It is an expo-eject project and the commands I have used after cloning the project are:
Yarn,
Yarn start,
Yarn android,
And it does not show any error but gets stuck on a same point everytime when I try to run the project.
The project runs fine on the laptops of other teammates, but I am facing this issue.
Here are the versions of the installed tools:
Nodejs 14.17.6,
Expo 4.11.0,
React-native-cli 2.0.1,
I am adding an image that shows where the project gets blocked.
This is the issue in running project.
Had the same issue, and tried #usama-alaf reply, which consisted of:
Installing the right SDK for the Android device
Linking the SDK path under project/android/local.properties
But none of the above worked for me. Digging a little deeper, I found this Github issue from Willem Horsten, where the developer states that there was a yarn.lock file on one of his Hard Drives. I'm actually running my development environment on a secondary HD, and I also had a lock file in the root of the drive, but after deleting it, nothing changed.
Here's what actually worked for me. I was running Node v12, and trying to build the project, and trying to check whether the Node version was the culprit, I did this:
Deleted my node_modules, yarn.lock, and all other lock files I could find (for some reason there was also a package-lock.json file on the project)
Since I'm using NVM, I switched to Node v15.14.0 (the latest I have installed).
Installed the dependencies again with yarn install
Ran yarn android, and the build worked this time.
My System:
Mac OSX 10.14.6
Electron: 10.1.5
electron-forge: ^6.0.0-beta.54
I've been working on an Electron side project. I started it using electron-forge, I had a small application functioning just fine, I then set it aside for a couple weeks. Coming back to it, I tried running npm start and it did nothing but return to a new terminal line. So I tried electron-forge start and it returned bash: electron-forge: command not found.
I tried deleting my node_modules folder and reinstalling, I tried creating a new electron-forge boilerplate, and neither made a difference. I tried installing electron-forge globally, but it errored out on the second step, and I found several stackoverflow articles saying I shouldn't have electron-forge installed globally. I haven't changed anything (that I know of) on a system level, but it seems to be a system issue, rather than a package issue, but I'm not knowledgable enough to do anything other than Google the errors and see what stacksoverflow articles are out there, but no articles have helped.
I'd love any and all help, Electron has ceased working on my system completely, and I have no idea how to troubleshoot it. Thanks in advance!
I ended up deleting and re-installing Node and that seems to have fixed it. Still not sure what caused the initial issue, but it's working again. For those interested, here's the resources I used:
https://stackabuse.com/how-to-uninstall-node-js-from-mac-osx/
https://pawelgrzybek.com/install-nodejs-installer-vs-homebrew-vs-nvm/
Update:
I kept having issues running npm start. What finally worked was to create a new boilerplate project using the CLI and copy the contents of the package-lock.json to the old project. That finally launched the app.
I know this is an old question but, I had the same issue and instead of uninstalling Node, I used rm -rf node_modules then I used npm cache clean --force. I reinstalled my dependencies and electron-forge worked again.
Use the command below
npm install electron
It is said that pictures speak louder than words so...
As you can see nodemon works just fine by itself as expected:
then when i get express to the project nodemon just keeps restarting due to changes
tried pretty much every solution i can find on the internet(including here on stack) for this problem nothing worked...
Can someone please tell me what's the problem and how to fix it?
I've met the same error in the past and you can try these following ways:
Solution 1: Uninstall your nodemon and install it again by executing
npm uninstall -g nodemon
then
npm install -g nodemon
Solution 2: Your computer maybe lack of environment. Add this
%SystemRoot%\system32;%SystemRoot%;%SystemRoot%\System32\wbem;
into %PATH% environment variable which located in
Control Panel\System and Security\System
then move to
-> Advanced Settings System -> Environment Variables...
and reset your computer.
I hope these solutions work.
I have the following library https://github.com/codyc4321/react-data-components-updated
I installed it in my react project locally like npm i ~/react-data-components-updated
Now running my node server I don't get any changes no matter what I do. I am seeing old print statements which I deleted, and my new ones are not coming:
console.log('data in dataSort() in dataReducer.js:');
console.log(state.data);
doesn't show up.
I have constantly reinstalled like $ npm i ~/react-data-components-updated/ and it isn't helping. I was seeing weird errors affecting this location:
http://localhost:3001/__webpack_hmr
but right now I get a 200 for that address and it still isn't updating. How can I use this library locally and have my project update when it sees changes?
Problem is that your package got installed and is now in your-project-folder/node_modules, so in order for the modifications to replicate you have four options:
Directly modify the scripts in your-project-folder/node_modules/react-data-components-updated [not recommended]
Delete your-project-folder/node_modules/react-data-components-updated and run npm i ~/react-data-components-updated
Runnpm uninstall react-data-components-updated && npm i ~/react-data-components-updated so it reinstalls with the current files.
