Run any command on specific Node.js versions.
Unlike nvm exec
it:
- can run multiple Node.js versions at once
- can be run programmatically
- is much faster
- does not need a separate installation step for each Node version
- can run the major release's latest minor/patch version automatically
- works on Windows. No need to run as Administrator.
- does not require Bash
- is installed as a Node module (as opposed to a
Bash installation script
downloaded with
curl
)
nve
executes a single file or command. It does not change the node
nor
npm
global binaries. To run a specific Node.js version for an entire project
or shell session, please use nvm
,
nvm-windows
,
n
or nvs
instead.
Please reach out if you're looking for a Node.js API or CLI engineer (11 years of experience). Most recently I have been Netlify Build's and Netlify Plugins' technical lead for 2.5 years. I am available for full-time remote positions.
# Same as `node` but with Node 12
$ nve 12 node
Welcome to Node.js v12.22.12.
Type ".help" for more information.
> .exit
# Same as `node file.js` but with Node 8
$ nve 8 node file.js
# Any command can be used
$ nve 12 npm test
# Execute a local binary
$ nve 8 ava
# Run a specific version
$ nve 8.10.0 npm test
# Use a version range
$ nve "<8" npm test
# Run the latest Node.js version
$ nve latest npm test
# Run the latest LTS version
$ nve lts npm test
# Run the Node version from `~/.nvmrc` or the current process version
$ nve global npm test
# Run the current directory's Node.js version using its `.nvmrc` or `package.json` (`engines.node` field)
$ nve local npm test
# Run the Node version using a file like `.nvmrc` or `package.json`
$ nve /path/to/.nvmrc npm test
# Use a different mirror for the Node binaries
$ nve --mirror=https://npmmirror.com/mirrors/node 8 npm test
# Do not use the cached list of available Node.js versions
$ nve --fetch 8 npm test
# Always use the cached list of available Node.js versions even if it's more
# than one hour old
$ nve --no-fetch 8 npm test
# Use a different CPU architecture for the Node binaries
$ nve --arch=x32 8 npm test
# Chaining commands
$ nve 8 npm run build && nve 8 npm test
# Cache Node 8 download
$ nve 8 node --version
# Run multiple versions
$ nve 12,10,8 npm test
⬢ Node 12.22.12
105 tests passed
Finished 'test' after 3.8 s
⬢ Node 10.24.1
105 tests passed
Finished 'test' after 4.2 s
⬢ Node 8.17.0
105 tests passed
Finished 'test' after 4.5 s
# Do not abort on the first version that fails
$ nve --continue 12,10,8 npm test
# Run all versions in parallel
$ nve --parallel 12,10,8 npm test
# Cache multiple Node downloads
$ nve 12,10,8 node --version
# Prints latest Node.js version
$ nve latest
20.4.0
# Prints latest Node.js 8 version
$ nve 8
8.17.0
# Prints latest Node.js 12, 10 and 8 versions
$ nve 12,10,8
12.22.12
10.24.1
8.17.0
You can try this library:
- either directly in your browser.
- or by executing the
examples
files in a terminal.
npm install -g nve
node >=18.18.0
must be globally installed. However the command run by nve
can use any Node version (providing it is compatible with it).
To use this programmatically (from Node.js) instead, please check
nvexeca
.
nve [OPTIONS...] VERSION,... [COMMAND] [ARGS...]
This is exactly the same as:
COMMAND [ARGS...]
But using a specific Node VERSION
. Several comma-separated VERSION
can be
specified at once.
VERSION
can be:
- any version range such as
12
,12.6.0
or<12
-
latest
: Latest available Node version -
lts
: Latest LTS Node version -
global
: Global Node version- Using the home directory
.nvmrc
orpackage.json
(engines.node
field) - Some similar files used by other Node.js version managers are also searched for
- If nothing is found, defaults to the current process's Node version
- Using the home directory
-
local
: Current directory's Node version- Using the current directory or parent directories
.nvmrc
,package.json
(engines.node
field) or similar files - Defaults to the
global
version
- Using the current directory or parent directories
- a file path towards a
.nvmrc
,package.json
(engines.node
field) or similar files
COMMAND
must be compatible with the specific Node VERSION
. For example npm
is only compatible with Node >=6
.
