Node.js comes with a variety of CLI options. These options expose built-in debugging, multiple ways to execute scripts, and other helpful runtime options.
To view this documentation as a manual page in a terminal, run man node
.
node [options] [V8 options] [<program-entry-point> | -e "script" | -] [--] [arguments]
node inspect [<program-entry-point> | -e "script" | <host>:<port>] …
node --v8-options
Execute without arguments to start the REPL.
For more info about node inspect
, see the debugger documentation.
The program entry point is a specifier-like string. If the string is not an absolute path, it's resolved as a relative path from the current working directory. That path is then resolved by CommonJS module loader. If no corresponding file is found, an error is thrown.
If a file is found, its path will be passed to the ES module loader under any of the following conditions:
.mjs
extension..cjs
extension, and the nearest parent package.json
file contains a top-level "type"
field with a value of "module"
.Otherwise, the file is loaded using the CommonJS module loader. See Modules loaders for more details.
When loading, the ES module loader loads the program entry point, the node
command will accept as input only files with .js
, .mjs
, or .cjs
extensions; and with .wasm
extensions when --experimental-wasm-modules
is enabled.
All options, including V8 options, allow words to be separated by both dashes (-
) or underscores (_
). For example, --pending-deprecation
is equivalent to --pending_deprecation
.
If an option that takes a single value (such as --max-http-header-size
) is passed more than once, then the last passed value is used. Options from the command line take precedence over options passed through the NODE_OPTIONS
environment variable.
-
Alias for stdin. Analogous to the use of -
in other command-line utilities, meaning that the script is read from stdin, and the rest of the options are passed to that script.
--
Indicate the end of node options. Pass the rest of the arguments to the script. If no script filename or eval/print script is supplied prior to this, then the next argument is used as a script filename.
--abort-on-uncaught-exception
Aborting instead of exiting causes a core file to be generated for post-mortem analysis using a debugger (such as lldb
, gdb
, and mdb
).
If this flag is passed, the behavior can still be set to not abort through process.setUncaughtExceptionCaptureCallback()
(and through usage of the node:domain
module that uses it).
--allow-child-process
When using the Permission Model, the process will not be able to spawn any child process by default. Attempts to do so will throw an ERR_ACCESS_DENIED
unless the user explicitly passes the --allow-child-process
flag when starting Node.js.
Example:
const childProcess = require('node:child_process'); // Attempt to bypass the permission childProcess.spawn('node', ['-e', 'require("fs").writeFileSync("/new-file", "example")']); copy
$ node --experimental-permission --allow-fs-read=* index.js node:internal/child_process:388 const err = this._handle.spawn(options); ^ Error: Access to this API has been restricted at ChildProcess.spawn (node:internal/child_process:388:28) at Object.spawn (node:child_process:723:9) at Object.<anonymous> (/home/index.js:3:14) at Module._compile (node:internal/modules/cjs/loader:1120:14) at Module._extensions..js (node:internal/modules/cjs/loader:1174:10) at Module.load (node:internal/modules/cjs/loader:998:32) at Module._load (node:internal/modules/cjs/loader:839:12) at Function.executeUserEntryPoint [as runMain] (node:internal/modules/run_main:81:12) at node:internal/main/run_main_module:17:47 { code: 'ERR_ACCESS_DENIED', permission: 'ChildProcess' } copy
--allow-fs-read
This flag configures file system read permissions using the Permission Model.
The valid arguments for the --allow-fs-read
flag are:
*
- To allow all FileSystemRead
operations.--allow-fs-read
flags. Example --allow-fs-read=/folder1/ --allow-fs-read=/folder1/
Paths delimited by comma (,
) are no longer allowed. When passing a single flag with a comma a warning will be diplayed
Examples can be found in the File System Permissions documentation.
Relative paths are NOT yet supported by the CLI flag.
The initializer module also needs to be allowed. Consider the following example:
$ node --experimental-permission t.js node:internal/modules/cjs/loader:162 const result = internalModuleStat(filename); ^ Error: Access to this API has been restricted at stat (node:internal/modules/cjs/loader:162:18) at Module._findPath (node:internal/modules/cjs/loader:640:16) at resolveMainPath (node:internal/modules/run_main:15:25) at Function.executeUserEntryPoint [as runMain] (node:internal/modules/run_main:53:24) at node:internal/main/run_main_module:23:47 { code: 'ERR_ACCESS_DENIED', permission: 'FileSystemRead', resource: '/Users/rafaelgss/repos/os/node/t.js' } copy
The process needs to have access to the index.js
module:
node --experimental-permission --allow-fs-read=/path/to/index.js index.js copy
--allow-fs-write
This flag configures file system write permissions using the Permission Model.
The valid arguments for the --allow-fs-write
flag are:
*
- To allow all FileSystemWrite
operations.--allow-fs-read
flags. Example --allow-fs-read=/folder1/ --allow-fs-read=/folder1/
Paths delimited by comma (,
) are no longer allowed. When passing a single flag with a comma a warning will be diplayed
Examples can be found in the File System Permissions documentation.
Relative paths are NOT supported through the CLI flag.
--allow-worker
When using the Permission Model, the process will not be able to create any worker threads by default. For security reasons, the call will throw an ERR_ACCESS_DENIED
unless the user explicitly pass the flag --allow-worker
in the main Node.js process.
Example:
const { Worker } = require('node:worker_threads'); // Attempt to bypass the permission new Worker(__filename); copy
$ node --experimental-permission --allow-fs-read=* index.js node:internal/worker:188 this[kHandle] = new WorkerImpl(url, ^ Error: Access to this API has been restricted at new Worker (node:internal/worker:188:21) at Object.<anonymous> (/home/index.js.js:3:1) at Module._compile (node:internal/modules/cjs/loader:1120:14) at Module._extensions..js (node:internal/modules/cjs/loader:1174:10) at Module.load (node:internal/modules/cjs/loader:998:32) at Module._load (node:internal/modules/cjs/loader:839:12) at Function.executeUserEntryPoint [as runMain] (node:internal/modules/run_main:81:12) at node:internal/main/run_main_module:17:47 { code: 'ERR_ACCESS_DENIED', permission: 'WorkerThreads' } copy
--build-snapshot
Generates a snapshot blob when the process exits and writes it to disk, which can be loaded later with --snapshot-blob
.
