http-errors
Create HTTP errors for Express, Koa, Connect, etc. with ease.
Install
This is a Node.js module available through the npm registry. Installation is done using the npm install command:
Example
This is the current API, currently extracted from Koa and subject to change.
Error Properties
- expose — can be used to signal if message should be sent to the client, defaulting to false when status >= 500
- headers — can be an object of header names to values to be sent to the client, defaulting to undefined . When defined, the key names should all be lower-cased
- message — the traditional error message, which should be kept short and all single line
- status — the status code of the error, mirroring statusCode for general compatibility
- statusCode — the status code of the error, defaulting to 500
createError([status], [message], [properties])
Create a new error object with the given message msg . The error object inherits from createError.HttpError .
- status: 500 — the status code as a number
- message — the message of the error, defaulting to node’s text for that status code.
- properties — custom properties to attach to the object
createError([status], [error], [properties])
Extend the given error object with createError.HttpError properties. This will not alter the inheritance of the given error object, and the modified error object is the return value.
- status — the status code as a number
- error — the error object to extend
- properties — custom properties to attach to the object
createError.isHttpError(val)
Determine if the provided val is an HttpError . This will return true if the error inherits from the HttpError constructor of this module or matches the «duck type» for an error this module creates. All outputs from the createError factory will return true for this function, including if an non- HttpError was passed into the factory.
Источник
Node.js v19.4.0 documentation
Errors #
Applications running in Node.js will generally experience four categories of errors:
- Standard JavaScript errors such as , , , , , and .
- System errors triggered by underlying operating system constraints such as attempting to open a file that does not exist or attempting to send data over a closed socket.
- User-specified errors triggered by application code.
- AssertionError s are a special class of error that can be triggered when Node.js detects an exceptional logic violation that should never occur. These are raised typically by the node:assert module.
All JavaScript and system errors raised by Node.js inherit from, or are instances of, the standard JavaScript class and are guaranteed to provide at least the properties available on that class.
Error propagation and interception #
Node.js supports several mechanisms for propagating and handling errors that occur while an application is running. How these errors are reported and handled depends entirely on the type of Error and the style of the API that is called.
All JavaScript errors are handled as exceptions that immediately generate and throw an error using the standard JavaScript throw mechanism. These are handled using the try…catch construct provided by the JavaScript language.
Any use of the JavaScript throw mechanism will raise an exception that must be handled using try…catch or the Node.js process will exit immediately.
With few exceptions, Synchronous APIs (any blocking method that does not accept a callback function, such as fs.readFileSync ), will use throw to report errors.
Errors that occur within Asynchronous APIs may be reported in multiple ways:
Most asynchronous methods that accept a callback function will accept an Error object passed as the first argument to that function. If that first argument is not null and is an instance of Error , then an error occurred that should be handled.
When an asynchronous method is called on an object that is an EventEmitter , errors can be routed to that object’s ‘error’ event.
A handful of typically asynchronous methods in the Node.js API may still use the throw mechanism to raise exceptions that must be handled using try…catch . There is no comprehensive list of such methods; please refer to the documentation of each method to determine the appropriate error handling mechanism required.
The use of the ‘error’ event mechanism is most common for stream-based and event emitter-based APIs, which themselves represent a series of asynchronous operations over time (as opposed to a single operation that may pass or fail).
For all EventEmitter objects, if an ‘error’ event handler is not provided, the error will be thrown, causing the Node.js process to report an uncaught exception and crash unless either: The domain module is used appropriately or a handler has been registered for the ‘uncaughtException’ event.
Errors generated in this way cannot be intercepted using try…catch as they are thrown after the calling code has already exited.
Developers must refer to the documentation for each method to determine exactly how errors raised by those methods are propagated.
Error-first callbacks #
Most asynchronous methods exposed by the Node.js core API follow an idiomatic pattern referred to as an error-first callback. With this pattern, a callback function is passed to the method as an argument. When the operation either completes or an error is raised, the callback function is called with the Error object (if any) passed as the first argument. If no error was raised, the first argument will be passed as null .
The JavaScript try…catch mechanism cannot be used to intercept errors generated by asynchronous APIs. A common mistake for beginners is to try to use throw inside an error-first callback:
This will not work because the callback function passed to fs.readFile() is called asynchronously. By the time the callback has been called, the surrounding code, including the try…catch block, will have already exited. Throwing an error inside the callback can crash the Node.js process in most cases. If domains are enabled, or a handler has been registered with process.on(‘uncaughtException’) , such errors can be intercepted.
Class: Error #
A generic JavaScript object that does not denote any specific circumstance of why the error occurred. Error objects capture a «stack trace» detailing the point in the code at which the Error was instantiated, and may provide a text description of the error.
All errors generated by Node.js, including all system and JavaScript errors, will either be instances of, or inherit from, the Error class.
new Error(message[, options]) #
Creates a new Error object and sets the error.message property to the provided text message. If an object is passed as message , the text message is generated by calling String(message) . If the cause option is provided, it is assigned to the error.cause property. The error.stack property will represent the point in the code at which new Error() was called. Stack traces are dependent on V8’s stack trace API. Stack traces extend only to either (a) the beginning of synchronous code execution, or (b) the number of frames given by the property Error.stackTraceLimit , whichever is smaller.
Error.captureStackTrace(targetObject[, constructorOpt]) #
Creates a .stack property on targetObject , which when accessed returns a string representing the location in the code at which Error.captureStackTrace() was called.
The first line of the trace will be prefixed with $: $ .
The optional constructorOpt argument accepts a function. If given, all frames above constructorOpt , including constructorOpt , will be omitted from the generated stack trace.
The constructorOpt argument is useful for hiding implementation details of error generation from the user. For instance:
Error.stackTraceLimit #
The Error.stackTraceLimit property specifies the number of stack frames collected by a stack trace (whether generated by new Error().stack or Error.captureStackTrace(obj) ).
The default value is 10 but may be set to any valid JavaScript number. Changes will affect any stack trace captured after the value has been changed.
If set to a non-number value, or set to a negative number, stack traces will not capture any frames.
error.cause #
If present, the error.cause property is the underlying cause of the Error . It is used when catching an error and throwing a new one with a different message or code in order to still have access to the original error.
The error.cause property is typically set by calling new Error(message, < cause >) . It is not set by the constructor if the cause option is not provided.
This property allows errors to be chained. When serializing Error objects, util.inspect() recursively serializes error.cause if it is set.
error.code #
The error.code property is a string label that identifies the kind of error. error.code is the most stable way to identify an error. It will only change between major versions of Node.js. In contrast, error.message strings may change between any versions of Node.js. See Node.js error codes for details about specific codes.
error.message #
The error.message property is the string description of the error as set by calling new Error(message) . The message passed to the constructor will also appear in the first line of the stack trace of the Error , however changing this property after the Error object is created may not change the first line of the stack trace (for example, when error.stack is read before this property is changed).
error.stack #
The error.stack property is a string describing the point in the code at which the Error was instantiated.
The first line is formatted as : , and is followed by a series of stack frames (each line beginning with «at «). Each frame describes a call site within the code that lead to the error being generated. V8 attempts to display a name for each function (by variable name, function name, or object method name), but occasionally it will not be able to find a suitable name. If V8 cannot determine a name for the function, only location information will be displayed for that frame. Otherwise, the determined function name will be displayed with location information appended in parentheses.
Frames are only generated for JavaScript functions. If, for example, execution synchronously passes through a C++ addon function called cheetahify which itself calls a JavaScript function, the frame representing the cheetahify call will not be present in the stack traces:
The location information will be one of:
- native , if the frame represents a call internal to V8 (as in [].forEach ).
- plain-filename.js:line:column , if the frame represents a call internal to Node.js.
- /absolute/path/to/file.js:line:column , if the frame represents a call in a user program (using CommonJS module system), or its dependencies.
- :///url/to/module/file.mjs:line:column , if the frame represents a call in a user program (using ES module system), or its dependencies.
The string representing the stack trace is lazily generated when the error.stack property is accessed.
The number of frames captured by the stack trace is bounded by the smaller of Error.stackTraceLimit or the number of available frames on the current event loop tick.
Class: AssertionError #
Indicates the failure of an assertion. For details, see Class: assert.AssertionError .
Class: RangeError #
Indicates that a provided argument was not within the set or range of acceptable values for a function; whether that is a numeric range, or outside the set of options for a given function parameter.
Node.js will generate and throw RangeError instances immediately as a form of argument validation.
Class: ReferenceError #
Indicates that an attempt is being made to access a variable that is not defined. Such errors commonly indicate typos in code, or an otherwise broken program.
While client code may generate and propagate these errors, in practice, only V8 will do so.
Unless an application is dynamically generating and running code, ReferenceError instances indicate a bug in the code or its dependencies.
Class: SyntaxError #
Indicates that a program is not valid JavaScript. These errors may only be generated and propagated as a result of code evaluation. Code evaluation may happen as a result of eval , Function , require , or vm. These errors are almost always indicative of a broken program.
SyntaxError instances are unrecoverable in the context that created them – they may only be caught by other contexts.
Class: SystemError #
Node.js generates system errors when exceptions occur within its runtime environment. These usually occur when an application violates an operating system constraint. For example, a system error will occur if an application attempts to read a file that does not exist.
- address If present, the address to which a network connection failed
- code The string error code
- dest If present, the file path destination when reporting a file system error
- errno The system-provided error number
- info If present, extra details about the error condition
- message A system-provided human-readable description of the error
- path If present, the file path when reporting a file system error
- port If present, the network connection port that is not available
- syscall The name of the system call that triggered the error
error.address #
If present, error.address is a string describing the address to which a network connection failed.
error.code #
The error.code property is a string representing the error code.
error.dest #
If present, error.dest is the file path destination when reporting a file system error.
error.errno #
The error.errno property is a negative number which corresponds to the error code defined in libuv Error handling .
