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<h1 align="center">
Fast Node Manager (<code>fnm</code>)
<img alt="Amount of downloads" src="https://img.shields.io/github/downloads/Schniz/fnm/total.svg?style=flat" />
<a href="https://github.com/Schniz/fnm/actions"><img src="https://img.shields.io/github/workflow/status/Schniz/fnm/Rust/master?label=workflow" alt="GitHub Actions workflow status" /></a>
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</h1>
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> :rocket: Fast and simple Node.js version manager, built in Rust
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<div align="center">
<img src="./docs/fnm.svg" alt="Blazing fast!">
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</div>
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## Features
:earth_americas: Cross-platform support (macOS, Windows, Linux)
:sparkles: Single file, easy installation, instant startup
:rocket: Built with speed in mind
:thinking: Works with `.node-version` and `.nvmrc` files
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## Installation
### Using a script (macOS/Linux)
For `bash`, `zsh` and `fish` shells, there's an [automatic installation script](./.ci/install.sh):
```sh
curl -fsSL https://fnm.vercel.app/install | bash
```
#### Upgrade
On macOS, it is as simple as `brew upgrade fnm`.
On other operating systems, upgrading `fnm` is almost the same as installing it. To prevent duplication in your shell config file add `--skip-shell` to install command.
Parameterize the install script for relative install of fnm (#48) What are your thoughts on parameterizing the install script for local install? I know this seems weird but it means that I don't have to rely on developers having any tools already installed except bash and some way to edit the files. Here is an actual example script setup I would use. Here is an example local install script `installLocal.sh` ```bash #!/usr/bin/env bash DESIRED_NODE_VERSION=v$(cat package.json | grep -Ei "\"node\"" | grep -Eoi "[0-9]+\.[0-9]+\.[0-9]+") export FNM_DIR="$(pwd)/.fnm" if [ ! -d "$FNM_DIR" ]; then curl 'https://raw.githubusercontent.com/Schniz/fnm/master/.ci/install.sh' | INSTALL_DIR=`pwd` bash fi set -e NODE_DIR="$FNM_DIR/node-versions/$DESIRED_NODE_VERSION/installation/bin" export PATH=$FNM_DIR:$NODE_DIR:$PATH #TODO: support fish eval `fnm env --multi` if [ ! -f "$NODE_DIR/node" ]; then fnm install $DESIRED_NODE_VERSION fi sumOfPackageJson() { cat package.json | md5sum | cut -d' ' -f1 } if [ ! -f ".packageRevision" ] || [ "$(cat .packageRevision)" != "$(sumOfPackageJson)" ]; then sumOfPackageJson > .packageRevision npm install fi ``` then in script called `nodew` ```bash #!/usr/bin/env bash cd "$( dirname "${BASH_SOURCE[0]}" )" source ./installLocal.sh node "$@" ``` and `npmw` ```bash #!/usr/bin/env bash cd "$( dirname "${BASH_SOURCE[0]}" )" source ./installLocal.sh npm "$@" ``` and for completeness sake I usually go one step further and do an `appw` ```bash #!/usr/bin/env bash cd "$( dirname "${BASH_SOURCE[0]}" )" source ./installLocal.sh node ./app/index.js "$@" ```
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#### Parameters
`--install-dir`
Set a custom directory for fnm to be installed. The default is `$HOME/.fnm`.