When building the snapshot, if --snapshot-blob
is not specified, the generated blob will be written, by default, to snapshot.blob
in the current working directory. Otherwise it will be written to the path specified by --snapshot-blob
.
$ echo "globalThis.foo = 'I am from the snapshot'" > snapshot.js # Run snapshot.js to initialize the application and snapshot the # state of it into snapshot.blob. $ node --snapshot-blob snapshot.blob --build-snapshot snapshot.js $ echo "console.log(globalThis.foo)" > index.js # Load the generated snapshot and start the application from index.js. $ node --snapshot-blob snapshot.blob index.js I am from the snapshot copy
The v8.startupSnapshot
API can be used to specify an entry point at snapshot building time, thus avoiding the need of an additional entry script at deserialization time:
$ echo "require('v8').startupSnapshot.setDeserializeMainFunction(() => console.log('I am from the snapshot'))" > snapshot.js $ node --snapshot-blob snapshot.blob --build-snapshot snapshot.js $ node --snapshot-blob snapshot.blob I am from the snapshot copy
For more information, check out the v8.startupSnapshot
API documentation.
Currently the support for run-time snapshot is experimental in that:
-c
, --check
Syntax check the script without executing.
--completion-bash
Print source-able bash completion script for Node.js.
node --completion-bash > node_bash_completion source node_bash_completion copy
-C condition
, --conditions=condition
Enable experimental support for custom conditional exports resolution conditions.
Any number of custom string condition names are permitted.
The default Node.js conditions of "node"
, "default"
, "import"
, and "require"
will always apply as defined.
For example, to run a module with "development" resolutions:
node -C development app.js copy
--cpu-prof
Starts the V8 CPU profiler on start up, and writes the CPU profile to disk before exit.
If --cpu-prof-dir
is not specified, the generated profile is placed in the current working directory.
If --cpu-prof-name
is not specified, the generated profile is named CPU.${yyyymmdd}.${hhmmss}.${pid}.${tid}.${seq}.cpuprofile
.
$ node --cpu-prof index.js $ ls *.cpuprofile CPU.20190409.202950.15293.0.0.cpuprofile copy
--cpu-prof-dir
Specify the directory where the CPU profiles generated by --cpu-prof
will be placed.
The default value is controlled by the --diagnostic-dir
command-line option.
--cpu-prof-interval
Specify the sampling interval in microseconds for the CPU profiles generated by --cpu-prof
. The default is 1000 microseconds.
--cpu-prof-name
Specify the file name of the CPU profile generated by --cpu-prof
.
--diagnostic-dir=directory
Set the directory to which all diagnostic output files are written. Defaults to current working directory.
Affects the default output directory of:
--disable-proto=mode
Disable the Object.prototype.__proto__
property. If mode
is delete
, the property is removed entirely. If mode
is throw
, accesses to the property throw an exception with the code ERR_PROTO_ACCESS
.
--disallow-code-generation-from-strings
Make built-in language features like eval
and new Function
that generate code from strings throw an exception instead. This does not affect the Node.js node:vm
module.
--dns-result-order=order
Set the default value of verbatim
in dns.lookup()
and dnsPromises.lookup()
. The value could be:
ipv4first
: sets default verbatim
false
.verbatim
: sets default verbatim
true
.The default is verbatim
and dns.setDefaultResultOrder()
have higher priority than --dns-result-order
.
--enable-fips
Enable FIPS-compliant crypto at startup. (Requires Node.js to be built against FIPS-compatible OpenSSL.)
--enable-source-maps
Enable Source Map v3 support for stack traces.
When using a transpiler, such as TypeScript, stack traces thrown by an application reference the transpiled code, not the original source position. --enable-source-maps
enables caching of Source Maps and makes a best effort to report stack traces relative to the original source file.
Overriding Error.prepareStackTrace
prevents --enable-source-maps
from modifying the stack trace.
Note, enabling source maps can introduce latency to your application when Error.stack
is accessed. If you access Error.stack
frequently in your application, take into account the performance implications of --enable-source-maps
.
--env-file=config
Loads environment variables from a file relative to the current directory, making them available to applications on process.env
. The environment variables which configure Node.js, such as NODE_OPTIONS
, are parsed and applied. If the same variable is defined in the environment and in the file, the value from the environment takes precedence.
You can pass multiple --env-file
arguments. Subsequent files override pre-existing variables defined in previous files.
node --env-file=.env --env-file=.development.env index.js copy
The format of the file should be one line per key-value pair of environment variable name and value separated by =
:
PORT=3000 copy
Any text after a #
is treated as a comment:
# This is a comment PORT=3000 # This is also a comment copy
Values can start and end with the following quotes: \
, "
or '
. They are omitted from the values.
USERNAME="nodejs" # will result in `nodejs` as the value. copy
-e
, --eval "script"
Evaluate the following argument as JavaScript. The modules which are predefined in the REPL can also be used in script
.
On Windows, using cmd.exe
a single quote will not work correctly because it only recognizes double "
for quoting. In Powershell or Git bash, both '
and "
are usable.
--experimental-import-meta-resolve
Enable experimental import.meta.resolve()
parent URL support, which allows passing a second parentURL
argument for contextual resolution.
Previously gated the entire import.meta.resolve
feature.
--experimental-loader=module
This flag is discouraged and may be removed in a future version of Node.js. Please use
--import
withregister()
instead.
Specify the module
containing exported module customization hooks. module
may be any string accepted as an import
specifier.
--experimental-network-imports
Enable experimental support for the https:
protocol in import
specifiers.
--experimental-permission
Enable the Permission Model for current process. When enabled, the following permissions are restricted:
--allow-fs-read
, --allow-fs-write
flags--allow-child-process
flag--allow-worker
flag--experimental-policy
Use the specified file as a security policy.
--experimental-sea-config
Use this flag to generate a blob that can be injected into the Node.js binary to produce a single executable application. See the documentation about this configuration for details.