On Windows the error number provided by the system will be normalized by libuv.
To get the string representation of the error code, use util.getSystemErrorName(error.errno) .
error.info #
If present, error.info is an object with details about the error condition.
error.message #
error.message is a system-provided human-readable description of the error.
error.path #
If present, error.path is a string containing a relevant invalid pathname.
error.port #
If present, error.port is the network connection port that is not available.
error.syscall #
The error.syscall property is a string describing the syscall that failed.
Common system errors #
This is a list of system errors commonly-encountered when writing a Node.js program. For a comprehensive list, see the errno (3) man page.
EACCES (Permission denied): An attempt was made to access a file in a way forbidden by its file access permissions.
EADDRINUSE (Address already in use): An attempt to bind a server ( net , http , or https ) to a local address failed due to another server on the local system already occupying that address.
ECONNREFUSED (Connection refused): No connection could be made because the target machine actively refused it. This usually results from trying to connect to a service that is inactive on the foreign host.
ECONNRESET (Connection reset by peer): A connection was forcibly closed by a peer. This normally results from a loss of the connection on the remote socket due to a timeout or reboot. Commonly encountered via the http and net modules.
EEXIST (File exists): An existing file was the target of an operation that required that the target not exist.
EISDIR (Is a directory): An operation expected a file, but the given pathname was a directory.
EMFILE (Too many open files in system): Maximum number of file descriptors allowable on the system has been reached, and requests for another descriptor cannot be fulfilled until at least one has been closed. This is encountered when opening many files at once in parallel, especially on systems (in particular, macOS) where there is a low file descriptor limit for processes. To remedy a low limit, run ulimit -n 2048 in the same shell that will run the Node.js process.
ENOENT (No such file or directory): Commonly raised by fs operations to indicate that a component of the specified pathname does not exist. No entity (file or directory) could be found by the given path.
ENOTDIR (Not a directory): A component of the given pathname existed, but was not a directory as expected. Commonly raised by fs.readdir .
ENOTEMPTY (Directory not empty): A directory with entries was the target of an operation that requires an empty directory, usually fs.unlink .
ENOTFOUND (DNS lookup failed): Indicates a DNS failure of either EAI_NODATA or EAI_NONAME . This is not a standard POSIX error.
EPERM (Operation not permitted): An attempt was made to perform an operation that requires elevated privileges.
EPIPE (Broken pipe): A write on a pipe, socket, or FIFO for which there is no process to read the data. Commonly encountered at the net and http layers, indicative that the remote side of the stream being written to has been closed.
ETIMEDOUT (Operation timed out): A connect or send request failed because the connected party did not properly respond after a period of time. Usually encountered by http or net . Often a sign that a socket.end() was not properly called.
Class: TypeError #
Indicates that a provided argument is not an allowable type. For example, passing a function to a parameter which expects a string would be a TypeError .
Node.js will generate and throw TypeError instances immediately as a form of argument validation.
Exceptions vs. errors #
A JavaScript exception is a value that is thrown as a result of an invalid operation or as the target of a throw statement. While it is not required that these values are instances of Error or classes which inherit from Error , all exceptions thrown by Node.js or the JavaScript runtime will be instances of Error .
Some exceptions are unrecoverable at the JavaScript layer. Such exceptions will always cause the Node.js process to crash. Examples include assert() checks or abort() calls in the C++ layer.
OpenSSL errors #
Errors originating in crypto or tls are of class Error , and in addition to the standard .code and .message properties, may have some additional OpenSSL-specific properties.
error.opensslErrorStack #
An array of errors that can give context to where in the OpenSSL library an error originates from.
error.function #
The OpenSSL function the error originates in.
error.library #
The OpenSSL library the error originates in.
error.reason #
A human-readable string describing the reason for the error.
Node.js error codes #
ABORT_ERR #
Used when an operation has been aborted (typically using an AbortController ).
APIs not using AbortSignal s typically do not raise an error with this code.
This code does not use the regular ERR_* convention Node.js errors use in order to be compatible with the web platform’s AbortError .
ERR_AMBIGUOUS_ARGUMENT #
A function argument is being used in a way that suggests that the function signature may be misunderstood. This is thrown by the node:assert module when the message parameter in assert.throws(block, message) matches the error message thrown by block because that usage suggests that the user believes message is the expected message rather than the message the AssertionError will display if block does not throw.
ERR_ARG_NOT_ITERABLE #
An iterable argument (i.e. a value that works with for. of loops) was required, but not provided to a Node.js API.
ERR_ASSERTION #
A special type of error that can be triggered whenever Node.js detects an exceptional logic violation that should never occur. These are raised typically by the node:assert module.
ERR_ASSERT_SNAPSHOT_NOT_SUPPORTED #
An attempt was made to use assert.snapshot() in an environment that does not support snapshots, such as the REPL, or when using node —eval .
ERR_ASYNC_CALLBACK #
An attempt was made to register something that is not a function as an AsyncHooks callback.
ERR_ASYNC_TYPE #
The type of an asynchronous resource was invalid. Users are also able to define their own types if using the public embedder API.
ERR_BROTLI_COMPRESSION_FAILED #
Data passed to a Brotli stream was not successfully compressed.
ERR_BROTLI_INVALID_PARAM #
An invalid parameter key was passed during construction of a Brotli stream.
ERR_BUFFER_CONTEXT_NOT_AVAILABLE #
An attempt was made to create a Node.js Buffer instance from addon or embedder code, while in a JS engine Context that is not associated with a Node.js instance. The data passed to the Buffer method will have been released by the time the method returns.
When encountering this error, a possible alternative to creating a Buffer instance is to create a normal Uint8Array , which only differs in the prototype of the resulting object. Uint8Array s are generally accepted in all Node.js core APIs where Buffer s are; they are available in all Contexts.
ERR_BUFFER_OUT_OF_BOUNDS #
An operation outside the bounds of a Buffer was attempted.
ERR_BUFFER_TOO_LARGE #
An attempt has been made to create a Buffer larger than the maximum allowed size.
ERR_CANNOT_WATCH_SIGINT #
Node.js was unable to watch for the SIGINT signal.
ERR_CHILD_CLOSED_BEFORE_REPLY #
A child process was closed before the parent received a reply.
ERR_CHILD_PROCESS_IPC_REQUIRED #
Used when a child process is being forked without specifying an IPC channel.
ERR_CHILD_PROCESS_STDIO_MAXBUFFER #
Used when the main process is trying to read data from the child process’s STDERR/STDOUT, and the data’s length is longer than the maxBuffer option.
ERR_CLOSED_MESSAGE_PORT #
There was an attempt to use a MessagePort instance in a closed state, usually after .close() has been called.
ERR_CONSOLE_WRITABLE_STREAM #
Console was instantiated without stdout stream, or Console has a non-writable stdout or stderr stream.
ERR_CONSTRUCT_CALL_INVALID #
A class constructor was called that is not callable.
ERR_CONSTRUCT_CALL_REQUIRED #
A constructor for a class was called without new .
ERR_CONTEXT_NOT_INITIALIZED #
The vm context passed into the API is not yet initialized. This could happen when an error occurs (and is caught) during the creation of the context, for example, when the allocation fails or the maximum call stack size is reached when the context is created.
ERR_CRYPTO_CUSTOM_ENGINE_NOT_SUPPORTED #
A client certificate engine was requested that is not supported by the version of OpenSSL being used.
ERR_CRYPTO_ECDH_INVALID_FORMAT #
An invalid value for the format argument was passed to the crypto.ECDH() class getPublicKey() method.
ERR_CRYPTO_ECDH_INVALID_PUBLIC_KEY #
An invalid value for the key argument has been passed to the crypto.ECDH() class computeSecret() method. It means that the public key lies outside of the elliptic curve.
ERR_CRYPTO_ENGINE_UNKNOWN #
An invalid crypto engine identifier was passed to require(‘node:crypto’).setEngine() .
ERR_CRYPTO_FIPS_FORCED #
The —force-fips command-line argument was used but there was an attempt to enable or disable FIPS mode in the node:crypto module.
ERR_CRYPTO_FIPS_UNAVAILABLE #
An attempt was made to enable or disable FIPS mode, but FIPS mode was not available.
ERR_CRYPTO_HASH_FINALIZED #
hash.digest() was called multiple times. The hash.digest() method must be called no more than one time per instance of a Hash object.
ERR_CRYPTO_HASH_UPDATE_FAILED #
hash.update() failed for any reason. This should rarely, if ever, happen.
ERR_CRYPTO_INCOMPATIBLE_KEY #
The given crypto keys are incompatible with the attempted operation.
ERR_CRYPTO_INCOMPATIBLE_KEY_OPTIONS #
The selected public or private key encoding is incompatible with other options.
ERR_CRYPTO_INITIALIZATION_FAILED #
Initialization of the crypto subsystem failed.
ERR_CRYPTO_INVALID_AUTH_TAG #
An invalid authentication tag was provided.
ERR_CRYPTO_INVALID_COUNTER #
An invalid counter was provided for a counter-mode cipher.
ERR_CRYPTO_INVALID_CURVE #
An invalid elliptic-curve was provided.
ERR_CRYPTO_INVALID_DIGEST #
An invalid crypto digest algorithm was specified.
ERR_CRYPTO_INVALID_IV #
An invalid initialization vector was provided.