Both global and local binaries can be executed.
Alias: -c
Type: boolean
Default: false
By default, when running multiple Node versions and one of those versions fails, the others are aborted. This option disables this.
Alias: -p
Type: boolean
Default: false
When running multiple Node versions, run all of them at the same time. This is faster. However this does not work if the command:
- requires some interactive CLI input (for example using a prompt)
- is not concurrency-safe
Type: boolean
Default: true
Whether to show a progress bar while the Node binary is downloading.
Alias: -m
Type: string
Default: https://nodejs.org/dist
Base URL to retrieve Node binaries. Can be overridden (for example
https://npmmirror.com/mirrors/node
).
The following environment variables can also be used: NODE_MIRROR
,
NVM_NODEJS_ORG_MIRROR
, N_NODE_MIRROR
or NODIST_NODE_MIRROR
.
Alias: -f
Type: boolean
Default: undefined
The list of available Node.js versions is cached for one hour by default. With:
-
--fetch
: the cache will not be used -
--no-fetch
: the cache will be used even if it's older than one hour
The default value is undefined
(neither of the above). When no COMMAND
is
specified (only printing the Node.js version), the default value is --fetch
instead.
Alias: -a
Type: string
Default: process.arch
Node.js binary's CPU architecture. This is useful for example when you're on x64 but would like to run Node.js x32.
All the values from
process.arch
are
allowed except mips
and mipsel
.
The first time nve
is run with a new VERSION
, the Node binary is downloaded
under the hood. This initially takes few seconds. However subsequent runs are
almost instantaneous.
COMMAND
can be omitted in order to cache that initial download without
executing any commands.
nve
is meant for one-off command execution. Examples include:
- running tests with an older Node.js version
- checking if an older Node.js version supports a specific syntax or feature
- benchmarking different Node.js versions
- programmatic usage or child processes
Tools like nvm
,
nvm-windows
,
n
or nvs
are
meant to execute a specific Node.js version for an entire machine, project or
shell session.
nve
can (and probably should) be used alongside those tools.
If your code is using native modules, nve
works providing:
- they are built with N-API
- the target Node.js version is
>=8.12.0
(since N-API was not available or stable before that)
Otherwise the following error message is shown:
Error: The module was compiled against a different Node.js version
.
The following benchmarks compare the average time to run
nve
, nvm exec
and
npx node
:
nve: 295ms
nvm exec: 741ms
npx node: 1058ms
-
nvexeca
: Likenve
but programmatic (from Node.js) -
execa
: Process execution for humans -
get-node
: Download Node.js -
preferred-node-version
: Get the preferred Node.js version of a project or user -
node-version-alias
: Resolve Node.js version aliases likelatest
,lts
orerbium
-
normalize-node-version
: Normalize and validate Node.js versions -
all-node-versions
: List all available Node.js versions -
fetch-node-website
: Fetch releases on nodejs.org -
global-cache-dir
: Get the global cache directory
For any question, don't hesitate to submit an issue on GitHub.
Everyone is welcome regardless of personal background. We enforce a Code of conduct in order to promote a positive and inclusive environment.
This project was made with ❤️. The simplest way to give back is by starring and sharing it online.
If the documentation is unclear or has a typo, please click on the page's Edit
button (pencil icon) and suggest a correction.
If you would like to help us fix a bug or add a new feature, please check our guidelines. Pull requests are welcome!
Thanks go to our wonderful contributors:
ehmicky 💻 🎨 🤔 📖 |
Scott Warren 💬 |
Charlike Mike Reagent 💬 🤔 |
Hongarc 🤔 |
Pedro Augusto de Paula Barbosa 🐛 |
Adrien Becchis 💻 |
Eric Cornelissen 🐛 🤔 |