--experimental-shadow-realm
Use this flag to enable ShadowRealm support.
--experimental-test-coverage
When used in conjunction with the node:test
module, a code coverage report is generated as part of the test runner output. If no tests are run, a coverage report is not generated. See the documentation on collecting code coverage from tests for more details.
--experimental-vm-modules
Enable experimental ES Module support in the node:vm
module.
--experimental-wasi-unstable-preview1
Enable experimental WebAssembly System Interface (WASI) support.
--experimental-wasm-modules
Enable experimental WebAssembly module support.
--force-context-aware
Disable loading native addons that are not context-aware.
--force-fips
Force FIPS-compliant crypto on startup. (Cannot be disabled from script code.) (Same requirements as --enable-fips
.)
--force-node-api-uncaught-exceptions-policy
Enforces uncaughtException
event on Node-API asynchronous callbacks.
To prevent from an existing add-on from crashing the process, this flag is not enabled by default. In the future, this flag will be enabled by default to enforce the correct behavior.
--frozen-intrinsics
Enable experimental frozen intrinsics like Array
and Object
.
Only the root context is supported. There is no guarantee that globalThis.Array
is indeed the default intrinsic reference. Code may break under this flag.
To allow polyfills to be added, --require
and --import
both run before freezing intrinsics.
--heap-prof
Starts the V8 heap profiler on start up, and writes the heap profile to disk before exit.
If --heap-prof-dir
is not specified, the generated profile is placed in the current working directory.
If --heap-prof-name
is not specified, the generated profile is named Heap.${yyyymmdd}.${hhmmss}.${pid}.${tid}.${seq}.heapprofile
.
$ node --heap-prof index.js $ ls *.heapprofile Heap.20190409.202950.15293.0.001.heapprofile copy
--heap-prof-dir
Specify the directory where the heap profiles generated by --heap-prof
will be placed.
The default value is controlled by the --diagnostic-dir
command-line option.
--heap-prof-interval
Specify the average sampling interval in bytes for the heap profiles generated by --heap-prof
. The default is 512 * 1024 bytes.
--heap-prof-name
Specify the file name of the heap profile generated by --heap-prof
.
--heapsnapshot-near-heap-limit=max_count
Writes a V8 heap snapshot to disk when the V8 heap usage is approaching the heap limit. count
should be a non-negative integer (in which case Node.js will write no more than max_count
snapshots to disk).
When generating snapshots, garbage collection may be triggered and bring the heap usage down. Therefore multiple snapshots may be written to disk before the Node.js instance finally runs out of memory. These heap snapshots can be compared to determine what objects are being allocated during the time consecutive snapshots are taken. It's not guaranteed that Node.js will write exactly max_count
snapshots to disk, but it will try its best to generate at least one and up to max_count
snapshots before the Node.js instance runs out of memory when max_count
is greater than 0
.
Generating V8 snapshots takes time and memory (both memory managed by the V8 heap and native memory outside the V8 heap). The bigger the heap is, the more resources it needs. Node.js will adjust the V8 heap to accommodate the additional V8 heap memory overhead, and try its best to avoid using up all the memory available to the process. When the process uses more memory than the system deems appropriate, the process may be terminated abruptly by the system, depending on the system configuration.
$ node --max-old-space-size=100 --heapsnapshot-near-heap-limit=3 index.js Wrote snapshot to Heap.20200430.100036.49580.0.001.heapsnapshot Wrote snapshot to Heap.20200430.100037.49580.0.002.heapsnapshot Wrote snapshot to Heap.20200430.100038.49580.0.003.heapsnapshot <--- Last few GCs ---> [49580:0x110000000] 4826 ms: Mark-sweep 130.6 (147.8) -> 130.5 (147.8) MB, 27.4 / 0.0 ms (average mu = 0.126, current mu = 0.034) allocation failure scavenge might not succeed [49580:0x110000000] 4845 ms: Mark-sweep 130.6 (147.8) -> 130.6 (147.8) MB, 18.8 / 0.0 ms (average mu = 0.088, current mu = 0.031) allocation failure scavenge might not succeed <--- JS stacktrace ---> FATAL ERROR: Ineffective mark-compacts near heap limit Allocation failed - JavaScript heap out of memory .... copy
--heapsnapshot-signal=signal
Enables a signal handler that causes the Node.js process to write a heap dump when the specified signal is received. signal
must be a valid signal name. Disabled by default.
$ node --heapsnapshot-signal=SIGUSR2 index.js & $ ps aux USER PID %CPU %MEM VSZ RSS TTY STAT START TIME COMMAND node 1 5.5 6.1 787252 247004 ? Ssl 16:43 0:02 node --heapsnapshot-signal=SIGUSR2 index.js $ kill -USR2 1 $ ls Heap.20190718.133405.15554.0.001.heapsnapshot copy
-h
, --help
Print node command-line options. The output of this option is less detailed than this document.
--icu-data-dir=file
Specify ICU data load path. (Overrides NODE_ICU_DATA
.)
--import=module
Preload the specified module at startup.
Follows ECMAScript module resolution rules. Use --require
to load a CommonJS module. Modules preloaded with --require
will run before modules preloaded with --import
.
--input-type=type
This configures Node.js to interpret string input as CommonJS or as an ES module. String input is input via --eval
, --print
, or STDIN
.
Valid values are "commonjs"
and "module"
. The default is "commonjs"
.
The REPL does not support this option.
--insecure-http-parser
Use an insecure HTTP parser that accepts invalid HTTP headers. This may allow interoperability with non-conformant HTTP implementations. It may also allow request smuggling and other HTTP attacks that rely on invalid headers being accepted. Avoid using this option.
--inspect[=[host:]port]
Activate inspector on host:port
. Default is 127.0.0.1:9229
.
V8 inspector integration allows tools such as Chrome DevTools and IDEs to debug and profile Node.js instances. The tools attach to Node.js instances via a tcp port and communicate using the Chrome DevTools Protocol.
Binding the inspector to a public IP (including 0.0.0.0
) with an open port is insecure, as it allows external hosts to connect to the inspector and perform a remote code execution attack.
