible-role-nvm
nodejs_version: "8.16.0"
nvm_commands:
- "nvm exec default npm install"
become: true # THIS WILL CHANGE THE LOGIN CONTEXT TO USE THE USER BELOW
become_user: ec2-user # THIS INSTALLS NVM IN THE CONTEXT OF THE EC2-USER/DEFAULT USER. THIS USER MUST EXIST ON THE SYSTEM!
- role: some-other-role
...
become: true # THIS SCOPES ALL TASKS, ONLY FOR THE SOME-OTHER-ROLE, AS ROOT_USER
become_method: sudo # THIS SCOPES ALL TASKS, ONLY FOR THE SOME-OTHER-ROLE, AS ROOT_USER
See Issues below for further details
Include the role as is and it will install latest LTS version of Node.js
- hosts: all
roles:
- role: ansible-role-nvm
Include the role and specify the specific version of Node.js you want to install
- hosts: all
roles:
- role: ansible-role-nvm
nodejs_version: "8.15.0"
This example shows how you might set up multiple environments (Dev/Prod) with different options. The Prod setup takes advantage of the nvm_commands
option to install, build and run the application. The role supports and takes advantage of Ansible variable syntax e.g. {{ variable_name }}
.
- hosts: dev
vars_files:
- vars/dev.yml
roles:
- role: ansible-role-nvm
nodejs_version: "{{ config.dev.nodejs.version }}"
- hosts: prod
vars_files:
- vars/prod.yml
roles:
- role: ansible-role-nvm
nvm_install: "curl"
nvm_dir: "/usr/local/nvm"
nvm_commands:
- "nvm install {{ config.prod.client-1.nodejs.version }}"
- "nvm alias default {{ config.prod.client-1.nodejs.version }}"
- "nvm exec default npm install"
- "nvm exec default npm run prod"
By default, the first Node.js version instantiated in your Playbook will automatically be aliased as the "default" version regardless of whatever version you install afterwards or how many times you run the role. It is important to declare which version is expected to be the "default" version is you are install multiple versions on Node.js on a single machine.
There are two pre-existing NVM aliases default
(current "active" version of Node.js) and system
(the base OS version of Node.js).
Aliasing is a very powerful feature of NVM and it is a recommended best practice for managing your environment.
- hosts: host-1
roles:
# Services
- role: ansible-role-nvm
nodejs_version: "8.15.0" # <= This will be the "default" version of Node.js
# Application
- role: ansible-role-nvm
nodejs_version: "10.15.0"
- hosts: host-2
roles:
# Services
- role: ansible-role-nvm
nodejs_version: "8.15.0"
# Application
- role: ansible-role-nvm
default: true
nodejs_version: "10.15.0" # <= This is now the "default" version of Node.js
NVM commands are a very powerful feature of this role which takes advantage of the groundwork NVM has set up. Leveraging nvm_commands
could potentially eliminate the need for a specific Node role to manage your Node applications altogether.
There is a difference between nvm run
and nvm exec
commands. nvm run
is functionally equivalent to node server.js
or node server
where you are invoking a JavaScript file
nvm exec
executes in a sub process context and is functionally equivalent to npm run server
where server
is a key name in the scripts section in the package.json
file
{
"name": "my_application",
"version": "0.1.0",
"private": true,
"scripts": {
"preserver": "npm run dbService &",
"server": "nodemon ./bin/www",
"build": "node build/build.js",
"dbService": "nodemon ./data-service/server.js --ignore node_modules/"
},
"dependencies": {
"..."
}
}
OR
nvm exec
can execute some arbitrary script file .e.g. nvm exec hello-world.py
e.g hello-world.py
#!/usr/bin/env python
print('hello-world')
OR
run some arbitrary bash command
ls -al >> output.txt
nvm_commands
make it very easy to set up a Node Application and Node API layer running on different version of Node.js on the same host
- hosts: host-1
roles:
# Services
# WHAT'S HAPPENING?
# 1. Run the services JavaScript file with Node version 8.15.0
# WARNING: This is aliased as the default version of Node.js At this point !!
# Therefore We need to explicitly specify the version we're using because
# the default Node.js version changes in Application section below
- role: ansible-role-nvm
nodejs_version: "8.15.0"
nvm_commands:
- "nvm exec 8.15.0 npm run services"
# Application
# WHAT'S HAPPENING?
# 1. Set the default version of Node.js to version 10.15.0
# 2. Install package dependencies with npm
# 3. Set the environment to Production, run the build JavaScript file
# 4. Then run the production deploy script
- role: ansible-role-nvm
nodejs_version: "10.15.0"
nvm_commands:
- "nvm alias webapp {{ nodejs_version }}" # <= Changes the default NVM version (supports Ansible variable syntax)
- "nvm exec webapp npm install" # install app dependences
- "NODE_ENV=production nvm run webapp build" # invoke Node.js directly to run the production build script
- "nvm exec webapp npm run prod" # invoke npm to run the production script in your package.json file
Another example
- hosts: host-2
roles:
# Services
# WHAT'S HAPPENING?
# 1. Create an Alias for version 8.15.0 entitled service-default (Supports Ansible variable syntax)
# 2. Run the services script
#
# ** It is recommended that you alias your Node.js versions and reference them accordingly **
- role: ansible-role-nvm
nodejs_version: "8.15.0"
nvm_commands:
- "nvm alias service-default {{ nodejs_version }}" # <= (Supports Ansible variable syntax)
- "nvm exec service-default npm run services" # run the services script in your package.json file
# Application - No separate Node.js Ansible Role Needed
# WHAT'S HAPPENING?
# 1. Install version 10.15.0 of Node.js
# 1. Set the default version of Node.js to version 10.15.0
# 2. Run the test.js script file invoking Node.js directly
# 3. Then run the production deploy bash script
- role: ansible-role-nvm
nodejs_version: "10.15.0"
nvm_commands:
- "nvm alias default 10.15.0" # <= Changes the default NVM version
- "nvm exec default node test.js" # invoke Node.js directly to run the test script
- "nvm exec ./deploy.sh" # run an arbitrary bash script
Whatever command line arguments you use to start your application, or command scripts you've declared in your package.json file can be placed inside the nvm_commands: []
section of this role.
- hosts: host1
pre_tasks:
# test-user needs to be a real user on the system before we can install nvm in their profile
- name: add new user
user:
name: "test-user"
become: true
roles:
- role: ansible-role-nvm
nodejs_version: "8.16.0"
nvm_profile: "/home/test-user/.bashrc"
nvm_commands:
- "whoami"
- "node --version"
- "nvm --version"
- "npm --version"
- "python3 -m hello"
become_user: test-user
become: true
-
By default, the first version listed in your Playbook, on the first run, will automatically be aliased as the "default" version of Node.js regardless of whatever version you install afterwards or however many times you run the role. First one in/installed is always the default. As a result, if you expect a Node.js version declared later in the playbook to be set as default use
default: true
or explicitly set it in thenvm_commands
list like- "nvm alias default <YOUR_VERSION>"
-
If you have
default: true
explicitly declared as a role variable AND- "nvm alias default <SOME_OTHER_VERSION>"
as part of yournvm_commands
the version withdefault: true
will ALWAYS be executed first. This is because we need Node.js to be available before doing anything else. -
NVM is stateless in that if you have multiple versions of Node.js installed on a machine, you may have to run
nvm use <VERSION>
as part of your script to run the Node.js version you want/expect. However, it is highly recommended that you alias your versions accordingly and reference them that way. See the examples above.
This is often the result of running the role in another user context then the nvm
and node
user context will run inside the machine. If you add become: true
to all the roles in your playbook to get around errors those roles throw due to permission issues, then this role will install nvm
under the ROOT_USER
(usually /root/.bashrc
). It is more than likely that you will want to run nvm and node as a default user e.g. vagrant, ec2-user, ubuntu etc. If, for whatever reason, you cannot remove the become: true
for everything, you can get around the become: true
issue by specifying become: true
AND become_user: ec2-user
for this role alone. See bash: nvm command not found
for a detailed explanation of the issue
It is due to OS's that run Python 3 by default (e.g. Fedora). You will need to specify the Ansible python interpreter variable in the inventory file or via the command line
[fedora1]
192.168.0.1 ansible_python_interpreter=/usr/bin/python3
[fedora2]
192.168.0.2
[fedora2:vars]
ansible_python_interpreter=/usr/bin/python3
or
ansible-playbook my-playbook.yml -e "ansible_python_interpreter=/usr/bin/python3"
You are attempting to run a version of Node.js on an operating system that is not supported by the version of Node.js you are installing. This is not an NVM issue nor is it an issue with the role. You need to either upgrade the OS or downgrade the version of Node.js you are atrempting to install.