`--skip-shell`
Skip appending shell specific loader to shell config file, based on the current user shell, defined in `$SHELL`. e.g. for Bash, `$HOME/.bashrc`. `$HOME/.zshrc` for Zsh. For Fish - `$HOME/.config/fish/conf.d/fnm.fish`
Parameterize the install script for relative install of fnm (#48) What are your thoughts on parameterizing the install script for local install? I know this seems weird but it means that I don't have to rely on developers having any tools already installed except bash and some way to edit the files. Here is an actual example script setup I would use. Here is an example local install script `installLocal.sh` ```bash #!/usr/bin/env bash DESIRED_NODE_VERSION=v$(cat package.json | grep -Ei "\"node\"" | grep -Eoi "[0-9]+\.[0-9]+\.[0-9]+") export FNM_DIR="$(pwd)/.fnm" if [ ! -d "$FNM_DIR" ]; then curl 'https://raw.githubusercontent.com/Schniz/fnm/master/.ci/install.sh' | INSTALL_DIR=`pwd` bash fi set -e NODE_DIR="$FNM_DIR/node-versions/$DESIRED_NODE_VERSION/installation/bin" export PATH=$FNM_DIR:$NODE_DIR:$PATH #TODO: support fish eval `fnm env --multi` if [ ! -f "$NODE_DIR/node" ]; then fnm install $DESIRED_NODE_VERSION fi sumOfPackageJson() { cat package.json | md5sum | cut -d' ' -f1 } if [ ! -f ".packageRevision" ] || [ "$(cat .packageRevision)" != "$(sumOfPackageJson)" ]; then sumOfPackageJson > .packageRevision npm install fi ``` then in script called `nodew` ```bash #!/usr/bin/env bash cd "$( dirname "${BASH_SOURCE[0]}" )" source ./installLocal.sh node "$@" ``` and `npmw` ```bash #!/usr/bin/env bash cd "$( dirname "${BASH_SOURCE[0]}" )" source ./installLocal.sh npm "$@" ``` and for completeness sake I usually go one step further and do an `appw` ```bash #!/usr/bin/env bash cd "$( dirname "${BASH_SOURCE[0]}" )" source ./installLocal.sh node ./app/index.js "$@" ```
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`--force-install`
macOS installations using the installation script are deprecated in favor of the Homebrew formula, but this forces the script to install using it anyway.
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Example:
```sh
curl -fsSL https://fnm.vercel.app/install | bash -s -- --install-dir "./.fnm" --skip-shell
Parameterize the install script for relative install of fnm (#48) What are your thoughts on parameterizing the install script for local install? I know this seems weird but it means that I don't have to rely on developers having any tools already installed except bash and some way to edit the files. Here is an actual example script setup I would use. Here is an example local install script `installLocal.sh` ```bash #!/usr/bin/env bash DESIRED_NODE_VERSION=v$(cat package.json | grep -Ei "\"node\"" | grep -Eoi "[0-9]+\.[0-9]+\.[0-9]+") export FNM_DIR="$(pwd)/.fnm" if [ ! -d "$FNM_DIR" ]; then curl 'https://raw.githubusercontent.com/Schniz/fnm/master/.ci/install.sh' | INSTALL_DIR=`pwd` bash fi set -e NODE_DIR="$FNM_DIR/node-versions/$DESIRED_NODE_VERSION/installation/bin" export PATH=$FNM_DIR:$NODE_DIR:$PATH #TODO: support fish eval `fnm env --multi` if [ ! -f "$NODE_DIR/node" ]; then fnm install $DESIRED_NODE_VERSION fi sumOfPackageJson() { cat package.json | md5sum | cut -d' ' -f1 } if [ ! -f ".packageRevision" ] || [ "$(cat .packageRevision)" != "$(sumOfPackageJson)" ]; then sumOfPackageJson > .packageRevision npm install fi ``` then in script called `nodew` ```bash #!/usr/bin/env bash cd "$( dirname "${BASH_SOURCE[0]}" )" source ./installLocal.sh node "$@" ``` and `npmw` ```bash #!/usr/bin/env bash cd "$( dirname "${BASH_SOURCE[0]}" )" source ./installLocal.sh npm "$@" ``` and for completeness sake I usually go one step further and do an `appw` ```bash #!/usr/bin/env bash cd "$( dirname "${BASH_SOURCE[0]}" )" source ./installLocal.sh node ./app/index.js "$@" ```
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```
### Manually
#### Using Homebrew (macOS/Linux)
```sh
brew install fnm
```
Then, [set up your shell for fnm](#shell-setup)
#### Using Scoop (Windows)
```sh
scoop install fnm
```
Then, [set up your shell for fnm](#shell-setup)
#### Using Cargo (Linux/macOS/Windows)
```sh
cargo install fnm
```
Then, [set up your shell for fnm](#shell-setup)
#### Using a release binary (Linux/macOS/Windows)
- Download the [latest release binary](https://github.com/Schniz/fnm/releases) for your system
- Make it available globally on `PATH` environment variable
- Configure your shell profile:
## Completions
fnm ships its completions with the binary:
```sh
fnm completions --shell <SHELL>
```
Where `<SHELL>` can be one of the supported shells:
- `bash`
- `zsh`
- `fish`
- `powershell`
Please follow your shell instructions to install them.