If specifying a host, make sure that either:
More specifically, --inspect=0.0.0.0
is insecure if the port (9229
by default) is not firewall-protected.
See the debugging security implications section for more information.
--inspect-brk[=[host:]port]
Activate inspector on host:port
and break at start of user script. Default host:port
is 127.0.0.1:9229
.
--inspect-port=[host:]port
Set the host:port
to be used when the inspector is activated. Useful when activating the inspector by sending the SIGUSR1
signal.
Default host is 127.0.0.1
.
See the security warning below regarding the host
parameter usage.
--inspect-publish-uid=stderr,http
Specify ways of the inspector web socket url exposure.
By default inspector websocket url is available in stderr and under /json/list
endpoint on http://host:port/json/list
.
-i
, --interactive
Opens the REPL even if stdin does not appear to be a terminal.
--jitless
Disable runtime allocation of executable memory. This may be required on some platforms for security reasons. It can also reduce attack surface on other platforms, but the performance impact may be severe.
This flag is inherited from V8 and is subject to change upstream. It may disappear in a non-semver-major release.
--max-http-header-size=size
Specify the maximum size, in bytes, of HTTP headers. Defaults to 16 KiB.
--napi-modules
This option is a no-op. It is kept for compatibility.
--no-addons
Disable the node-addons
exports condition as well as disable loading native addons. When --no-addons
is specified, calling process.dlopen
or requiring a native C++ addon will fail and throw an exception.
--no-deprecation
Silence deprecation warnings.
--no-experimental-fetch
Disable experimental support for the Fetch API.
--no-experimental-global-customevent
Disable exposition of CustomEvent Web API on the global scope.
--no-experimental-global-webcrypto
Disable exposition of Web Crypto API on the global scope.
--no-experimental-repl-await
Use this flag to disable top-level await in REPL.
--no-extra-info-on-fatal-exception
Hide extra information on fatal exception that causes exit.
--no-force-async-hooks-checks
Disables runtime checks for async_hooks
. These will still be enabled dynamically when async_hooks
is enabled.
--no-global-search-paths
Do not search modules from global paths like $HOME/.node_modules
and $NODE_PATH
.
--no-network-family-autoselection
Disables the family autoselection algorithm unless connection options explicitly enables it.
--no-warnings
Silence all process warnings (including deprecations).
--node-memory-debug
Enable extra debug checks for memory leaks in Node.js internals. This is usually only useful for developers debugging Node.js itself.
--openssl-config=file
Load an OpenSSL configuration file on startup. Among other uses, this can be used to enable FIPS-compliant crypto if Node.js is built against FIPS-enabled OpenSSL.
--openssl-legacy-provider
Enable OpenSSL 3.0 legacy provider. For more information please see OSSL_PROVIDER-legacy.
--openssl-shared-config
Enable OpenSSL default configuration section, openssl_conf
to be read from the OpenSSL configuration file. The default configuration file is named openssl.cnf
but this can be changed using the environment variable OPENSSL_CONF
, or by using the command line option --openssl-config
. The location of the default OpenSSL configuration file depends on how OpenSSL is being linked to Node.js. Sharing the OpenSSL configuration may have unwanted implications and it is recommended to use a configuration section specific to Node.js which is nodejs_conf
and is default when this option is not used.
--pending-deprecation
Emit pending deprecation warnings.
Pending deprecations are generally identical to a runtime deprecation with the notable exception that they are turned off by default and will not be emitted unless either the --pending-deprecation
command-line flag, or the NODE_PENDING_DEPRECATION=1
environment variable, is set. Pending deprecations are used to provide a kind of selective "early warning" mechanism that developers may leverage to detect deprecated API usage.
--policy-integrity=sri
Instructs Node.js to error prior to running any code if the policy does not have the specified integrity. It expects a Subresource Integrity string as a parameter.
--preserve-symlinks
Instructs the module loader to preserve symbolic links when resolving and caching modules.
By default, when Node.js loads a module from a path that is symbolically linked to a different on-disk location, Node.js will dereference the link and use the actual on-disk "real path" of the module as both an identifier and as a root path to locate other dependency modules. In most cases, this default behavior is acceptable. However, when using symbolically linked peer dependencies, as illustrated in the example below, the default behavior causes an exception to be thrown if moduleA
attempts to require moduleB
as a peer dependency:
{appDir} ├── app │ ├── index.js │ └── node_modules │ ├── moduleA -> {appDir}/moduleA │ └── moduleB │ ├── index.js │ └── package.json └── moduleA ├── index.js └── package.json copy
The --preserve-symlinks
command-line flag instructs Node.js to use the symlink path for modules as opposed to the real path, allowing symbolically linked peer dependencies to be found.
Note, however, that using --preserve-symlinks
can have other side effects. Specifically, symbolically linked native modules can fail to load if those are linked from more than one location in the dependency tree (Node.js would see those as two separate modules and would attempt to load the module multiple times, causing an exception to be thrown).
The --preserve-symlinks
flag does not apply to the main module, which allows node --preserve-symlinks node_module/.bin/<foo>
to work. To apply the same behavior for the main module, also use --preserve-symlinks-main
.
--preserve-symlinks-main
Instructs the module loader to preserve symbolic links when resolving and caching the main module (require.main
).
This flag exists so that the main module can be opted-in to the same behavior that --preserve-symlinks
gives to all other imports; they are separate flags, however, for backward compatibility with older Node.js versions.
--preserve-symlinks-main
does not imply --preserve-symlinks
; use --preserve-symlinks-main
in addition to --preserve-symlinks
when it is not desirable to follow symlinks before resolving relative paths.
See --preserve-symlinks
for more information.
-p
, --print "script"
Identical to -e
but prints the result.
--prof
Generate V8 profiler output.
--prof-process
Process V8 profiler output generated using the V8 option --prof
.
--redirect-warnings=file
Write process warnings to the given file instead of printing to stderr. The file will be created if it does not exist, and will be appended to if it does. If an error occurs while attempting to write the warning to the file, the warning will be written to stderr instead.
