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Allow multiple installs of Node on Windows with msi #4603
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Some comment wether this will get on the backlog or not would be nice |
Not many people work on the installers in general, if you feel strongly about this you may have to work on it yourself. :) I'm not very familiar with the installers (especially windows) but I can try to help/point to the right people. I'm not familiar enough with windows installations to tell if this is actually a good idea though. cc @nodejs/platform-windows |
My main concern with something like this would be how a system would handle multiple installs in the path. is it only the most recent that is linked to? It seems like this could be a breaking change for systems, but I don't really know the installer so this is speculation. @felixfbecker is there a reason you prefer this to be handled by the node installer rather than a userland module such as nvm-windows? |
I'm not saying that the installer shouldn't handle these cases, but for the time being, you'll likely have a better experience if you use a version manager like nvm-windows, as @thealphanerd mentioned. |
@thealphanerd It is pretty easy to configure whats in the %PATH% on Windows, there is a very nice GUI for it:
People can either set for themselves what version should be there or just check "change PATH" when they install a new version, the old entry should then get replaced by the new one. The msi is the primary and recommended installation method for Node on Windows, and just how programs are installed on Windows. Even NPM says under how to install to Windows "get the msi, npm is in it". msi is for Windows what pkg is for Mac. Version managers bypasses the native installation methods on Windows, you don't get an entry in control panel for uninstalling, you dont get shortcuts in start menu, etc. They dont share global NPM packages between versions, create symlinks and switch their targets, download node versions in AppData directories so it does not need administrative rights etc to solve a problem that shouldnt exist in the first place. I want my programs to be installed in @Fishrock123 I indeed feel quite strongly about this: Everyone respects how files should be layed out on Unix file hierachy and everyone is ok with needing sudo to do stuff, but on Windows often the motto is install anywhere, avoid UAC at all cost. To often you see "just download the zip and put it in C:" or installers like Squirrel that dont allow you to customize the install location. Unfortunately, I have never worked with installers before. I will try to take a look at it. But from what I understand, at least noone is opposed to this :) |
@felixfbecker thanks for sharing! I definitely think that this could be a big improvement to the windows workflow! Let us know what we can do to help support you as you dig into this problem |
@thealphanerd @Fishrock123 I found out that the stuff is located under |
it's built using the wix tools which is an open source msi creation tool. |
This is something that I have been recently looking into and discussing with @joaocgreis. I agree in principle that the MSI installing only one version is too limiting. The issue of adding multiple versions / creating conflicts with the global PATH is probably the single biggest complication as already mentioned. Python allows side-by-side installation of different major versions. That can be simply implemented by changing the upgrade code with each major version. Python also add a launcher to the path (py.exe, pyw.exe) which then select a particular version of the engine based on a shebang line in the script (or other default configuration). I am considering implementing something similar for Node. |
@orangemocha Why make it so complicated? Just give the user the choice to overwrite an existing PATH entry on install. Uninstalling previous versions would be the default anyway, so people who install multiple versions should know what they are doing. It's easy to detect what version is currently in PATH by doing The point with python was really the problem that there is a huge gap between Python 2.x and Python 3.x. I would like to not limit this on major versions, but minor by default with a directory structure like in my original post. But people could also install patch versions by changing the install dir. |
I read a bit about WiX and tried to understand the code but I don't think I'm able to contribute here. Sorry. |
Pinging some wix friends. @giltayar @AdirAmsalem @bolshchikov any chance you could get someone from the wix tools team to look into this? |
@benjamingr - those are two different Wix-es. The Wix you're referring to is a developer tool for building msi-s. The wix we are part of is a Consumer Saas for building web sites. |
Having said that, doesn't |
Oh oops, my bad - you guys are working on so many things related to web technologies I just assumed that it was the same company. Apologies Gil Adir and Sergey. |
I just googled nvm windows, and got this: https://github.com/coreybutler/nvm-windows |
At the moment nvm for Windows is the best tool that I know of to run multiple versions on the same machine.
I am concerned that this could introduce some problems / confusion based on the order of installs and uninstalls. I can't say for sure until we test it thoroughly.