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### Shell Setup
fnm needs to run some shell commands before you can start using it.
This is done by evaluating the output of `fnm env`. Check out the following guides for the shell you use:
#### Bash
add the following to your `.bashrc` profile:
```bash
eval "$(fnm env)"
```
#### Zsh
add the following to your `.zshrc` profile:
```zsh
eval "$(fnm env)"
```
#### Fish shell
create `~/.config/fish/conf.d/fnm.fish` add this line to it:
```fish
fnm env | source
```
#### PowerShell
add the following to the end of your profile file::
```powershell
fnm env --use-on-cd | Out-String | Invoke-Expression
```
- On Windows, the profile is located at `~\Documents\PowerShell\Microsoft.PowerShell_profile.ps1`
- For macOS/Linux, the profile is located at `~/.config/powershell/Microsoft.PowerShell_profile.ps1`
#### Windows Command Prompt aka Batch aka WinCMD
fnm is also supported but is not entirely covered. [You can set up a startup script](https://superuser.com/a/144348) and append the following line:
```batch
FOR /f "tokens=*" %i IN ('fnm env --use-on-cd') DO CALL %i
```
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## Usage
### Global Options
```sh
fnm [--shell=fish|bash|zsh] [--node-dist-mirror=URI] [--fnm-dir=DIR] [--log-level=quiet|error|info] <command>
```
- Providing `--shell=fish` will output the Fish-compliant version. Omitting it and `fnm` will try to infer the current shell based on the process tree
- Providing `--node-dist-mirror="https://npm.taobao.org/dist"` will use the Chinese mirror of Node.js
- Providing `--fnm-dir="/tmp/fnm"` will install and use versions in `/tmp/fnm` directory
You can always use `fnm --help` to read the docs:
### `fnm install [VERSION]`
Installs `[VERSION]`. If no version provided, it will install the version specified in the `.node-version` or `.nvmrc` files located in the current working directory.
### `fnm install --lts`
Installs the latest LTS version of Node
### `fnm use [VERSION]`
Activates `[VERSION]` as the current Node version. If no version provided, it will activate the version specified in the `.node-version` or `.nvmrc` file located in the current working directory.
#### Flags
- `--install-if-missing` — installs the version if it isn't installed yet
### `fnm current`
Display currently activated Node version.
### `fnm list`
Lists the installed Node versions.
### `fnm list-remote`
Lists the Node versions available to download remotely.
### `fnm uninstall [VERSION]`
Uninstalls the node version specified in `[VERSION]`.
### `fnm alias [VERSION] [NAME]`
Aliases a Node version to a given name.
### `fnm default [VERSION]`
Aliases a Node version as default. Uses `fnm alias` underneath.
### `fnm env`
Prints the required shell commands in order to configure your shell, Bash compliant if can't infer the shell. This command is highly influenced by [the global options](#global-options)
#### Options:
- `--use-on-cd` will also output a script that will automatically change the node version if a `.node-version`/`.nvmrc` file is found
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## Contributing
PRs welcome :tada:
### Developing:
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```sh
# Install Rust
git clone https://github.com/Schniz/fnm.git
cd fnm/
cargo build
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```
### Running Binary:
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```sh
cargo run -- --help # Will behave like `fnm --help`
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```
### Running Tests:
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```sh
cargo test
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```