The file
name may be an absolute path. If it is not, the default directory it will be written to is controlled by the --diagnostic-dir
command-line option.
--report-compact
Write reports in a compact format, single-line JSON, more easily consumable by log processing systems than the default multi-line format designed for human consumption.
--report-dir=directory
, report-directory=directory
Location at which the report will be generated.
--report-filename=filename
Name of the file to which the report will be written.
If the filename is set to 'stdout'
or 'stderr'
, the report is written to the stdout or stderr of the process respectively.
--report-on-fatalerror
Enables the report to be triggered on fatal errors (internal errors within the Node.js runtime such as out of memory) that lead to termination of the application. Useful to inspect various diagnostic data elements such as heap, stack, event loop state, resource consumption etc. to reason about the fatal error.
--report-on-signal
Enables report to be generated upon receiving the specified (or predefined) signal to the running Node.js process. The signal to trigger the report is specified through --report-signal
.
--report-signal=signal
Sets or resets the signal for report generation (not supported on Windows). Default signal is SIGUSR2
.
--report-uncaught-exception
Enables report to be generated when the process exits due to an uncaught exception. Useful when inspecting the JavaScript stack in conjunction with native stack and other runtime environment data.
-r
, --require module
Preload the specified module at startup.
Follows require()
's module resolution rules. module
may be either a path to a file, or a node module name.
Only CommonJS modules are supported. Use --import
to preload an ECMAScript module. Modules preloaded with --require
will run before modules preloaded with --import
.
--secure-heap=n
Initializes an OpenSSL secure heap of n
bytes. When initialized, the secure heap is used for selected types of allocations within OpenSSL during key generation and other operations. This is useful, for instance, to prevent sensitive information from leaking due to pointer overruns or underruns.
The secure heap is a fixed size and cannot be resized at runtime so, if used, it is important to select a large enough heap to cover all application uses.
The heap size given must be a power of two. Any value less than 2 will disable the secure heap.
The secure heap is disabled by default.
The secure heap is not available on Windows.
See CRYPTO_secure_malloc_init
for more details.
--secure-heap-min=n
When using --secure-heap
, the --secure-heap-min
flag specifies the minimum allocation from the secure heap. The minimum value is 2
. The maximum value is the lesser of --secure-heap
or 2147483647
. The value given must be a power of two.
--snapshot-blob=path
When used with --build-snapshot
, --snapshot-blob
specifies the path where the generated snapshot blob is written to. If not specified, the generated blob is written to snapshot.blob
in the current working directory.
When used without --build-snapshot
, --snapshot-blob
specifies the path to the blob that is used to restore the application state.
When loading a snapshot, Node.js checks that:
If they don't match, Node.js refuses to load the snapshot and exits with status code 1.
--test
Starts the Node.js command line test runner. This flag cannot be combined with --watch-path
, --check
, --eval
, --interactive
, or the inspector. See the documentation on running tests from the command line for more details.
--test-name-pattern
A regular expression that configures the test runner to only execute tests whose name matches the provided pattern. See the documentation on filtering tests by name for more details.
--test-only
Configures the test runner to only execute top level tests that have the only
option set.
--test-reporter
A test reporter to use when running tests. See the documentation on test reporters for more details.
--test-reporter-destination
The destination for the corresponding test reporter. See the documentation on test reporters for more details.
--test-shard
Test suite shard to execute in a format of <index>/<total>
, where
index
is a positive integer, index of divided parts total
is a positive integer, total of divided part This command will divide all tests files into total
equal parts, and will run only those that happen to be in an index
part.
For example, to split your tests suite into three parts, use this:
node --test --test-shard=1/3 node --test --test-shard=2/3 node --test --test-shard=3/3 copy
--throw-deprecation
Throw errors for deprecations.
--title=title
Set process.title
on startup.
--tls-cipher-list=list
Specify an alternative default TLS cipher list. Requires Node.js to be built with crypto support (default).
--tls-keylog=file
Log TLS key material to a file. The key material is in NSS SSLKEYLOGFILE
format and can be used by software (such as Wireshark) to decrypt the TLS traffic.
--tls-max-v1.2
Set tls.DEFAULT_MAX_VERSION
to 'TLSv1.2'. Use to disable support for TLSv1.3.
--tls-max-v1.3
Set default tls.DEFAULT_MAX_VERSION
to 'TLSv1.3'. Use to enable support for TLSv1.3.
--tls-min-v1.0
Set default tls.DEFAULT_MIN_VERSION
to 'TLSv1'. Use for compatibility with old TLS clients or servers.
--tls-min-v1.1
Set default tls.DEFAULT_MIN_VERSION
to 'TLSv1.1'. Use for compatibility with old TLS clients or servers.
--tls-min-v1.2
Set default tls.DEFAULT_MIN_VERSION
to 'TLSv1.2'. This is the default for 12.x and later, but the option is supported for compatibility with older Node.js versions.
--tls-min-v1.3
Set default tls.DEFAULT_MIN_VERSION
to 'TLSv1.3'. Use to disable support for TLSv1.2, which is not as secure as TLSv1.3.
--trace-atomics-wait
Print short summaries of calls to Atomics.wait()
to stderr. The output could look like this:
(node:15701) [Thread 0] Atomics.wait(<address> + 0, 1, inf) started (node:15701) [Thread 0] Atomics.wait(<address> + 0, 1, inf) did not wait because the values mismatched (node:15701) [Thread 0] Atomics.wait(<address> + 0, 0, 10) started (node:15701) [Thread 0] Atomics.wait(<address> + 0, 0, 10) timed out (node:15701) [Thread 0] Atomics.wait(<address> + 4, 0, inf) started (node:15701) [Thread 1] Atomics.wait(<address> + 4, -1, inf) started (node:15701) [Thread 0] Atomics.wait(<address> + 4, 0, inf) was woken up by another thread (node:15701) [Thread 1] Atomics.wait(<address> + 4, -1, inf) was woken up by another thread copy
The fields here correspond to:
worker_threads.threadId
SharedArrayBuffer
in question, as well as the byte offset corresponding to the index passed to Atomics.wait()
Atomics.wait()
Atomics.wait
--trace-deprecation
Print stack traces for deprecations.
