Just keep in mind that these commands will remove the Node executable, and not necessarily all of the Node projects or NPM cache.
Manually
If you installed Node either by source or from a binary distribution then you'll likely have to delete the executable and other resources manually. Unfortunately, this isn't easy since there are quite a few directories containing Node resources, like
npm
and node_modules
.
To completely uninstall the
node
executable as well as npm
, here are some instructions on what to do:
Note that not all of the directories listed here may exist on your system depending on your install method.
- Delete
node
and/ornode_modules
from/usr/local/lib
- Delete
node
and/ornode_modules
from/usr/local/include
- Delete
node
,node-debug
, andnode-gyp
from/usr/local/bin
- Delete
.npmrc
from your home directory (these are your npm settings, don't delete this if you plan on re-installing Node right away) - Delete
.npm
from your home directory - Delete
.node-gyp
from your home directory - Delete
.node_repl_history
from your home directory - Delete
node*
from/usr/local/share/man/man1/
- Delete
npm*
from/usr/local/share/man/man1/
- Delete
node.d
from/usr/local/lib/dtrace/
- Delete
node
from/opt/local/bin/
- Delete
node
from/opt/local/include/
- Delete
node_modules
from/opt/local/lib/
- Delete
node
from/usr/local/share/doc/
- Delete
node.stp
from/usr/local/share/systemtap/tapset/
This list should include just about all the references to Node on your system. Keep in mind there may be more. Please let me know if you find any others (and how you installed Node originally)!
Homebrew
The Homebrew method is arguably one of the easiest ways to get Node on and off your system. The command to remove it is just as simple as the command to install it. Assuming you used
brew install node
to install it, just execute this to get rid of it:$ brew uninstall node
And that's it! All traces of the executable will be gone from your system.
NVM
The Node Version Manager (NVM) is almost as convenient as Homebrew, but in a different way. It allows you to install multiple versions of Node on your system so you can easily switch from one to the other.
Eventually, you'll probably want to get rid of one of the versions when you're done with it. And like Homebrew, you can easily do this using a command similar to the way you installed it:
$ nvm uninstall <version>
And a complete example of this might be something like:
$ nvm uninstall v0.12.2
And now only version v0.12.2 of Node will be uninstalled. Keep in mind that if you had multiple versions installed, then Node will still be on your system, but not v0.12.2 (using the example above).
Phantom Installs
If for some reason none of the above methods worked for you, then you can always hunt down the executable using the command line tool
which
. This command shows you the location of the file for a given command.
We can use this to find where Node is installed on your system. You can try this with:
$ which node
/Users/Kasinathantechnology/.nvm/versions/node/v4.1.2/bin/node
You can see in the output that my
node
command is linked to an NVM version, although yours may be located somewhere else. Now I can use this info to uninstall it.
Using this tool should help you find out how the executable was installed or how to remove it manually.
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