I got this error when running ng serve command
C:\Mysystem\Programs\myfwms>ng serve The serve command requires to be
run in an Angular project, but a project definition could not be
found.
when i try this existing project getting this error
The above statement requires the angular project to be run in the same port where it is created. When the server has killed the system redirect the port to Localhost:4200 and localhost:8080. Therefore it faces difficulties in recoating the port:3000. Following command line can help to redirect the particular port from where it is created:
npm run serve 1
I am learning node.js in an online course to build up a web server and app
before the teaching started, the teacher told me to set up your coding environment, and it got a direction to told me what to do step by step.
Because I using Chromebook, So I started an aws ec2 serve which is ubuntu 18.04 and using cloud9 for my ide
I installed node.js successful on the ec2
And the direction told me to type on those on the terminal
git clone https://github.com/OpenClassrooms-Student-Center/5614116-front-end-app.git frontend
You can then do the following:
cd frontend
npm install
ng serve
This will install all the dependencies needed by the front end app and will launch the development server. Now, if you navigate to http://localhost:4200 , you should see the following (assuming you've followed the steps above successfully):
the direction say if I successfully followed the step, will see something on http://localhost:4200
On the terminal, at last show me
ℹ 「wdm」: Compiled successfully.
But how can I connect to http://localhost:4200 which was an ec2?
I tried using IP:4200, the browser keeps on loading the page and nothing shows up on the browser
----------------------------------------
I found out that the program that teacher gave me to install set the URL to http://localhost:4200
because cloud9 says the program was running, but running at a URL call http://localhost:4200
what should I do?
Localhost refers to your local machine. But as mentionedd that your node.js running on ec2 and want to connect to it from your browser, get the IP of the ec2 and type in your browser- IP:4200
And it should work
The only problem here is you have to add port 4200 in your aws ec2 instance security group to allow inbound traffic.
STEPS:
1. Go to your EC2 instance.
2. Click security group from Description below.
3. Click Inbound then Edit.
4. Click Add Rule
5. Select Custom TCP , Port - 4200 , IP - 0.0.0.0/0
6. Then SAVE.
After that try <EC2-IP:Port> in your browser it will work fine.
I am developing a node.js app at the moment. I plan to host in on heroku.
The catch is this app relies on a jar file, that i will have to run obviously.
Is this possible on heroku, to run java?
You'll need to add the JVM buildpack to your app:
$ heroku buildpacks:add -i 1 heroku/jvm
Then redeploy with:
$ git commit -m "Add JVM" --allow-empty
$ git push heroku master
After this, the java command will be available at runtime.
I keep on getting "? Something is already running on port 3000" message in my terminal when I start up my react server when there is absolutely nothing running on my port 3000
What I have tried to solve with:
Restart the macOS.
checking my "http://localhost:3000" on chrome browser. (Nothing: This site can’t be reached)
Go to chrome://serviceworker-internals and chrome://appcache-internals, search for localhost:3000 (Nothing found)
I also tried almost every command lines I found on Google regarding this issue
I also created another express.js app, and it was successfully launch on port 3000 while React said there is something running on 3000. React on my computer just keeping thinking there is something running on port 3000.
If you are a windows user you can try using
npx kill-port 3000
in your console. I was having the same problem and it worked for me.
Not sure about MAC.
Open cmd and write this
netstat -a -o -n
You will get list of active connections then find 3000 by hitting
Cntrl + f
Copy the PID of that port and hit this command
taskkill /F /PID PID_of_port
Edit
This guide is for windows.
Kill Node.Js process from Task Manager.
Step 1: Open Task Manager by clicking ctrl+shift+delete
Step 2: Open Prcesses tab
Step 3: Search for Node.JS process and right click on that then click on End Task
Step 4: Now you can start again.
As #khurram khan suggested terminating the process may be the best option for you, This work for me on linux:
$ lsof -i tcp:3000
$ kill -9 PID
the first command should give you the PID number to enter in the second command as PID.
I had this problem on Mac and I solved by running:
npx kill-port 3000
I had stuck with this one for few hours, and the end I had found the solution
There was incorrect mapping to the local host in the hosts file and didn't had any relation to the port taken something like
10.2.224.130 localhost
Just Change it back to
127.0.0.1 localhost
Host file locations
https://www.howtogeek.com/howto/27350/beginner-geek-how-to-edit-your-hosts-file/
In case anyone comes across this and the above solutions didn't help, make sure your /etc/hosts has:
127.0.0.1 localhost
For some reason this was wiped from my hosts file and CRA's dependency for checking ports (detect-port-alt) checks localhost:[PORT] to see if it's available. If it errors out, you'll always get the "Something is already running..." error when checking a specific port but not when using a random port (since that's picked by the dependency).
kill node.js from the background processes. that would soleve the probelem. alterntively, you could restart your system
for window use this in package.json
"start": "set PORT=3006 && react-scripts start"
for Linux and MacOS
"start": "PORT=3006 react-scripts start"
This worked for me on windows pc. This one is for those are not seeing the port when you run this command netstat -a -o -n on your command prompt.