--trace-event-categories
A comma separated list of categories that should be traced when trace event tracing is enabled using --trace-events-enabled
.
--trace-event-file-pattern
Template string specifying the filepath for the trace event data, it supports ${rotation}
and ${pid}
.
--trace-events-enabled
Enables the collection of trace event tracing information.
--trace-exit
Prints a stack trace whenever an environment is exited proactively, i.e. invoking process.exit()
.
--trace-sigint
Prints a stack trace on SIGINT.
--trace-sync-io
Prints a stack trace whenever synchronous I/O is detected after the first turn of the event loop.
--trace-tls
Prints TLS packet trace information to stderr
. This can be used to debug TLS connection problems.
--trace-uncaught
Print stack traces for uncaught exceptions; usually, the stack trace associated with the creation of an Error
is printed, whereas this makes Node.js also print the stack trace associated with throwing the value (which does not need to be an Error
instance).
Enabling this option may affect garbage collection behavior negatively.
--trace-warnings
Print stack traces for process warnings (including deprecations).
--track-heap-objects
Track heap object allocations for heap snapshots.
--unhandled-rejections=mode
Using this flag allows to change what should happen when an unhandled rejection occurs. One of the following modes can be chosen:
throw
: Emit unhandledRejection
. If this hook is not set, raise the unhandled rejection as an uncaught exception. This is the default.strict
: Raise the unhandled rejection as an uncaught exception. If the exception is handled, unhandledRejection
is emitted.warn
: Always trigger a warning, no matter if the unhandledRejection
hook is set or not but do not print the deprecation warning.warn-with-error-code
: Emit unhandledRejection
. If this hook is not set, trigger a warning, and set the process exit code to 1.none
: Silence all warnings.If a rejection happens during the command line entry point's ES module static loading phase, it will always raise it as an uncaught exception.
--use-bundled-ca
, --use-openssl-ca
Use bundled Mozilla CA store as supplied by current Node.js version or use OpenSSL's default CA store. The default store is selectable at build-time.
The bundled CA store, as supplied by Node.js, is a snapshot of Mozilla CA store that is fixed at release time. It is identical on all supported platforms.
Using OpenSSL store allows for external modifications of the store. For most Linux and BSD distributions, this store is maintained by the distribution maintainers and system administrators. OpenSSL CA store location is dependent on configuration of the OpenSSL library but this can be altered at runtime using environment variables.
See SSL_CERT_DIR
and SSL_CERT_FILE
.
--use-largepages=mode
Re-map the Node.js static code to large memory pages at startup. If supported on the target system, this will cause the Node.js static code to be moved onto 2 MiB pages instead of 4 KiB pages.
The following values are valid for mode
:
off
: No mapping will be attempted. This is the default.on
: If supported by the OS, mapping will be attempted. Failure to map will be ignored and a message will be printed to standard error.silent
: If supported by the OS, mapping will be attempted. Failure to map will be ignored and will not be reported.--v8-options
Print V8 command-line options.
--v8-pool-size=num
Set V8's thread pool size which will be used to allocate background jobs.
If set to 0
then Node.js will choose an appropriate size of the thread pool based on an estimate of the amount of parallelism.
The amount of parallelism refers to the number of computations that can be carried out simultaneously in a given machine. In general, it's the same as the amount of CPUs, but it may diverge in environments such as VMs or containers.
-v
, --version
Print node's version.
--watch
Starts Node.js in watch mode. When in watch mode, changes in the watched files cause the Node.js process to restart. By default, watch mode will watch the entry point and any required or imported module. Use --watch-path
to specify what paths to watch.
This flag cannot be combined with --check
, --eval
, --interactive
, or the REPL.
node --watch index.js copy
--watch-path
Starts Node.js in watch mode and specifies what paths to watch. When in watch mode, changes in the watched paths cause the Node.js process to restart. This will turn off watching of required or imported modules, even when used in combination with --watch
.
This flag cannot be combined with --check
, --eval
, --interactive
, --test
, or the REPL.
node --watch-path=./src --watch-path=./tests index.js copy
This option is only supported on macOS and Windows. An ERR_FEATURE_UNAVAILABLE_ON_PLATFORM
exception will be thrown when the option is used on a platform that does not support it.
--watch-preserve-output
Disable the clearing of the console when watch mode restarts the process.
node --watch --watch-preserve-output test.js copy
--zero-fill-buffers
Automatically zero-fills all newly allocated Buffer
and SlowBuffer
instances.
FORCE_COLOR=[1, 2, 3]
The FORCE_COLOR
environment variable is used to enable ANSI colorized output. The value may be:
1
, true
, or the empty string ''
indicate 16-color support,2
to indicate 256-color support, or3
to indicate 16 million-color support.When FORCE_COLOR
is used and set to a supported value, both the NO_COLOR
, and NODE_DISABLE_COLORS
environment variables are ignored.
Any other value will result in colorized output being disabled.
NO_COLOR=<any>
NO_COLOR
is an alias for NODE_DISABLE_COLORS
. The value of the environment variable is arbitrary.
NODE_DEBUG=module[,…]
','
-separated list of core modules that should print debug information.
NODE_DEBUG_NATIVE=module[,…]
','
-separated list of core C++ modules that should print debug information.
NODE_DISABLE_COLORS=1
When set, colors will not be used in the REPL.
NODE_EXTRA_CA_CERTS=file
When set, the well known "root" CAs (like VeriSign) will be extended with the extra certificates in file
. The file should consist of one or more trusted certificates in PEM format. A message will be emitted (once) with process.emitWarning()
if the file is missing or malformed, but any errors are otherwise ignored.
Neither the well known nor extra certificates are used when the ca
options property is explicitly specified for a TLS or HTTPS client or server.
This environment variable is ignored when node
runs as setuid root or has Linux file capabilities set.
The NODE_EXTRA_CA_CERTS
environment variable is only read when the Node.js process is first launched. Changing the value at runtime using process.env.NODE_EXTRA_CA_CERTS
has no effect on the current process.