ansible-core 2.16 +
There has been a fundamental change on how Ansible manages includes/imports. Ansible has removed ansible.builtin.include
from ansible-core and replaced it with ansible.builtin.include_tasks
. Unfortunately, Ansible cannot scope ansible.builtin.include
to ignore older versions etc. so I upgraded this role to fully support ansible-core 2.16+
If you require support for ansible-core 2.15 and below, please use the ansible-role-nvm-legacy branch
ansible-core 2.15 and below
Please use the legacy 1.5.X branch
Available variables are listed below, along with default values see defaults/main.yml
The Node.js version to install. The latest "lts" version is the default and works on most supported OSes.
nodejs_version: "lts"
Convenience method for installing NVM bash autocomplete (nvm <TAB>
) when a user has to maintain a server or workstation manually
autocomplete: false
Install NVM from scratch removing ANY and ALL existing or previous references to .nvm
(directories) and ANY and ALL existing or previous references in profile entries e.g. .bashrc
in the system.
clean_install: false
clean_install: true
greps all files in/home
/root
,/etc
, andcustom install directories
for refrences as-well-as looking for any.nvm
folder in the system. This is equivalent to a new machine setup, USE WITH CAUTION
default: false
Set default version of Node when maintaining/installing multiple versions of Node
NVM will automatically alias the first run/installed version as "default" which is more than likely what people will use this role for, however, this will allow for installation/upgrade of multiple versions on an existing machine
List of NVM commands to run. Default is an empty list.
nvm_commands: []
NVM Installation type. Options are wget, curl and git
nvm_install: "wget"
NVM Installation directory.
nvm_dir: ""
NVM will, by default, install the
.nvm
directory in the home directory of the user e.g./home/vagrant/.nvm
. You can override the installation directory by changing this variable e.g./opt/nvm
to put it into a global space (not tied to a specific user account) if you wanted. This variable will respect Ansible substitution variables e.g.{{ansible_env.HOME}}
NVM Profile location Options are .bashrc, .cshrc, .tcshrc, .zshrc
nvm_profile: ".bashrc"
The location of the login SHELL profile that will source the nvm command from. There are two potential contexts to consider:
Globally, meaning everyone who logs in will have access to nvm (which may or may not what you really want)
e.g
/etc/bash.bashrc
,/etc/profile
etc.OR
On a per user basis tied to a specific user account
e.g.
/home/vagrant/.bashrc
.*This role will create the appropriate profile file if it doesn't already exist.
If you specify nvm_profile: "/home/node-user/.bashrc" explicity and the node-user is not a real user on the box, then nvm will not work as you expect. become, become_user and nvm_profile path are symbiotic
⚠️ PLEASE BE AWARE OF THE LIMITATIONS OF EXPLICITLY DECLARING .profile OR .bash_profile FILES ON UBUNTU SYSTEMShttps://askubuntu.com/a/969923 Explains in detail
https://kb.iu.edu/d/abdy Shows options for each shell type
NVM Profile location Options are:
BASH: .bashrc
CSH: /etc/csh.cshrc, .cshrc
TSCH: /etc/csh.cshrc, .tcshrc, .cshrc
ZSH: .zshrc
NVM source location i.e. you host your own fork of NVM
nvm_source: ""
NVM version to install
nvm_version: "0.39.7"
Uninstall NVM, will remove the .nvm directory and clean up file located at the {{ nvm_profile }}
variable path (usually $HOME/.bashrc) where ever that file is located
uninstall: False
None.
2.0.0 See the RELEASE NOTES
MIT / BSD
dm00000 via MORGANGRAPHICS, INC
This role borrows heavily from Jeff Geerling's Node.js role, author of Ansible for DevOps.