ERR_CRYPTO_INVALID_JWK #
An invalid JSON Web Key was provided.
ERR_CRYPTO_INVALID_KEY_OBJECT_TYPE #
The given crypto key object’s type is invalid for the attempted operation.
ERR_CRYPTO_INVALID_KEYLEN #
An invalid key length was provided.
ERR_CRYPTO_INVALID_KEYPAIR #
An invalid key pair was provided.
ERR_CRYPTO_INVALID_KEYTYPE #
An invalid key type was provided.
ERR_CRYPTO_INVALID_MESSAGELEN #
An invalid message length was provided.
ERR_CRYPTO_INVALID_SCRYPT_PARAMS #
Invalid scrypt algorithm parameters were provided.
ERR_CRYPTO_INVALID_STATE #
A crypto method was used on an object that was in an invalid state. For instance, calling cipher.getAuthTag() before calling cipher.final() .
ERR_CRYPTO_INVALID_TAG_LENGTH #
An invalid authentication tag length was provided.
ERR_CRYPTO_JOB_INIT_FAILED #
Initialization of an asynchronous crypto operation failed.
ERR_CRYPTO_JWK_UNSUPPORTED_CURVE #
Key’s Elliptic Curve is not registered for use in the JSON Web Key Elliptic Curve Registry.
ERR_CRYPTO_JWK_UNSUPPORTED_KEY_TYPE #
Key’s Asymmetric Key Type is not registered for use in the JSON Web Key Types Registry.
ERR_CRYPTO_OPERATION_FAILED #
A crypto operation failed for an otherwise unspecified reason.
ERR_CRYPTO_PBKDF2_ERROR #
The PBKDF2 algorithm failed for unspecified reasons. OpenSSL does not provide more details and therefore neither does Node.js.
ERR_CRYPTO_SCRYPT_INVALID_PARAMETER #
One or more crypto.scrypt() or crypto.scryptSync() parameters are outside their legal range.
ERR_CRYPTO_SCRYPT_NOT_SUPPORTED #
Node.js was compiled without scrypt support. Not possible with the official release binaries but can happen with custom builds, including distro builds.
ERR_CRYPTO_SIGN_KEY_REQUIRED #
A signing key was not provided to the sign.sign() method.
ERR_CRYPTO_TIMING_SAFE_EQUAL_LENGTH #
crypto.timingSafeEqual() was called with Buffer , TypedArray , or DataView arguments of different lengths.
ERR_CRYPTO_UNKNOWN_CIPHER #
An unknown cipher was specified.
ERR_CRYPTO_UNKNOWN_DH_GROUP #
An unknown Diffie-Hellman group name was given. See crypto.getDiffieHellman() for a list of valid group names.
ERR_CRYPTO_UNSUPPORTED_OPERATION #
An attempt to invoke an unsupported crypto operation was made.
ERR_DEBUGGER_ERROR #
An error occurred with the debugger.
ERR_DEBUGGER_STARTUP_ERROR #
The debugger timed out waiting for the required host/port to be free.
ERR_DLOPEN_DISABLED #
Loading native addons has been disabled using —no-addons .
ERR_DLOPEN_FAILED #
A call to process.dlopen() failed.
ERR_DIR_CLOSED #
The fs.Dir was previously closed.
ERR_DIR_CONCURRENT_OPERATION #
A synchronous read or close call was attempted on an fs.Dir which has ongoing asynchronous operations.
ERR_DNS_SET_SERVERS_FAILED #
c-ares failed to set the DNS server.
ERR_DOMAIN_CALLBACK_NOT_AVAILABLE #
The node:domain module was not usable since it could not establish the required error handling hooks, because process.setUncaughtExceptionCaptureCallback() had been called at an earlier point in time.
ERR_DOMAIN_CANNOT_SET_UNCAUGHT_EXCEPTION_CAPTURE #
process.setUncaughtExceptionCaptureCallback() could not be called because the node:domain module has been loaded at an earlier point in time.
The stack trace is extended to include the point in time at which the node:domain module had been loaded.
ERR_DUPLICATE_STARTUP_SNAPSHOT_MAIN_FUNCTION #
v8.startupSnapshot.setDeserializeMainFunction() could not be called because it had already been called before.
ERR_ENCODING_INVALID_ENCODED_DATA #
Data provided to TextDecoder() API was invalid according to the encoding provided.
ERR_ENCODING_NOT_SUPPORTED #
Encoding provided to TextDecoder() API was not one of the WHATWG Supported Encodings.
ERR_EVAL_ESM_CANNOT_PRINT #
—print cannot be used with ESM input.
ERR_EVENT_RECURSION #
Thrown when an attempt is made to recursively dispatch an event on EventTarget .
ERR_EXECUTION_ENVIRONMENT_NOT_AVAILABLE #
The JS execution context is not associated with a Node.js environment. This may occur when Node.js is used as an embedded library and some hooks for the JS engine are not set up properly.
ERR_FALSY_VALUE_REJECTION #
A Promise that was callbackified via util.callbackify() was rejected with a falsy value.
ERR_FEATURE_UNAVAILABLE_ON_PLATFORM #
Used when a feature that is not available to the current platform which is running Node.js is used.
ERR_FS_CP_DIR_TO_NON_DIR #
An attempt was made to copy a directory to a non-directory (file, symlink, etc.) using fs.cp() .
ERR_FS_CP_EEXIST #
An attempt was made to copy over a file that already existed with fs.cp() , with the force and errorOnExist set to true .
ERR_FS_CP_EINVAL #
When using fs.cp() , src or dest pointed to an invalid path.
ERR_HTTP_CONTENT_LENGTH_MISMATCH #
Response body size doesn’t match with the specified content-length header value.
ERR_FS_CP_FIFO_PIPE #
An attempt was made to copy a named pipe with fs.cp() .
ERR_FS_CP_NON_DIR_TO_DIR #
An attempt was made to copy a non-directory (file, symlink, etc.) to a directory using fs.cp() .
ERR_FS_CP_SOCKET #
An attempt was made to copy to a socket with fs.cp() .
ERR_FS_CP_SYMLINK_TO_SUBDIRECTORY #
When using fs.cp() , a symlink in dest pointed to a subdirectory of src .
ERR_FS_CP_UNKNOWN #
An attempt was made to copy to an unknown file type with fs.cp() .
ERR_FS_EISDIR #
Path is a directory.
ERR_FS_FILE_TOO_LARGE #
An attempt has been made to read a file whose size is larger than the maximum allowed size for a Buffer .
ERR_FS_INVALID_SYMLINK_TYPE #
An invalid symlink type was passed to the fs.symlink() or fs.symlinkSync() methods.
ERR_HTTP_HEADERS_SENT #
An attempt was made to add more headers after the headers had already been sent.
ERR_HTTP_INVALID_HEADER_VALUE #
An invalid HTTP header value was specified.
ERR_HTTP_INVALID_STATUS_CODE #
Status code was outside the regular status code range (100-999).
ERR_HTTP_REQUEST_TIMEOUT #
The client has not sent the entire request within the allowed time.
ERR_HTTP_SOCKET_ENCODING #
Changing the socket encoding is not allowed per RFC 7230 Section 3.
ERR_HTTP_TRAILER_INVALID #
The Trailer header was set even though the transfer encoding does not support that.
ERR_HTTP2_ALTSVC_INVALID_ORIGIN #
HTTP/2 ALTSVC frames require a valid origin.
ERR_HTTP2_ALTSVC_LENGTH #
HTTP/2 ALTSVC frames are limited to a maximum of 16,382 payload bytes.
ERR_HTTP2_CONNECT_AUTHORITY #
For HTTP/2 requests using the CONNECT method, the :authority pseudo-header is required.
ERR_HTTP2_CONNECT_PATH #
For HTTP/2 requests using the CONNECT method, the :path pseudo-header is forbidden.
ERR_HTTP2_CONNECT_SCHEME #
For HTTP/2 requests using the CONNECT method, the :scheme pseudo-header is forbidden.
ERR_HTTP2_ERROR #
A non-specific HTTP/2 error has occurred.
ERR_HTTP2_GOAWAY_SESSION #
New HTTP/2 Streams may not be opened after the Http2Session has received a GOAWAY frame from the connected peer.
ERR_HTTP2_HEADER_SINGLE_VALUE #
Multiple values were provided for an HTTP/2 header field that was required to have only a single value.
ERR_HTTP2_HEADERS_AFTER_RESPOND #
An additional headers was specified after an HTTP/2 response was initiated.
ERR_HTTP2_HEADERS_SENT #
An attempt was made to send multiple response headers.
ERR_HTTP2_INFO_STATUS_NOT_ALLOWED #
Informational HTTP status codes ( 1xx ) may not be set as the response status code on HTTP/2 responses.
ERR_HTTP2_INVALID_CONNECTION_HEADERS #
HTTP/1 connection specific headers are forbidden to be used in HTTP/2 requests and responses.
ERR_HTTP2_INVALID_HEADER_VALUE #
An invalid HTTP/2 header value was specified.
ERR_HTTP2_INVALID_INFO_STATUS #
An invalid HTTP informational status code has been specified. Informational status codes must be an integer between 100 and 199 (inclusive).
ERR_HTTP2_INVALID_ORIGIN #
HTTP/2 ORIGIN frames require a valid origin.
ERR_HTTP2_INVALID_PACKED_SETTINGS_LENGTH #
Input Buffer and Uint8Array instances passed to the http2.getUnpackedSettings() API must have a length that is a multiple of six.
