If I have a package.json file defined in my application root and run npm install -g
it will install all the dependencies defined in package.json, globablly.
However, this doesn't seem to work in reverse.
If I do npm uninstall -g
in my application root it throws an error, expceting me to pass it a package name.
Shouldn't this also uninstall the same packages I installed?
Am I doing something wrong?
If using Bash, just switch into the folder that has your package.json file and run the following:
for package in `ls node_modules`; do npm uninstall $package; done;
In the case of globally-installed packages, switch into your %appdata%/npm
folder (if on Windows) and run the same command.
EDIT: This command breaks with npm 3.3.6 (Node 5.0). I'm now using the following Bash command, which I've mapped to npm_uninstall_all in my .bashrc file:
npm uninstall `ls -1 node_modules | tr '/\n' ' '`
Added bonus? it's way faster!
https://github.com/npm/npm/issues/10187
This worked for me:
command prompt or gitbash into the node_modules folder in your project then execute:
npm uninstall *
Removed all of the local packages for that project.
For windows go to node_modules dir and run this in powershell
npm uninstall (Get-ChildItem).Name
I recently found a node command that allows uninstalling all the development dependencies as follows:
npm prune --production
As I mentioned, this command only uninstalls the development dependency packages. At least it helped me not to have to do it manually.
Tip for Windows users: Run this PowerShell command from within node_modules
parent directory:
ls .\node_modules | % {npm uninstall $_}
// forcibly remove and reinstall all package dependencies
ren package.json package.json-bak
echo {} > package.json
npm prune
del package.json
ren package.json-bak package.json
npm i
This essentially creates a fake, empty package.json, calls npm prune
to remove everything in node_modules, restores the original package.json and re-installs everything.
Some of the other solutions might be more elegant, but I suspect this is faster and exhaustive. On other threads I've seen people suggest just deleting the node_modules directory, but at least for windows, this causes npm to choke afterward because the bin directory goes missing. Maybe on linux it gets restored properly, but not windows.
Actually there is no option to do that, if you want to uninstall packages from package.json
simply do npm ls
on the same directory that package.json
relies and use npm uninstall <name>
or npm rm <name>
for the package you want to remove.
Another SIMPLE option is to delete the node_modules and package-lock.json
rm -rf node_modules
rm -rf package-lock.json
After this you can try reinstalling the npm packages
First, remove all packages from dependencies
and devDependencies
in package.json
Second, run npm install
That simple.
remove unwanted dependencies from package.json npm i
"npm i
" will not only install missing deps, it updates node_modules to match the package.json
Powershell users: foreach($package in ls node_modules){npm uninstall $package}
Thanks @JustMailer
(Don't replicate these steps till you read everything)
For me all mentioned solutions didn't work. Soo I went to /usr/lib
and run there
for package in `ls node_modules`; do sudo npm uninstall $package; done;
But it also removed the npm
package and only half of the packages (till it reached letter n).
So I tried to install node again by the node guide.
# Using Ubuntu
curl -sL https://deb.nodesource.com/setup_12.x | sudo -E bash -
sudo apt-get install -y nodejs
But it didn't install npm
again.
So I decided to reinstall whole node sudo apt-get remove nodejs
And again install by the guide above.
Now is NPM again working but the global modules are still there. So I checked the content of the directory /usr/lib/node_modules
and seems the only important here is npm
. So I edited the command above to uninstall everything except npm
for package in $(ls node_modules); do if [ "$package" != "npm" ]; then sudo npm uninstall $package; fi; done;
It removed all modules what were not prefixed @
. Soo I extended the loop for subdirectories.
for package in $(ls node_modules); do if [ ${package:0:1} = \@ ]; then
for innerPackage in $(ls node_modules/${package}); do
sudo npm uninstall "$package/$innerPackage";
done;
fi; done;
My /usr/lib/node_modules
now contains only npm
and linked packages.
Even you don't need to run the loop for that.
You can delete all the node_modules by using the only single command:-
npm uninstall `ls -1 node_modules | tr '/\n' ' '`
Piggy-backing off of VIKAS KOHLI and jedmao, you can do this
single line version:
npm uninstall `ls -1 node_modules | grep -v ^@ | tr '/\n' ' '` `find node_modules/@* -type d -depth 1 2>/dev/null | cut -d/ -f2-3 | tr '\n' ' '`
multi-lined version:
npm uninstall \
`ls -1 node_modules | grep -v ^@ | tr '/\n' ' '` \
`find node_modules/@* -type d -depth 1 2>/dev/null | cut -d/ -f2-3 | tr '\n' ' '`
Since this is still the first result on the Googler when searching how to remove all modules in NPM, I figured I'd share a small script for Powershell to remove all dependencies through NPM:
#Create a Packages Array to add package names to
$Packages = New-Object System.Collections.ArrayList
#Get all Production Dependencies by name
(Get-Content .\Package.json | ConvertFrom-JSON).dependencies.psobject.properties.name |
ForEach-Object { $Packages.Add($_) | Out-Null }
#Get all Dev Dependencies by name
(Get-Content .\Package.json | ConvertFrom-JSON).devDependencies.psobject.properties.name |
ForEach-Object { $Packages.Add($_) | Out-Null }
#Remove each package individually
Foreach($Package in ($Packages | select -unique))
{ npm uninstall $Package }
#Clean up any remaining packages
$Modules = Get-ChildItem "node_modules"
if($Modules)
{ $Modules | ForEach-Object { Remove-Item ".\node_modules\$_" -Force -Recurse } }
This runs a more specific removal, rather than removing each module from node_modules individually.
Success story sharing
npm uninstall <package>
for each folder. I did this myself and it works excellently!npm uninstall
takes care of that, which is why this trick is useful.foreach($package in ls node_modules){npm uninstall $package}
tr is not recognized