NODE_ICU_DATA=file
Data path for ICU (Intl
object) data. Will extend linked-in data when compiled with small-icu support.
NODE_NO_WARNINGS=1
When set to 1
, process warnings are silenced.
NODE_OPTIONS=options...
A space-separated list of command-line options. options...
are interpreted before command-line options, so command-line options will override or compound after anything in options...
. Node.js will exit with an error if an option that is not allowed in the environment is used, such as -p
or a script file.
If an option value contains a space, it can be escaped using double quotes:
NODE_OPTIONS='--require "./my path/file.js"' copy
A singleton flag passed as a command-line option will override the same flag passed into NODE_OPTIONS
:
# The inspector will be available on port 5555 NODE_OPTIONS='--inspect=localhost:4444' node --inspect=localhost:5555 copy
A flag that can be passed multiple times will be treated as if its NODE_OPTIONS
instances were passed first, and then its command-line instances afterwards:
NODE_OPTIONS='--require "./a.js"' node --require "./b.js" # is equivalent to: node --require "./a.js" --require "./b.js" copy
Node.js options that are allowed are:
--allow-child-process
--allow-fs-read
--allow-fs-write
--allow-worker
--conditions
, -C
--diagnostic-dir
--disable-proto
--dns-result-order
--enable-fips
--enable-network-family-autoselection
--enable-source-maps
--experimental-abortcontroller
--experimental-import-meta-resolve
--experimental-json-modules
--experimental-loader
--experimental-modules
--experimental-network-imports
--experimental-permission
--experimental-policy
--experimental-shadow-realm
--experimental-specifier-resolution
--experimental-top-level-await
--experimental-vm-modules
--experimental-wasi-unstable-preview1
--experimental-wasm-modules
--force-context-aware
--force-fips
--force-node-api-uncaught-exceptions-policy
--frozen-intrinsics
--heapsnapshot-near-heap-limit
--heapsnapshot-signal
--http-parser
--icu-data-dir
--import
--input-type
--insecure-http-parser
--inspect-brk
--inspect-port
, --debug-port
--inspect-publish-uid
--inspect
--max-http-header-size
--napi-modules
--no-addons
--no-deprecation
--no-experimental-fetch
--no-experimental-global-customevent
--no-experimental-global-webcrypto
--no-experimental-repl-await
--no-extra-info-on-fatal-exception
--no-force-async-hooks-checks
--no-global-search-paths
--no-network-family-autoselection
--no-warnings
--node-memory-debug
--openssl-config
--openssl-legacy-provider
--openssl-shared-config
--pending-deprecation
--policy-integrity
--preserve-symlinks-main
--preserve-symlinks
--prof-process
--redirect-warnings
--report-compact
--report-dir
, --report-directory
--report-filename
--report-on-fatalerror
--report-on-signal
--report-signal
--report-uncaught-exception
--require
, -r
--secure-heap-min
--secure-heap
--snapshot-blob
--test-only
--test-reporter-destination
--test-reporter
--test-shard
--throw-deprecation
--title
--tls-cipher-list
--tls-keylog
--tls-max-v1.2
--tls-max-v1.3
--tls-min-v1.0
--tls-min-v1.1
--tls-min-v1.2
--tls-min-v1.3
--trace-atomics-wait
--trace-deprecation
--trace-event-categories
--trace-event-file-pattern
--trace-events-enabled
--trace-exit
--trace-sigint
--trace-sync-io
--trace-tls
--trace-uncaught
--trace-warnings
--track-heap-objects
--unhandled-rejections
--use-bundled-ca
--use-largepages
--use-openssl-ca
--v8-pool-size
--watch-path
--watch-preserve-output
--watch
--zero-fill-buffers
V8 options that are allowed are:
--abort-on-uncaught-exception
--disallow-code-generation-from-strings
--enable-etw-stack-walking
--huge-max-old-generation-size
--interpreted-frames-native-stack
--jitless
--max-old-space-size
--max-semi-space-size
--perf-basic-prof-only-functions
--perf-basic-prof
--perf-prof-unwinding-info
--perf-prof
--stack-trace-limit
--perf-basic-prof-only-functions
, --perf-basic-prof
, --perf-prof-unwinding-info
, and --perf-prof
are only available on Linux.
--enable-etw-stack-walking
is only available on Windows.
NODE_PATH=path[:…]
':'
-separated list of directories prefixed to the module search path.
On Windows, this is a ';'
-separated list instead.
NODE_PENDING_DEPRECATION=1
When set to 1
, emit pending deprecation warnings.
Pending deprecations are generally identical to a runtime deprecation with the notable exception that they are turned off by default and will not be emitted unless either the --pending-deprecation
command-line flag, or the NODE_PENDING_DEPRECATION=1
environment variable, is set. Pending deprecations are used to provide a kind of selective "early warning" mechanism that developers may leverage to detect deprecated API usage.
NODE_PENDING_PIPE_INSTANCES=instances
Set the number of pending pipe instance handles when the pipe server is waiting for connections. This setting applies to Windows only.
NODE_PRESERVE_SYMLINKS=1
When set to 1
, instructs the module loader to preserve symbolic links when resolving and caching modules.
NODE_REDIRECT_WARNINGS=file
When set, process warnings will be emitted to the given file instead of printing to stderr. The file will be created if it does not exist, and will be appended to if it does. If an error occurs while attempting to write the warning to the file, the warning will be written to stderr instead. This is equivalent to using the --redirect-warnings=file
command-line flag.
NODE_REPL_EXTERNAL_MODULE=file
Path to a Node.js module which will be loaded in place of the built-in REPL. Overriding this value to an empty string (''
) will use the built-in REPL.
NODE_REPL_HISTORY=file
Path to the file used to store the persistent REPL history. The default path is ~/.node_repl_history
, which is overridden by this variable. Setting the value to an empty string (''
or ' '
) disables persistent REPL history.
NODE_SKIP_PLATFORM_CHECK=value
If value
equals '1'
, the check for a supported platform is skipped during Node.js startup. Node.js might not execute correctly. Any issues encountered on unsupported platforms will not be fixed.