ERR_HTTP2_INVALID_PSEUDOHEADER #
Only valid HTTP/2 pseudoheaders ( :status , :path , :authority , :scheme , and :method ) may be used.
ERR_HTTP2_INVALID_SESSION #
An action was performed on an Http2Session object that had already been destroyed.
ERR_HTTP2_INVALID_SETTING_VALUE #
An invalid value has been specified for an HTTP/2 setting.
ERR_HTTP2_INVALID_STREAM #
An operation was performed on a stream that had already been destroyed.
ERR_HTTP2_MAX_PENDING_SETTINGS_ACK #
Whenever an HTTP/2 SETTINGS frame is sent to a connected peer, the peer is required to send an acknowledgment that it has received and applied the new SETTINGS . By default, a maximum number of unacknowledged SETTINGS frames may be sent at any given time. This error code is used when that limit has been reached.
ERR_HTTP2_NESTED_PUSH #
An attempt was made to initiate a new push stream from within a push stream. Nested push streams are not permitted.
ERR_HTTP2_NO_MEM #
Out of memory when using the http2session.setLocalWindowSize(windowSize) API.
ERR_HTTP2_NO_SOCKET_MANIPULATION #
An attempt was made to directly manipulate (read, write, pause, resume, etc.) a socket attached to an Http2Session .
ERR_HTTP2_ORIGIN_LENGTH #
HTTP/2 ORIGIN frames are limited to a length of 16382 bytes.
ERR_HTTP2_OUT_OF_STREAMS #
The number of streams created on a single HTTP/2 session reached the maximum limit.
ERR_HTTP2_PAYLOAD_FORBIDDEN #
A message payload was specified for an HTTP response code for which a payload is forbidden.
ERR_HTTP2_PING_CANCEL #
An HTTP/2 ping was canceled.
ERR_HTTP2_PING_LENGTH #
HTTP/2 ping payloads must be exactly 8 bytes in length.
ERR_HTTP2_PSEUDOHEADER_NOT_ALLOWED #
An HTTP/2 pseudo-header has been used inappropriately. Pseudo-headers are header key names that begin with the : prefix.
ERR_HTTP2_PUSH_DISABLED #
An attempt was made to create a push stream, which had been disabled by the client.
ERR_HTTP2_SEND_FILE #
An attempt was made to use the Http2Stream.prototype.responseWithFile() API to send a directory.
ERR_HTTP2_SEND_FILE_NOSEEK #
An attempt was made to use the Http2Stream.prototype.responseWithFile() API to send something other than a regular file, but offset or length options were provided.
ERR_HTTP2_SESSION_ERROR #
The Http2Session closed with a non-zero error code.
ERR_HTTP2_SETTINGS_CANCEL #
The Http2Session settings canceled.
ERR_HTTP2_SOCKET_BOUND #
An attempt was made to connect a Http2Session object to a net.Socket or tls.TLSSocket that had already been bound to another Http2Session object.
ERR_HTTP2_SOCKET_UNBOUND #
An attempt was made to use the socket property of an Http2Session that has already been closed.
ERR_HTTP2_STATUS_101 #
Use of the 101 Informational status code is forbidden in HTTP/2.
ERR_HTTP2_STATUS_INVALID #
An invalid HTTP status code has been specified. Status codes must be an integer between 100 and 599 (inclusive).
ERR_HTTP2_STREAM_CANCEL #
An Http2Stream was destroyed before any data was transmitted to the connected peer.
ERR_HTTP2_STREAM_ERROR #
A non-zero error code was been specified in an RST_STREAM frame.
ERR_HTTP2_STREAM_SELF_DEPENDENCY #
When setting the priority for an HTTP/2 stream, the stream may be marked as a dependency for a parent stream. This error code is used when an attempt is made to mark a stream and dependent of itself.
ERR_HTTP2_TOO_MANY_INVALID_FRAMES #
The limit of acceptable invalid HTTP/2 protocol frames sent by the peer, as specified through the maxSessionInvalidFrames option, has been exceeded.
ERR_HTTP2_TRAILERS_ALREADY_SENT #
Trailing headers have already been sent on the Http2Stream .
ERR_HTTP2_TRAILERS_NOT_READY #
The http2stream.sendTrailers() method cannot be called until after the ‘wantTrailers’ event is emitted on an Http2Stream object. The ‘wantTrailers’ event will only be emitted if the waitForTrailers option is set for the Http2Stream .
ERR_HTTP2_UNSUPPORTED_PROTOCOL #
http2.connect() was passed a URL that uses any protocol other than http: or https: .
ERR_ILLEGAL_CONSTRUCTOR #
An attempt was made to construct an object using a non-public constructor.
ERR_IMPORT_ASSERTION_TYPE_FAILED #
An import assertion has failed, preventing the specified module to be imported.
ERR_IMPORT_ASSERTION_TYPE_MISSING #
An import assertion is missing, preventing the specified module to be imported.
ERR_IMPORT_ASSERTION_TYPE_UNSUPPORTED #
An import assertion is not supported by this version of Node.js.
ERR_INCOMPATIBLE_OPTION_PAIR #
An option pair is incompatible with each other and cannot be used at the same time.
ERR_INPUT_TYPE_NOT_ALLOWED #
The —input-type flag was used to attempt to execute a file. This flag can only be used with input via —eval , —print , or STDIN .
ERR_INSPECTOR_ALREADY_ACTIVATED #
While using the node:inspector module, an attempt was made to activate the inspector when it already started to listen on a port. Use inspector.close() before activating it on a different address.
ERR_INSPECTOR_ALREADY_CONNECTED #
While using the node:inspector module, an attempt was made to connect when the inspector was already connected.
ERR_INSPECTOR_CLOSED #
While using the node:inspector module, an attempt was made to use the inspector after the session had already closed.
ERR_INSPECTOR_COMMAND #
An error occurred while issuing a command via the node:inspector module.
ERR_INSPECTOR_NOT_ACTIVE #
The inspector is not active when inspector.waitForDebugger() is called.
ERR_INSPECTOR_NOT_AVAILABLE #
The node:inspector module is not available for use.
ERR_INSPECTOR_NOT_CONNECTED #
While using the node:inspector module, an attempt was made to use the inspector before it was connected.
ERR_INSPECTOR_NOT_WORKER #
An API was called on the main thread that can only be used from the worker thread.
ERR_INTERNAL_ASSERTION #
There was a bug in Node.js or incorrect usage of Node.js internals. To fix the error, open an issue at https://github.com/nodejs/node/issues.
ERR_INVALID_ADDRESS_FAMILY #
The provided address family is not understood by the Node.js API.
ERR_INVALID_ARG_TYPE #
An argument of the wrong type was passed to a Node.js API.
ERR_INVALID_ARG_VALUE #
An invalid or unsupported value was passed for a given argument.
ERR_INVALID_ASYNC_ID #
An invalid asyncId or triggerAsyncId was passed using AsyncHooks . An id less than -1 should never happen.
ERR_INVALID_BUFFER_SIZE #
A swap was performed on a Buffer but its size was not compatible with the operation.
ERR_INVALID_CHAR #
Invalid characters were detected in headers.
ERR_INVALID_CURSOR_POS #
A cursor on a given stream cannot be moved to a specified row without a specified column.
ERR_INVALID_FD #
A file descriptor (‘fd’) was not valid (e.g. it was a negative value).
ERR_INVALID_FD_TYPE #
A file descriptor (‘fd’) type was not valid.
ERR_INVALID_FILE_URL_HOST #
A Node.js API that consumes file: URLs (such as certain functions in the fs module) encountered a file URL with an incompatible host. This situation can only occur on Unix-like systems where only localhost or an empty host is supported.
ERR_INVALID_FILE_URL_PATH #
A Node.js API that consumes file: URLs (such as certain functions in the fs module) encountered a file URL with an incompatible path. The exact semantics for determining whether a path can be used is platform-dependent.
ERR_INVALID_HANDLE_TYPE #
An attempt was made to send an unsupported «handle» over an IPC communication channel to a child process. See subprocess.send() and process.send() for more information.
ERR_INVALID_HTTP_TOKEN #
An invalid HTTP token was supplied.
ERR_INVALID_IP_ADDRESS #
An IP address is not valid.
ERR_INVALID_MIME_SYNTAX #
The syntax of a MIME is not valid.
ERR_INVALID_MODULE #
An attempt was made to load a module that does not exist or was otherwise not valid.
ERR_INVALID_MODULE_SPECIFIER #
The imported module string is an invalid URL, package name, or package subpath specifier.
ERR_INVALID_OBJECT_DEFINE_PROPERTY #
An error occurred while setting an invalid attribute on the property of an object.
ERR_INVALID_PACKAGE_CONFIG #
An invalid package.json file failed parsing.
ERR_INVALID_PACKAGE_TARGET #
The package.json «exports» field contains an invalid target mapping value for the attempted module resolution.
ERR_INVALID_PERFORMANCE_MARK #
While using the Performance Timing API ( perf_hooks ), a performance mark is invalid.
ERR_INVALID_PROTOCOL #
An invalid options.protocol was passed to http.request() .
ERR_INVALID_REPL_EVAL_CONFIG #
Both breakEvalOnSigint and eval options were set in the REPL config, which is not supported.
ERR_INVALID_REPL_INPUT #
The input may not be used in the REPL . The conditions under which this error is used are described in the REPL documentation.
ERR_INVALID_RETURN_PROPERTY #
Thrown in case a function option does not provide a valid value for one of its returned object properties on execution.
ERR_INVALID_RETURN_PROPERTY_VALUE #
Thrown in case a function option does not provide an expected value type for one of its returned object properties on execution.