Open your command prompt in administrator mode and run this command
net stop winnat
you'll get this response:
The Windows NAT Driver service was stopped successfully.
Them you run this next:
net start winnat
then you will get this response:
The Windows NAT Driver service was started successfully.
once you do that. Start the react server and it would work. Same too if your backend server doesn't run on 3000
It's very simple. You can fix it in 2 easy steps.
Check your environment variables if there is a key/entry with name "PORT".
If found delete that entry or rename it to something else.
It turns out that some other program is using that variable. Usually when you start react-scripts it will look for an environment variable with that title PORT.
Date: Sat 07, October 2020
Windows: Microsoft Windows 10 Pro Build 19041
Node: 12.16.1
NPM: 6.14.8
Something similar was happening to me on my Windows machine. Tried a lot of things suggested here on StackOverflow and other places.
In my case, I was following a video course that was suggesting adding --script-version 1.1.5 (as illustrated below) when creating a new React app.
create-react-app app-name --scripts-version 1.1.5
Here's the package.json scripts versions:
React: 17.0.1
React DOM: 17.0.1
React Scripts: 1.1.5
After running the command npm start and typing y to try to use a different port, the terminal will stay stucked until it was canceled.
Then I created a new React app without --scripts-version 1.1.5 and after trying to running it, it was still running into Something is already running on port 3000 but after typing y, the app will run with no problem on a different port.
Here's the package.json scripts versions (when it was running successfully):
React: 17.0.1
React-Dom: 17.0.1
React-Scripts: 4.0.0
Starting with the reason you do not see anything on localhost:3000, is because there must be a proper webapp or a website/server running on that port, but the port:3000 is currently running some process, just not of a server/site/app.
This out of the way, depending on your type of OS, it is quite easy to check if there is in-fact a process on port:3000 or not. For MacOS, opening a terminal and running sudo lsof -i ':3000' will list the current process on port 3000.
Note that we need to run command as sudo or root
Once you see what process is running, note the PID and run kill -9 {PID}, which should kill the process with PID (i.e distruptive process on port:3000). Now doing a npm start should get your app built, compiled and served on localhost:3000
Mostly what might've happened is that you had a npm start running which you either interrupted, or closed in the foreground. Doing a fg in your terminal will open any background tasks, so if this opens a npm start instance, it was this process stopping your flow. You can then properly end the session making sure all processes on port:3000 are killed.
Happy coding
If you are on linux you can try
pkill -f node
to terminate the processs
The error occurs when a task is left running on the port properly killing it.
this error can occur on both ports. Your react app and your node server.
To solve this you can run the following commands.
netstat -anp tcp | grep 3000
This command in the terminal will give you the list of activities on port 3000
npx kill-port 3000
This command will kill all the running servers on port 3000.
Now if you have the same problem for your Node server. You can follow the same steps.
netstat -anp tcp | grep 5000
Then
npx kill-port 5000
You don't need the first command. it's just to list out the running activities on the port.
just change the port number for any other port number.
This is the output you get after running the commands.
I am using Git bash on windows.
For me, this works every time (macOS): sudo kill -9 $(sudo lsof -t -i:3000)
Simple and Easy solution
close your current terminal and open a new one.
If you are running it in VS Code just create a new terminal and delete the old one.
On React - you can run an already created React single-page application (SPA) by
npm start command.
That may start your locally hosting development server and runs your app at:
http://localhost:3000/ which is equivalent to: 127.0.0.1:3000 address
127.0.0.1 is the default localhost IP number while the default port number set by
create-react-app package is 3000.
When getting: “Something is already running on port 3000" failure error message you may think that the port captured by another process running on your machine but you’ll find that it is captured permanently as if it runs on 0.0.0.0:3000 address
Solution:
In your project libraries created by create-react-app script navigate to:
node_modules/react-scripts/scripts/start.js
While running npm start command - the start.js script is being called and executed
There at start.js file in you editor find the above line:
const HOST = process.env.HOST || '0.0.0.0';
and change it to:
const HOST = process.env.HOST || '127.0.0.1';
save and run your web app again at: http://localhost:3000/ or http://127.0.0.1:3000
We have deploy the MeteorJS code on Ubuntu server. We haven't created any client to access this MeteorJS service. First we wanted to verify the service are running properly. Can any one suggest the steps for check the deployment is correct.
We install Meteor on Ubuntu : curl https://install.meteor.com/ | sh
MonogoDB - Already install for NodeJS application - Its Working!
Copy the Code Meteor Code to server using WinSCP
Set the MongoDB path for Code : export MONGO_URL=mongodb://ip:27017/userDB
Run Command to start the app: sudo nohup meteor --port 3001 --production &
Thanks.