NODE_TEST_CONTEXT=value
If value
equals 'child'
, test reporter options will be overridden and test output will be sent to stdout in the TAP format. If any other value is provided, Node.js makes no guarantees about the reporter format used or its stability.
NODE_TLS_REJECT_UNAUTHORIZED=value
If value
equals '0'
, certificate validation is disabled for TLS connections. This makes TLS, and HTTPS by extension, insecure. The use of this environment variable is strongly discouraged.
NODE_V8_COVERAGE=dir
When set, Node.js will begin outputting V8 JavaScript code coverage and Source Map data to the directory provided as an argument (coverage information is written as JSON to files with a coverage
prefix).
NODE_V8_COVERAGE
will automatically propagate to subprocesses, making it easier to instrument applications that call the child_process.spawn()
family of functions. NODE_V8_COVERAGE
can be set to an empty string, to prevent propagation.
Coverage is output as an array of ScriptCoverage objects on the top-level key result
:
{ "result": [ { "scriptId": "67", "url": "internal/tty.js", "functions": [] } ] } copy
If found, source map data is appended to the top-level key source-map-cache
on the JSON coverage object.
source-map-cache
is an object with keys representing the files source maps were extracted from, and values which include the raw source-map URL (in the key url
), the parsed Source Map v3 information (in the key data
), and the line lengths of the source file (in the key lineLengths
).
{ "result": [ { "scriptId": "68", "url": "file:///absolute/path/to/source.js", "functions": [] } ], "source-map-cache": { "file:///absolute/path/to/source.js": { "url": "./path-to-map.json", "data": { "version": 3, "sources": [ "file:///absolute/path/to/original.js" ], "names": [ "Foo", "console", "info" ], "mappings": "MAAMA,IACJC,YAAaC", "sourceRoot": "./" }, "lineLengths": [ 13, 62, 38, 27 ] } } } copy
OPENSSL_CONF=file
Load an OpenSSL configuration file on startup. Among other uses, this can be used to enable FIPS-compliant crypto if Node.js is built with ./configure --openssl-fips
.
If the --openssl-config
command-line option is used, the environment variable is ignored.
SSL_CERT_DIR=dir
If --use-openssl-ca
is enabled, this overrides and sets OpenSSL's directory containing trusted certificates.
Be aware that unless the child environment is explicitly set, this environment variable will be inherited by any child processes, and if they use OpenSSL, it may cause them to trust the same CAs as node.
SSL_CERT_FILE=file
If --use-openssl-ca
is enabled, this overrides and sets OpenSSL's file containing trusted certificates.
Be aware that unless the child environment is explicitly set, this environment variable will be inherited by any child processes, and if they use OpenSSL, it may cause them to trust the same CAs as node.
TZ
The TZ
environment variable is used to specify the timezone configuration.
While Node.js does not support all of the various ways that TZ
is handled in other environments, it does support basic timezone IDs (such as 'Etc/UTC'
, 'Europe/Paris'
, or 'America/New_York'
). It may support a few other abbreviations or aliases, but these are strongly discouraged and not guaranteed.
$ TZ=Europe/Dublin node -pe "new Date().toString()" Wed May 12 2021 20:30:48 GMT+0100 (Irish Standard Time) copy
UV_THREADPOOL_SIZE=size
Set the number of threads used in libuv's threadpool to size
threads.
Asynchronous system APIs are used by Node.js whenever possible, but where they do not exist, libuv's threadpool is used to create asynchronous node APIs based on synchronous system APIs. Node.js APIs that use the threadpool are:
fs
APIs, other than the file watcher APIs and those that are explicitly synchronouscrypto.pbkdf2()
, crypto.scrypt()
, crypto.randomBytes()
, crypto.randomFill()
, crypto.generateKeyPair()
dns.lookup()
zlib
APIs, other than those that are explicitly synchronousBecause libuv's threadpool has a fixed size, it means that if for whatever reason any of these APIs takes a long time, other (seemingly unrelated) APIs that run in libuv's threadpool will experience degraded performance. In order to mitigate this issue, one potential solution is to increase the size of libuv's threadpool by setting the 'UV_THREADPOOL_SIZE'
environment variable to a value greater than 4
(its current default value). For more information, see the libuv threadpool documentation.
V8 has its own set of CLI options. Any V8 CLI option that is provided to node
will be passed on to V8 to handle. V8's options have no stability guarantee. The V8 team themselves don't consider them to be part of their formal API, and reserve the right to change them at any time. Likewise, they are not covered by the Node.js stability guarantees. Many of the V8 options are of interest only to V8 developers. Despite this, there is a small set of V8 options that are widely applicable to Node.js, and they are documented here:
--max-old-space-size=SIZE
(in megabytes)
Sets the max memory size of V8's old memory section. As memory consumption approaches the limit, V8 will spend more time on garbage collection in an effort to free unused memory.
On a machine with 2 GiB of memory, consider setting this to 1536 (1.5 GiB) to leave some memory for other uses and avoid swapping.
node --max-old-space-size=1536 index.js copy
--max-semi-space-size=SIZE
(in megabytes)
Sets the maximum semi-space size for V8's scavenge garbage collector in MiB (megabytes). Increasing the max size of a semi-space may improve throughput for Node.js at the cost of more memory consumption.
Since the young generation size of the V8 heap is three times (see YoungGenerationSizeFromSemiSpaceSize
in V8) the size of the semi-space, an increase of 1 MiB to semi-space applies to each of the three individual semi-spaces and causes the heap size to increase by 3 MiB. The throughput improvement depends on your workload (see #42511).
The default value is 16 MiB for 64-bit systems and 8 MiB for 32-bit systems. To get the best configuration for your application, you should try different max-semi-space-size values when running benchmarks for your application.
For example, benchmark on a 64-bit systems:
for MiB in 16 32 64 128; do node --max-semi-space-size=$MiB index.js done copy
© Joyent, Inc. and other Node contributors
Licensed under the MIT License.
Node.js is a trademark of Joyent, Inc. and is used with its permission.
We are not endorsed by or affiliated with Joyent.
https://nodejs.org/api/cli.html