ERR_INVALID_RETURN_VALUE #
Thrown in case a function option does not return an expected value type on execution, such as when a function is expected to return a promise.
ERR_INVALID_STATE #
Indicates that an operation cannot be completed due to an invalid state. For instance, an object may have already been destroyed, or may be performing another operation.
ERR_INVALID_SYNC_FORK_INPUT #
A Buffer , TypedArray , DataView , or string was provided as stdio input to an asynchronous fork. See the documentation for the child_process module for more information.
ERR_INVALID_THIS #
A Node.js API function was called with an incompatible this value.
ERR_INVALID_TRANSFER_OBJECT #
An invalid transfer object was passed to postMessage() .
ERR_INVALID_TUPLE #
An element in the iterable provided to the WHATWG URLSearchParams constructor did not represent a [name, value] tuple – that is, if an element is not iterable, or does not consist of exactly two elements.
ERR_INVALID_URI #
An invalid URI was passed.
ERR_INVALID_URL #
An invalid URL was passed to the WHATWG URL constructor or the legacy url.parse() to be parsed. The thrown error object typically has an additional property ‘input’ that contains the URL that failed to parse.
ERR_INVALID_URL_SCHEME #
An attempt was made to use a URL of an incompatible scheme (protocol) for a specific purpose. It is only used in the WHATWG URL API support in the fs module (which only accepts URLs with ‘file’ scheme), but may be used in other Node.js APIs as well in the future.
ERR_IPC_CHANNEL_CLOSED #
An attempt was made to use an IPC communication channel that was already closed.
ERR_IPC_DISCONNECTED #
An attempt was made to disconnect an IPC communication channel that was already disconnected. See the documentation for the child_process module for more information.
ERR_IPC_ONE_PIPE #
An attempt was made to create a child Node.js process using more than one IPC communication channel. See the documentation for the child_process module for more information.
ERR_IPC_SYNC_FORK #
An attempt was made to open an IPC communication channel with a synchronously forked Node.js process. See the documentation for the child_process module for more information.
ERR_LOADER_CHAIN_INCOMPLETE #
An ESM loader hook returned without calling next() and without explicitly signaling a short circuit.
ERR_MANIFEST_ASSERT_INTEGRITY #
An attempt was made to load a resource, but the resource did not match the integrity defined by the policy manifest. See the documentation for policy manifests for more information.
ERR_MANIFEST_DEPENDENCY_MISSING #
An attempt was made to load a resource, but the resource was not listed as a dependency from the location that attempted to load it. See the documentation for policy manifests for more information.
ERR_MANIFEST_INTEGRITY_MISMATCH #
An attempt was made to load a policy manifest, but the manifest had multiple entries for a resource which did not match each other. Update the manifest entries to match in order to resolve this error. See the documentation for policy manifests for more information.
ERR_MANIFEST_INVALID_RESOURCE_FIELD #
A policy manifest resource had an invalid value for one of its fields. Update the manifest entry to match in order to resolve this error. See the documentation for policy manifests for more information.
ERR_MANIFEST_INVALID_SPECIFIER #
A policy manifest resource had an invalid value for one of its dependency mappings. Update the manifest entry to match to resolve this error. See the documentation for policy manifests for more information.
ERR_MANIFEST_PARSE_POLICY #
An attempt was made to load a policy manifest, but the manifest was unable to be parsed. See the documentation for policy manifests for more information.
ERR_MANIFEST_TDZ #
An attempt was made to read from a policy manifest, but the manifest initialization has not yet taken place. This is likely a bug in Node.js.
ERR_MANIFEST_UNKNOWN_ONERROR #
A policy manifest was loaded, but had an unknown value for its «onerror» behavior. See the documentation for policy manifests for more information.
ERR_MEMORY_ALLOCATION_FAILED #
An attempt was made to allocate memory (usually in the C++ layer) but it failed.
ERR_MESSAGE_TARGET_CONTEXT_UNAVAILABLE #
A message posted to a MessagePort could not be deserialized in the target vm Context . Not all Node.js objects can be successfully instantiated in any context at this time, and attempting to transfer them using postMessage() can fail on the receiving side in that case.
ERR_METHOD_NOT_IMPLEMENTED #
A method is required but not implemented.
ERR_MISSING_ARGS #
A required argument of a Node.js API was not passed. This is only used for strict compliance with the API specification (which in some cases may accept func(undefined) but not func() ). In most native Node.js APIs, func(undefined) and func() are treated identically, and the ERR_INVALID_ARG_TYPE error code may be used instead.
ERR_MISSING_OPTION #
For APIs that accept options objects, some options might be mandatory. This code is thrown if a required option is missing.
ERR_MISSING_PASSPHRASE #
An attempt was made to read an encrypted key without specifying a passphrase.
ERR_MISSING_PLATFORM_FOR_WORKER #
The V8 platform used by this instance of Node.js does not support creating Workers. This is caused by lack of embedder support for Workers. In particular, this error will not occur with standard builds of Node.js.
ERR_MISSING_TRANSFERABLE_IN_TRANSFER_LIST #
An object that needs to be explicitly listed in the transferList argument is in the object passed to a postMessage() call, but is not provided in the transferList for that call. Usually, this is a MessagePort .
In Node.js versions prior to v15.0.0, the error code being used here was ERR_MISSING_MESSAGE_PORT_IN_TRANSFER_LIST . However, the set of transferable object types has been expanded to cover more types than MessagePort .
ERR_MODULE_NOT_FOUND #
A module file could not be resolved by the ECMAScript modules loader while attempting an import operation or when loading the program entry point.
ERR_MULTIPLE_CALLBACK #
A callback was called more than once.
A callback is almost always meant to only be called once as the query can either be fulfilled or rejected but not both at the same time. The latter would be possible by calling a callback more than once.
ERR_NAPI_CONS_FUNCTION #
While using Node-API , a constructor passed was not a function.
ERR_NAPI_INVALID_DATAVIEW_ARGS #
While calling napi_create_dataview() , a given offset was outside the bounds of the dataview or offset + length was larger than a length of given buffer .
ERR_NAPI_INVALID_TYPEDARRAY_ALIGNMENT #
While calling napi_create_typedarray() , the provided offset was not a multiple of the element size.
ERR_NAPI_INVALID_TYPEDARRAY_LENGTH #
While calling napi_create_typedarray() , (length * size_of_element) + byte_offset was larger than the length of given buffer .
ERR_NAPI_TSFN_CALL_JS #
An error occurred while invoking the JavaScript portion of the thread-safe function.
ERR_NAPI_TSFN_GET_UNDEFINED #
An error occurred while attempting to retrieve the JavaScript undefined value.
ERR_NAPI_TSFN_START_IDLE_LOOP #
On the main thread, values are removed from the queue associated with the thread-safe function in an idle loop. This error indicates that an error has occurred when attempting to start the loop.
ERR_NAPI_TSFN_STOP_IDLE_LOOP #
Once no more items are left in the queue, the idle loop must be suspended. This error indicates that the idle loop has failed to stop.
ERR_NOT_BUILDING_SNAPSHOT #
An attempt was made to use operations that can only be used when building V8 startup snapshot even though Node.js isn’t building one.
ERR_NO_CRYPTO #
An attempt was made to use crypto features while Node.js was not compiled with OpenSSL crypto support.
ERR_NO_ICU #
An attempt was made to use features that require ICU, but Node.js was not compiled with ICU support.
ERR_NON_CONTEXT_AWARE_DISABLED #
A non-context-aware native addon was loaded in a process that disallows them.
ERR_OUT_OF_RANGE #
A given value is out of the accepted range.
ERR_PACKAGE_IMPORT_NOT_DEFINED #
The package.json «imports» field does not define the given internal package specifier mapping.
ERR_PACKAGE_PATH_NOT_EXPORTED #
The package.json «exports» field does not export the requested subpath. Because exports are encapsulated, private internal modules that are not exported cannot be imported through the package resolution, unless using an absolute URL.
ERR_PARSE_ARGS_INVALID_OPTION_VALUE #
When strict set to true , thrown by util.parseArgs() if a value is provided for an option of type , or if a value is provided for an option of type .
ERR_PARSE_ARGS_UNEXPECTED_POSITIONAL #
Thrown by util.parseArgs() , when a positional argument is provided and allowPositionals is set to false .
ERR_PARSE_ARGS_UNKNOWN_OPTION #
When strict set to true , thrown by util.parseArgs() if an argument is not configured in options .
ERR_PERFORMANCE_INVALID_TIMESTAMP #
An invalid timestamp value was provided for a performance mark or measure.
ERR_PERFORMANCE_MEASURE_INVALID_OPTIONS #
Invalid options were provided for a performance measure.
ERR_PROTO_ACCESS #
Accessing Object.prototype.__proto__ has been forbidden using —disable-proto=throw . Object.getPrototypeOf and Object.setPrototypeOf should be used to get and set the prototype of an object.
ERR_REQUIRE_ESM #
An attempt was made to require() an ES Module.
ERR_SCRIPT_EXECUTION_INTERRUPTED #
Script execution was interrupted by SIGINT (For example, Ctrl + C was pressed.)
ERR_SCRIPT_EXECUTION_TIMEOUT #
Script execution timed out, possibly due to bugs in the script being executed.
ERR_SERVER_ALREADY_LISTEN #
The server.listen() method was called while a net.Server was already listening. This applies to all instances of net.Server , including HTTP, HTTPS, and HTTP/2 Server instances.