Major versions of Node als have many differences between them. They are major versions - by definition - because they introduce breaking changes. Minor upgrades within the same major are supposed to be backward-compatible. In light of that, majors seem like a good place to change the upgrade code. But if we had a solid side-by-side story, and a valid reason to, we could get more granular than that. |
If we can work out the aspects of how the PATH gets presented to the process along with the NPM pairing (as today they're in the same location/PATH) I can certainly handle the wix tooling / msi creation. I do agree NVM for windows would be ideal as well, although the way that works today is via a symbolic link that switches it for any process that runs after the "use" version is issued. Not sure that's the desired approach. Ideally, something that would allow side-by-side of 2 process simultaneously using version A and version B along with a paired version of NPM (and perhaps global NPM modules0. Looking back to the opening comment on this issue, is this reasonable, with NPM/node_modules dangling off each path (duplication is OK?) - eg. if you switch versions, any global NPM modules would need to be installed again.:
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@cicorias The situation that NPM and NodeJS, despite having independent versions, laying in one folder by default is of course troubling. It is only the npm executable though - the global modules are always in Does it impose any problems, when the global modules are shared between versions (as they are right now), besides that engine constraints might get violated? One option of course would be to install NodeJS and NPM in separate folders:
But npm itself is only an npm module, and the handling on Windows always caused trouble with self-updating npm. Another option would be to simply add the global npm module path to the PATH and put npm in there as a global module? That way everyone would be able to self-update with Global modules should actually only be installed to
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Is somebody working on this? nvm is not really a solution. It allows you to switch between versions, but not have multiple versions side-by-side. |
True, but the switch is per-shell, so in essence, it does run multiple On Sun, Jan 24, 2016 at 1:02 PM Felix Becker [email protected]
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@giltayar AFAIK the switch is not per shell. It switches the target of a symlink in |
I use nvm on the Mac, and it is *definitely *per-shell. Not sure about On Sun, Jan 24, 2016 at 1:24 PM Felix Becker [email protected]
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See https://github.com/coreybutler/nvm-windows:
I could certainly build my own version manager by downloading the node.exe binaries, placing them in path C:\Program Files\NodeJS\<version>;%PATH% or Add-PathVariable C:\Program Files\NodeJS\<version> -Prepend in a shell to switch versions (or just reference the full path). But then I would not get the benefits of the msi (npm and uninstalling from control panel / package control) |
Oh cool, great to know this is possible @felixfbecker although it's hacky. Although personally I don't install node from the installer I can see the appeal. If you're interested (are you?) - what would you need in order to be able to start working on a PR? |
@benjamingr Yeah it is hacky, especially because you have to install npm manually. That means
After that, global modules will be installed to where your node binary was, so C:\Program Files if you installed for all users (which means I am interested, but I don't have any experience with Wix or C++. Maybe you can tell me
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I don’t think anyone disagrees that we should do it; but it shouldn’t be done without a comprehensive plan - and “let’s do a one-off implementation on each platform” isn’t quite what I’d call comprehensive. |
Of course. I didn't ever say we shouldn't have a solid plan for how to implement it on each platform because I completely agree that we should. I'd just like to see some progress. |
Sooo, I'm thinking:
Is this a good summary? Actually, none of the points in 3. are contradictory, and I happen to (intentionally) support all of them. |
There's also 3.d., which is find a way to prevent side-by-side installation with MSIs, while an official solution is worked on. |
Also there's 3.e, which is, do nothing while we work on a proper official solution. |
This dicussion has been ongoing for two years, so I am definitely in favor of 3.c. As a short-term solution, 3.b. (and possibly 3.a.) appear appropriate. |
I think 3.a. is a good idea; I'm very much against both 3.c and 3.b. |
Your reading my mind rock on bro.. |
ping @tniessen @ljharb @marcelklehr Do you think we can get consensus for 3.a and move this forward? |
@ljharb What is the argument against 3.c? |
@fhinkel I won't stand in the way, if someone were to open a PR saying that it is currently not supported / recommended, I would likely approve it. It's been some time since I used the MSI, but as far as I remember, the current behavior is to prevent side-by-side installation, isn't it? @felixfbecker See #4603 (comment), #4603 (comment), #4603 (comment). Summary: We should not work on a Windows-specific solution until the version management working group has come up with a "comprehensive plan". This has been open for two years now, any news from that WG? |
Yeah, making the documenting the status quo is always good. |
@felixfbecker I don't think we should do any work to support multi-version scenarios until the version management group has ironed out what that will look like. @tniessen we don't yet have a plan; i just met with the build WG recently and confirmed the direction for a first step. I"m hoping to have time to write something up soon. |
I believe the current consensus is this is incompatible with the current MSI implementation. Put into https://github.com/nodejs/node/projects/13 backlog |
@refack I don't agree that this is a |
Ack. |
BTW I've put it on the new backlog with the intent to make it visible to anyone who wants to pick this up. |
@ljharb Any updates on this? |
@ljharb I believe this was two years ago, any updates? This issue has been open for four years, and the situation doesn't seem to have changed at all. |
This issue isn’t open. No, there are no updates; the longer term plan is to standardize on install locations, but the node official installer still would not allow multiple installs directly - you’d have to go to userland for that. |
It should be possible to install different Node versions to different directories with the msi. Actually, many programs like Java JDK, MySQL Server, PostgreSQL or Python version the installs by minor releases by default. It should at least be _possible_ (if not the default) to install Node versions like this
...but the installer either errors or uninstalls the previous version, depending on order of install. People should be allowed to install to whatever location and these separate installs should be uninstallable separately from Control Panel (with their version in the name). The installer should simply have a checkbox (next to "Add to PATH") to uninstall the previous version for easy upgrades.
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