I successfully update/install the latest version of node js by using those commands (the official curl way not working for me) :
sudo npm cache clean -f
sudo npm install -g n
sudo n stable
sudo ln -sf /usr/local/n/versions/node/<VERSION>/bin/node /usr/bin/nodeHowever, the version of my node and nodejs become different :
$ node --version
v5.0.0
$ nodejs --version
v0.10.25It seems the new node is installed in /usr/local/bin/node, so i tried :
sudo ln -s /usr/bin/nodejs /usr/local/bin/nodeBut it returns :
ln: failed to create symbolic link ‘/usr/local/bin/node’: File existsI also use this link :
$ sudo ln -s /usr/bin/nodejs /usr/bin/node
ln: failed to create symbolic link ‘/usr/bin/node’: File existsI will use some frameworks that depend on node, like Ionic. Which node version will it use?
What should i do to solve this?
Thanks a lot for your help
13 Answers
Steps that solved the same problem for me:
sudo apt-get remove nodejs
sudo ln -s /usr/bin/node /usr/bin/nodejsExplanation
You have installed two versions of nodejs on your computer, so you need to remove one of them. Your situation:
node v5.0.0 - you will keep this one
nodejs v0.10.25 - this you can removeYou can remove nodejs package via apt-get remove command. This will also remove the file /usr/bin/nodejs and you will not get your error message again.
Now you can create a symbolic link called "/usr/bin/nodejs", that points on source "/usr/local/bin/node". In your example you have wrong order of paths "from" and "to"
sudo ln -s source_file myfileMore info about links creation: How symbolic links works
The error:
ln: failed to create symbolic link ‘/usr/bin/node’: File exists
is normally caused when you really have two versions of the Nodejs, a with the alias of the node and the other with the nodejs alias, as we can see on the result of the commands node --version and nodejs --version:
$ node --version
v5.0.0
$ nodejs --version
v0.10.25so you can't create a symbolic link for a file that already exists.
To solve this you need to completely remove the two packages using:
sudo apt-get purge node
sudo apt-get purge nodejs
sudo rm -rf bin/node bin/node-waf include/node lib/node lib/pkgconfig/nodejs.pc share/man/man1/nodeand reinstall only the nodejs package using the command:
sudo apt-get install nodejsand create a symbolic link using:
ln -s /usr/bin/nodejs /usr/bin/nodeor install the nodejs-legacy that will resolve this problem with the command:
sudo apt-get install nodejs-legacy 1 For me the node command is the NodeJS installed by nvm and nodejs command is the NodeJS installed using apt-get