ERR_SERVER_NOT_RUNNING #
The server.close() method was called when a net.Server was not running. This applies to all instances of net.Server , including HTTP, HTTPS, and HTTP/2 Server instances.
ERR_SOCKET_ALREADY_BOUND #
An attempt was made to bind a socket that has already been bound.
ERR_SOCKET_BAD_BUFFER_SIZE #
An invalid (negative) size was passed for either the recvBufferSize or sendBufferSize options in dgram.createSocket() .
ERR_SOCKET_BAD_PORT #
An API function expecting a port >= 0 and ERR_SOCKET_BAD_TYPE #
An API function expecting a socket type ( udp4 or udp6 ) received an invalid value.
ERR_SOCKET_BUFFER_SIZE #
While using dgram.createSocket() , the size of the receive or send Buffer could not be determined.
ERR_SOCKET_CLOSED #
An attempt was made to operate on an already closed socket.
ERR_SOCKET_CLOSED_BEFORE_CONNECTION #
When calling net.Socket.write() on a connecting socket and the socket was closed before the connection was established.
ERR_SOCKET_DGRAM_IS_CONNECTED #
A dgram.connect() call was made on an already connected socket.
ERR_SOCKET_DGRAM_NOT_CONNECTED #
A dgram.disconnect() or dgram.remoteAddress() call was made on a disconnected socket.
ERR_SOCKET_DGRAM_NOT_RUNNING #
A call was made and the UDP subsystem was not running.
ERR_SRI_PARSE #
A string was provided for a Subresource Integrity check, but was unable to be parsed. Check the format of integrity attributes by looking at the Subresource Integrity specification.
ERR_STREAM_ALREADY_FINISHED #
A stream method was called that cannot complete because the stream was finished.
ERR_STREAM_CANNOT_PIPE #
An attempt was made to call stream.pipe() on a Writable stream.
ERR_STREAM_DESTROYED #
A stream method was called that cannot complete because the stream was destroyed using stream.destroy() .
ERR_STREAM_NULL_VALUES #
An attempt was made to call stream.write() with a null chunk.
ERR_STREAM_PREMATURE_CLOSE #
An error returned by stream.finished() and stream.pipeline() , when a stream or a pipeline ends non gracefully with no explicit error.
ERR_STREAM_PUSH_AFTER_EOF #
An attempt was made to call stream.push() after a null (EOF) had been pushed to the stream.
ERR_STREAM_UNSHIFT_AFTER_END_EVENT #
An attempt was made to call stream.unshift() after the ‘end’ event was emitted.
ERR_STREAM_WRAP #
Prevents an abort if a string decoder was set on the Socket or if the decoder is in objectMode .
ERR_STREAM_WRITE_AFTER_END #
An attempt was made to call stream.write() after stream.end() has been called.
ERR_STRING_TOO_LONG #
An attempt has been made to create a string longer than the maximum allowed length.
ERR_SYNTHETIC #
An artificial error object used to capture the call stack for diagnostic reports.
ERR_SYSTEM_ERROR #
An unspecified or non-specific system error has occurred within the Node.js process. The error object will have an err.info object property with additional details.
ERR_TAP_LEXER_ERROR #
An error representing a failing lexer state.
ERR_TAP_PARSER_ERROR #
An error representing a failing parser state. Additional information about the token causing the error is available via the cause property.
ERR_TAP_VALIDATION_ERROR #
This error represents a failed TAP validation.
ERR_TEST_FAILURE #
This error represents a failed test. Additional information about the failure is available via the cause property. The failureType property specifies what the test was doing when the failure occurred.
ERR_TLS_CERT_ALTNAME_FORMAT #
This error is thrown by checkServerIdentity if a user-supplied subjectaltname property violates encoding rules. Certificate objects produced by Node.js itself always comply with encoding rules and will never cause this error.
ERR_TLS_CERT_ALTNAME_INVALID #
While using TLS, the host name/IP of the peer did not match any of the subjectAltNames in its certificate.
ERR_TLS_DH_PARAM_SIZE #
While using TLS, the parameter offered for the Diffie-Hellman ( DH ) key-agreement protocol is too small. By default, the key length must be greater than or equal to 1024 bits to avoid vulnerabilities, even though it is strongly recommended to use 2048 bits or larger for stronger security.
ERR_TLS_HANDSHAKE_TIMEOUT #
A TLS/SSL handshake timed out. In this case, the server must also abort the connection.
ERR_TLS_INVALID_CONTEXT #
The context must be a SecureContext .
ERR_TLS_INVALID_PROTOCOL_METHOD #
The specified secureProtocol method is invalid. It is either unknown, or disabled because it is insecure.
ERR_TLS_INVALID_PROTOCOL_VERSION #
Valid TLS protocol versions are ‘TLSv1’ , ‘TLSv1.1’ , or ‘TLSv1.2’ .
ERR_TLS_INVALID_STATE #
The TLS socket must be connected and securely established. Ensure the ‘secure’ event is emitted before continuing.
ERR_TLS_PROTOCOL_VERSION_CONFLICT #
Attempting to set a TLS protocol minVersion or maxVersion conflicts with an attempt to set the secureProtocol explicitly. Use one mechanism or the other.
ERR_TLS_PSK_SET_IDENTIY_HINT_FAILED #
Failed to set PSK identity hint. Hint may be too long.
ERR_TLS_RENEGOTIATION_DISABLED #
An attempt was made to renegotiate TLS on a socket instance with TLS disabled.
ERR_TLS_REQUIRED_SERVER_NAME #
While using TLS, the server.addContext() method was called without providing a host name in the first parameter.
ERR_TLS_SESSION_ATTACK #
An excessive amount of TLS renegotiations is detected, which is a potential vector for denial-of-service attacks.
ERR_TLS_SNI_FROM_SERVER #
An attempt was made to issue Server Name Indication from a TLS server-side socket, which is only valid from a client.
ERR_TRACE_EVENTS_CATEGORY_REQUIRED #
The trace_events.createTracing() method requires at least one trace event category.
ERR_TRACE_EVENTS_UNAVAILABLE #
The node:trace_events module could not be loaded because Node.js was compiled with the —without-v8-platform flag.
ERR_TRANSFORM_ALREADY_TRANSFORMING #
A Transform stream finished while it was still transforming.
ERR_TRANSFORM_WITH_LENGTH_0 #
A Transform stream finished with data still in the write buffer.
ERR_TTY_INIT_FAILED #
The initialization of a TTY failed due to a system error.
ERR_UNAVAILABLE_DURING_EXIT #
Function was called within a process.on(‘exit’) handler that shouldn’t be called within process.on(‘exit’) handler.
ERR_UNCAUGHT_EXCEPTION_CAPTURE_ALREADY_SET #
process.setUncaughtExceptionCaptureCallback() was called twice, without first resetting the callback to null .
This error is designed to prevent accidentally overwriting a callback registered from another module.
ERR_UNESCAPED_CHARACTERS #
A string that contained unescaped characters was received.
ERR_UNHANDLED_ERROR #
An unhandled error occurred (for instance, when an ‘error’ event is emitted by an EventEmitter but an ‘error’ handler is not registered).
ERR_UNKNOWN_BUILTIN_MODULE #
Used to identify a specific kind of internal Node.js error that should not typically be triggered by user code. Instances of this error point to an internal bug within the Node.js binary itself.
ERR_UNKNOWN_CREDENTIAL #
A Unix group or user identifier that does not exist was passed.
ERR_UNKNOWN_ENCODING #
An invalid or unknown encoding option was passed to an API.
ERR_UNKNOWN_FILE_EXTENSION #
An attempt was made to load a module with an unknown or unsupported file extension.
ERR_UNKNOWN_MODULE_FORMAT #
An attempt was made to load a module with an unknown or unsupported format.
ERR_UNKNOWN_SIGNAL #
An invalid or unknown process signal was passed to an API expecting a valid signal (such as subprocess.kill() ).
ERR_UNSUPPORTED_DIR_IMPORT #
import a directory URL is unsupported. Instead, self-reference a package using its name and define a custom subpath in the «exports» field of the package.json file.
ERR_UNSUPPORTED_ESM_URL_SCHEME #
import with URL schemes other than file and data is unsupported.
ERR_USE_AFTER_CLOSE #
An attempt was made to use something that was already closed.
ERR_VALID_PERFORMANCE_ENTRY_TYPE #
While using the Performance Timing API ( perf_hooks ), no valid performance entry types are found.
ERR_VM_DYNAMIC_IMPORT_CALLBACK_MISSING #
A dynamic import callback was not specified.
ERR_VM_MODULE_ALREADY_LINKED #
The module attempted to be linked is not eligible for linking, because of one of the following reasons:
- It has already been linked ( linkingStatus is ‘linked’ )
- It is being linked ( linkingStatus is ‘linking’ )
- Linking has failed for this module ( linkingStatus is ‘errored’ )
ERR_VM_MODULE_CACHED_DATA_REJECTED #
The cachedData option passed to a module constructor is invalid.
ERR_VM_MODULE_CANNOT_CREATE_CACHED_DATA #
Cached data cannot be created for modules which have already been evaluated.
ERR_VM_MODULE_DIFFERENT_CONTEXT #
The module being returned from the linker function is from a different context than the parent module. Linked modules must share the same context.
ERR_VM_MODULE_LINK_FAILURE #
The module was unable to be linked due to a failure.
ERR_VM_MODULE_NOT_MODULE #
The fulfilled value of a linking promise is not a vm.Module object.
ERR_VM_MODULE_STATUS #
The current module’s status does not allow for this operation. The specific meaning of the error depends on the specific function.
ERR_WASI_ALREADY_STARTED #
The WASI instance has already started.