Go to ~/react-data-components-updated/package.json and upgrade the version manually (or by CLI) and then running npm update in your project.
Depending on your needs and how you're handling changes in your local package, one may be better than the other.
I try to use node-vlc with nw.js (v0.12.0-alpha2). When i launch my app without nw.js it works, but when i launch it with nw.js i got an error:
Uncaught Error: Module did not self-register.", source: /home/alexis/Bureau/dev/jukebox/node_modules/vlc/node_modules/ffi/node_modules/bindings/bindings.js (84)
I tried some commands with nw-gyp but it couldn't help me.
I am on Ubuntu 14, 64-bit.
If you've upgraded node then npm rebuild might fix this for you
For me:
rm -r node_modules then
npm install
I had a similar issue with another product and my fix was to change the version of node I was using. I was using 0.12.0 and changed back to 0.10.26.
Personally, I use NVM to handle node version changing. With NVM installed it's as simple as running
nvm use 0.10.26
Or setting the default version to 0.10.26
nvm alias default 0.10.26
Hopefully this helps you out - our issues came from different products but the solution may be the same.
I had similar problem.
/Users/user/NodeAddons/bridge/node_modules/bindings/bindings.js:83
Error: Module did not self-register.
In my case I was doing a C/C++ Add-on, and I had forgotten to export the add-on, in my main.cc was missing the code below:
void Init(v8::Handle<v8::Object> exports) {
NODE_SET_METHOD(exports, "method", method);
}
NODE_MODULE(method, Init);
Hope this helps others!
Thanks :)
I've add the same issue because I installed to modules as sudo...
Removing the node modules folder and reinstalling as normal user fixed it.
For me npm rebuild or npm update didn't work. I had to remove the node_modules folder and run npm install to install them again.
I once had this problem when creating a multi-file c++ addon. In my binding.gyp file I had:
"sources": ["src/*.cc", "src/*.h" ]
And my project contained several *.cc files. However, the NODE_MODULE() macro was called only on one file which imported the rest of the files. But node expects that it is called on the frist *.cc file listed in sources. So I had to change sources to explicitly add that file to the beginning
For me, running npm update worked
I was getting an internal error: Module did not self-register.
Deleted the node_modules folder
ran npm install
It worked just fine.
I had this error with Snappy. Was using Node 11. Checked Snappy's NPM page https://www.npmjs.com/package/snappy where they listed which versions of node they supported.
Deleting node_modules folder rm -rf node_modules and then reinstalling using the correct version of Node resolved it.
One of the versions they supported on Linux at the time of this writing was Node version 12.
nvm deactivate 11
nvm uninstall 11
nvm install 12
nvm use 12
Problem solved
Another cause of this problem: if you're using pm2, then after upgrading node you may need to reinstall pm2. Test whether pm2 is the issue by running your app
without pm2 node server.js
then with pm2: pm2 start server.js.
Proper way to update PM2 after updating Node.js
I had this same issue with 0.12 and io.js 1.3.0, reverting to Node.js 0.10 fixed the issue.
Rebuild your C++ add-ons.
Did you encounter something like this?
Module did not self-register: '…\node_modules\#u4\opencv4nodejs\build\Release\opencv4nodejs.node
It’s likely that you have just updated your Node.js. Once you updated your Node.js, you need to rebuild your C++ add-ons, Node.js packages written in C++.
Why
When you build Node.js’ C++ add-ons, they get compiled into require-able .node files and linked to the currently installed Node.js ABI library, which is not compatible with other versions of it. Your packages were built only compatible with the specific version of Node.js.
How
Firstly, try npm rebuild. If your C++-add-on-based packages have a build script, it’ll do. If it doesn’t, you need to manually build your C++ native add-on packages. Do again what you did when you were installing such packages. Refer to the building instructions in the packages’ documentations to rebuild them. Or try reinstalling (npm install) them.
I had the same problem. My script that was referencing a global reference script had an invalid reference. I took off that invalid reference and the error was gone. My error message had no indication of that particular invalid reference which made it harder to debug. But 'Uncaught Error: Module did not self-register' was the message I was getting.
This also happen in my other project. For some reason, it wouldn't recognize the reference path if one of the characters are uppercase. Even thought, the upper-casing was the correct spelling of the path.
I had this issue while setting up my Cypress project.
I found out the issue was caused because Cypress uses node from its bundle version by default (which was version 8.0 in my case) , whilst the package I wanted to use required the node version to be 10 or higher.
I did have node 12.0 installed on my machine but since cypress was not using that I had to add the line shown below in the settings file (cypress.json) to set the value for 'nodeVersion' to 'system', to tell cypress explicitly to use the node version installed on my machine.
Add this line to your settings file:
**"nodeVersion": "system"**