ERR_WASI_NOT_STARTED #
The WASI instance has not been started.
ERR_WEBASSEMBLY_RESPONSE #
The Response that has been passed to WebAssembly.compileStreaming or to WebAssembly.instantiateStreaming is not a valid WebAssembly response.
ERR_WORKER_INIT_FAILED #
The Worker initialization failed.
ERR_WORKER_INVALID_EXEC_ARGV #
The execArgv option passed to the Worker constructor contains invalid flags.
ERR_WORKER_NOT_RUNNING #
An operation failed because the Worker instance is not currently running.
ERR_WORKER_OUT_OF_MEMORY #
The Worker instance terminated because it reached its memory limit.
ERR_WORKER_PATH #
The path for the main script of a worker is neither an absolute path nor a relative path starting with ./ or ../ .
ERR_WORKER_UNSERIALIZABLE_ERROR #
All attempts at serializing an uncaught exception from a worker thread failed.
ERR_WORKER_UNSUPPORTED_OPERATION #
The requested functionality is not supported in worker threads.
ERR_ZLIB_INITIALIZATION_FAILED #
Creation of a zlib object failed due to incorrect configuration.
HPE_HEADER_OVERFLOW #
History
Max header size in http_parser was set to 8 KiB.
Too much HTTP header data was received. In order to protect against malicious or malconfigured clients, if more than 8 KiB of HTTP header data is received then HTTP parsing will abort without a request or response object being created, and an Error with this code will be emitted.
HPE_UNEXPECTED_CONTENT_LENGTH #
Server is sending both a Content-Length header and Transfer-Encoding: chunked .
Transfer-Encoding: chunked allows the server to maintain an HTTP persistent connection for dynamically generated content. In this case, the Content-Length HTTP header cannot be used.
Use Content-Length or Transfer-Encoding: chunked .
MODULE_NOT_FOUND #
History
Version | Changes |
---|---|
v11.4.0, v10.15.0 |
Added requireStack property.
A module file could not be resolved by the CommonJS modules loader while attempting a require() operation or when loading the program entry point.
Legacy Node.js error codes #
ERR_CANNOT_TRANSFER_OBJECT #
The value passed to postMessage() contained an object that is not supported for transferring.
ERR_CRYPTO_HASH_DIGEST_NO_UTF16 #
The UTF-16 encoding was used with hash.digest() . While the hash.digest() method does allow an encoding argument to be passed in, causing the method to return a string rather than a Buffer , the UTF-16 encoding (e.g. ucs or utf16le ) is not supported.
ERR_HTTP2_FRAME_ERROR #
Used when a failure occurs sending an individual frame on the HTTP/2 session.
ERR_HTTP2_HEADERS_OBJECT #
Used when an HTTP/2 Headers Object is expected.
ERR_HTTP2_HEADER_REQUIRED #
Used when a required header is missing in an HTTP/2 message.
ERR_HTTP2_INFO_HEADERS_AFTER_RESPOND #
HTTP/2 informational headers must only be sent prior to calling the Http2Stream.prototype.respond() method.
ERR_HTTP2_STREAM_CLOSED #
Used when an action has been performed on an HTTP/2 Stream that has already been closed.
ERR_HTTP_INVALID_CHAR #
Used when an invalid character is found in an HTTP response status message (reason phrase).
ERR_INDEX_OUT_OF_RANGE #
A given index was out of the accepted range (e.g. negative offsets).
ERR_INVALID_OPT_VALUE #
An invalid or unexpected value was passed in an options object.
ERR_INVALID_OPT_VALUE_ENCODING #
An invalid or unknown file encoding was passed.
ERR_MISSING_MESSAGE_PORT_IN_TRANSFER_LIST #
This error code was replaced by ERR_MISSING_TRANSFERABLE_IN_TRANSFER_LIST in Node.js v15.0.0, because it is no longer accurate as other types of transferable objects also exist now.
ERR_NAPI_CONS_PROTOTYPE_OBJECT #
Used by the Node-API when Constructor.prototype is not an object.
ERR_NETWORK_IMPORT_BAD_RESPONSE #
Response was received but was invalid when importing a module over the network.
ERR_NETWORK_IMPORT_DISALLOWED #
A network module attempted to load another module that it is not allowed to load. Likely this restriction is for security reasons.
ERR_NO_LONGER_SUPPORTED #
A Node.js API was called in an unsupported manner, such as Buffer.write(string, encoding, offset[, length]) .
ERR_OPERATION_FAILED #
An operation failed. This is typically used to signal the general failure of an asynchronous operation.
ERR_OUTOFMEMORY #
Used generically to identify that an operation caused an out of memory condition.
ERR_PARSE_HISTORY_DATA #
The node:repl module was unable to parse data from the REPL history file.
ERR_SOCKET_CANNOT_SEND #
Data could not be sent on a socket.
ERR_STDERR_CLOSE #
History
Version | Changes |
---|---|
v12.0.0 |
Rather than emitting an error, process.stderr.end() now only closes the stream side but not the underlying resource, making this error obsolete.
Removed in: v10.12.0
An attempt was made to close the process.stderr stream. By design, Node.js does not allow stdout or stderr streams to be closed by user code.
ERR_STDOUT_CLOSE #
History
Version | Changes |
---|---|
v10.12.0 |
Rather than emitting an error, process.stderr.end() now only closes the stream side but not the underlying resource, making this error obsolete.
Removed in: v10.12.0
An attempt was made to close the process.stdout stream. By design, Node.js does not allow stdout or stderr streams to be closed by user code.
ERR_STREAM_READ_NOT_IMPLEMENTED #
Used when an attempt is made to use a readable stream that has not implemented readable._read() .
ERR_TLS_RENEGOTIATION_FAILED #
Used when a TLS renegotiation request has failed in a non-specific way.
ERR_TRANSFERRING_EXTERNALIZED_SHAREDARRAYBUFFER #
A SharedArrayBuffer whose memory is not managed by the JavaScript engine or by Node.js was encountered during serialization. Such a SharedArrayBuffer cannot be serialized.
This can only happen when native addons create SharedArrayBuffer s in «externalized» mode, or put existing SharedArrayBuffer into externalized mode.
ERR_UNKNOWN_STDIN_TYPE #
An attempt was made to launch a Node.js process with an unknown stdin file type. This error is usually an indication of a bug within Node.js itself, although it is possible for user code to trigger it.
ERR_UNKNOWN_STREAM_TYPE #
An attempt was made to launch a Node.js process with an unknown stdout or stderr file type. This error is usually an indication of a bug within Node.js itself, although it is possible for user code to trigger it.
ERR_V8BREAKITERATOR #
The V8 BreakIterator API was used but the full ICU data set is not installed.
ERR_VALUE_OUT_OF_RANGE #
Used when a given value is out of the accepted range.
ERR_VM_MODULE_NOT_LINKED #
The module must be successfully linked before instantiation.
ERR_VM_MODULE_LINKING_ERRORED #
The linker function returned a module for which linking has failed.
ERR_WORKER_UNSUPPORTED_EXTENSION #
The pathname used for the main script of a worker has an unknown file extension.
ERR_ZLIB_BINDING_CLOSED #
Used when an attempt is made to use a zlib object after it has already been closed.
Источник
Adblock
detector
Version | Changes |
---|---|
v10.12.0 |
Random Errors—One Place to Start
- Some strange issues can be resolved by simply running
npm cache clean
and trying again. - If you are having trouble with
npm install
, use the-verbose
option to see more details.
No compatible version found
You have an outdated npm. Please update to the latest stable npm.
Permissions Errors
Please see the discussions in Chapter 2 and Chapter 3 about ways to avoid permissions errors.
Error: ENOENT, stat 'C:Users<user>AppDataRoamingnpm'
on Windows 7
This is a consequence of joyent/node#8141, and is an issue with the Node installer for Windows. The workaround is to ensure that C:Users<user>AppDataRoamingnpm
exists and is writable with your normal user account.
No space
npm ERR! Error: ENOSPC, write
You are trying to install on a drive that either has no space, or has no permission to write.
- Free some disk space or
- Set the tmp folder somewhere with more space:
npm config set tmp /path/to/big/drive/tmp
or - Build Node yourself and install it somewhere writable with lots of space.
No git
npm ERR! not found: git
ENOGIT
You need to install git. Or, you may need to add your git information to your npm profile. You can do this from the command line or from the website.
running a Vagrant box on Windows fails due to path length issues
@drmyersii went through what sounds like a lot of painful trial and error to come up with a working solution involving Windows long paths and some custom Vagrant configuration:
This is the commit that I implemented it in, but I’ll go ahead and post the main snippet of code here:
config.vm.provider "virtualbox" do |v| v.customize ["sharedfolder", "add", :id, "--name", "www", "--hostpath", (("//?/" + File.dirname(__FILE__) + "/www").gsub("/","\"))] end config.vm.provision :shell, inline: "mkdir /home/vagrant/www" config.vm.provision :shell, inline: "mount -t vboxsf -o uid=`id -u vagrant`,gid=`getent group vagrant | cut -d: -f3` > www /home/vagrant/www", run: "always"In the code above, I am appending
\?
to the current directory absolute path. This will actually force the Windows API to allow an increase in the MAX_PATH variable (normally capped at 260). Read more about max path. This is happening during the sharedfolder creation which is intentionally handled by VBoxManage and not Vagrant’s «synced_folder» method. The last bit is pretty self-explanatory; we create the new shared folder and then make sure it’s mounted each time the machine is accessed or touched since Vagrant likes to reload its mounts/shared folders on each load.
npm only uses git:
and ssh+git:
URLs for GitHub repos, breaking proxies
@LaurentGoderre fixed this with some Git trickery:
I fixed this issue for several of my colleagues by running the following two commands:
git config --global url."https://github.com/".insteadOf git@github.com: git config --global url."https://".insteadOf git://
One thing we noticed is that the
.gitconfig
used is not always the one expected so if you are on a machine that modified the home path to a shared drive, you need to ensure that your.gitconfig
is the same on both your shared drive and inc:users[your user]
SSL Error
npm ERR! Error: 7684:error:140770FC:SSL routines:SSL23_GET_SERVER_HELLO:unknown protocol:opensslssls23_clnt.c:787:
You are trying to talk SSL to an unencrypted endpoint. More often than not, this is due to a proxy configuration error (see also this helpful, if dated, guide). In this case, you do not want to disable strict-ssl
– you may need to set up a CA / CA file for use with your proxy, but it’s much better to take the time to figure that out than disabling SSL protection.
npm ERR! Error: SSL Error: CERT_UNTRUSTED
npm ERR! Error: SSL Error: UNABLE_TO_VERIFY_LEAF_SIGNATURE
This problem will happen if you’re running Node 0.6. Please upgrade to node 0.8 or above. See this post for details.
You could also try these workarounds: npm config set ca ""
or npm config set strict-ssl false
npm ERR! Error: SSL Error: SELF_SIGNED_CERT_IN_CHAIN
npm no longer supports its self-signed certificates
Either:
- upgrade your version of npm
npm install npm -g --ca=""
- tell your current version of npm to use known registrars
npm config set ca=""
If this does not fix the problem, then you may have an SSL-intercepting proxy.
(For example, npm/npm#7439 (comment))
SSL-intercepting proxy
Unsolved. See npm/npm#9282
Not found / Server error
npm http 404 https://registry.npmjs.org/faye-websocket/-/faye-websocket-0.7.0.tgz
npm ERR! fetch failed https://registry.npmjs.org/faye-websocket/-/faye-websocket-0.7.0.tgz
npm ERR! Error: 404 Not Found
npm http 500 https://registry.npmjs.org/phonegap
- It’s most likely a temporary npm registry glitch. Check npm server status and try again later.
- If the error persists, perhaps the published package is corrupt. Contact the package owner and have them publish a new version of the package.
Invalid JSON
npm ERR! SyntaxError: Unexpected token <
npm ERR! registry error parsing json
- Possible temporary npm registry glitch, or corrupted local server cache.
Runnpm cache clean
and/or try again later. - This can be caused by corporate proxies that give HTML
responses topackage.json
requests. Check npm’s proxy configuration. - Check that it’s not a problem with a package you’re trying to install
(e.g. invalidpackage.json
).
Many ENOENT
/ ENOTEMPTY
errors in output
npm is written to use resources efficiently on install, and part of this is that it tries to do as many things concurrently as is practical. Sometimes this results in race conditions and other synchronization issues. As of npm 2.0.0, a very large number of these issues were addressed. If you see ENOENT lstat
, ENOENT chmod
, ENOTEMPTY unlink
, or something similar in your log output, try updating npm to the latest version. If the problem persists, look at npm/npm#6043 and see if somebody has already discussed your issue.
cb() never called!
when using shrinkwrapped dependencies
Take a look at issue #5920. We’re working on fixing this one, but it’s a fairly subtle race condition and it’s taking us a little time. You might try moving your npm-shrinkwrap.json
file out of the way until we have this fixed. This has been fixed in versions of npm newer than npm@2.1.5
, so update to npm@latest
.
npm login
errors
Sometimes npm login
fails for no obvious reason. The first thing to do is to log in at https://www.npmjs.com/login and check that your e-mail address on npmjs.com
matches the
email address you are giving to npm login
.
If that’s not the problem, or if you are seeing the message "may not mix password_sha and pbkdf2"
, then
- Log in at https://npmjs.com/
- Change password at https://npmjs.com/password – you can even «change» it to the same password
- Clear login-related fields from
~/.npmrc
– e.g., by runningsed -ie '/registry.npmjs.org/d' ~/.npmrc
npm login
and it generally seems to work.
See npm/npm#6641 (comment) for the history of this issue.
npm
hangs on Windows at addRemoteTarball
Check if you have two temp directories set in your .npmrc
:
Look for lines defining the tmp
config variable. If you find more than one, remove all but one of them.
See npm/npm#7590 for more about this unusual problem.
Why isn’t npm running the latest version on my Windows machine?
See the section about Windows here.
Random Errors—One Place to Start
- Some strange issues can be resolved by simply running
npm cache clean
and trying again. - If you are having trouble with
npm install
, use the-verbose
option to see more details.
No compatible version found
You have an outdated npm. Please update to the latest stable npm.
Permissions Errors
Please see the discussions in Chapter 2 and Chapter 3 about ways to avoid permissions errors.
Error: ENOENT, stat 'C:Users<user>AppDataRoamingnpm'
on Windows 7
This is a consequence of joyent/node#8141, and is an issue with the Node installer for Windows. The workaround is to ensure that C:Users<user>AppDataRoamingnpm
exists and is writable with your normal user account.
No space
npm ERR! Error: ENOSPC, write
You are trying to install on a drive that either has no space, or has no permission to write.
- Free some disk space or
- Set the tmp folder somewhere with more space:
npm config set tmp /path/to/big/drive/tmp
or - Build Node yourself and install it somewhere writable with lots of space.
No git
npm ERR! not found: git ENOGIT
You need to install git. Or, you may need to add your git information to your npm profile. You can do this from the command line or from the website.
running a Vagrant box on Windows fails due to path length issues
@drmyersii went through what sounds like a lot of painful trial and error to come up with a working solution involving Windows long paths and some custom Vagrant configuration:
This is the commit that I implemented it in, but I’ll go ahead and post the main snippet of code here:
config.vm.provider "virtualbox" do |v| v.customize ["sharedfolder", "add", :id, "--name", "www", "--hostpath", (("//?/" + File.dirname(__FILE__) + "/www").gsub("/","\"))] end config.vm.provision :shell, inline: "mkdir /home/vagrant/www" config.vm.provision :shell, inline: "mount -t vboxsf -o uid=`id -u vagrant`,gid=`getent group vagrant | cut -d: -f3` > www /home/vagrant/www", run: "always"In the code above, I am appending
\?
to the current directory absolute path. This will actually force the Windows API to allow an increase in the MAX_PATH variable (normally capped at 260). Read more about max path. This is happening during the sharedfolder creation which is intentionally handled by VBoxManage and not Vagrant’s «synced_folder» method. The last bit is pretty self-explanatory; we create the new shared folder and then make sure it’s mounted each time the machine is accessed or touched since Vagrant likes to reload its mounts/shared folders on each load.
npm only uses git:
and ssh+git:
URLs for GitHub repos, breaking proxies
@LaurentGoderre fixed this with some Git trickery:
I fixed this issue for several of my colleagues by running the following two commands:
git config --global url."https://github.com/".insteadOf [email protected]: git config --global url."https://".insteadOf git://One thing we noticed is that the
.gitconfig
used is not always the one expected so if you are on a machine that modified the home path to a shared drive, you need to ensure that your.gitconfig
is the same on both your shared drive and inc:users[your user]
SSL Error
npm ERR! Error: 7684:error:140770FC:SSL routines:SSL23_GET_SERVER_HELLO:unknown protocol:opensslssls23_clnt.c:787:
You are trying to talk SSL to an unencrypted endpoint. More often than not, this is due to a proxy configuration error (see also this helpful, if dated, guide). In this case, you do not want to disable strict-ssl
– you may need to set up a CA / CA file for use with your proxy, but it’s much better to take the time to figure that out than disabling SSL protection.
npm ERR! Error: SSL Error: CERT_UNTRUSTED
npm ERR! Error: SSL Error: UNABLE_TO_VERIFY_LEAF_SIGNATURE
This problem will happen if you’re running Node 0.6. Please upgrade to node 0.8 or above. See this post for details.
You could also try these workarounds: npm config set ca ""
or npm config set strict-ssl false
npm ERR! Error: SSL Error: SELF_SIGNED_CERT_IN_CHAIN
npm no longer supports its self-signed certificates
Either:
- upgrade your version of npm
npm install npm -g --ca=""
- tell your current version of npm to use known registrars
npm config set ca=""
If this does not fix the problem, then you may have an SSL-intercepting proxy. (For example, https://github.com/npm/npm/issues/7439#issuecomment-76024878)
SSL-intercepting proxy
Unsolved. See https://github.com/npm/npm/issues/9282
Not found / Server error
npm http 404 https://registry.npmjs.org/faye-websocket/-/faye-websocket-0.7.0.tgz npm ERR! fetch failed https://registry.npmjs.org/faye-websocket/-/faye-websocket-0.7.0.tgz npm ERR! Error: 404 Not Found
npm http 500 https://registry.npmjs.org/phonegap
- It’s most likely a temporary npm registry glitch. Check npm server status and try again later.
- If the error persists, perhaps the published package is corrupt. Contact the package owner and have them publish a new version of the package.
Invalid JSON
Error: Invalid JSON
npm ERR! SyntaxError: Unexpected token <
npm ERR! registry error parsing json
- Possible temporary npm registry glitch, or corrupted local server cache. Run
npm cache clean
and/or try again later. - This can be caused by corporate proxies that give HTML responses to
package.json
requests. Check npm’s proxy configuration. - Check that it’s not a problem with a package you’re trying to install (e.g. invalid
package.json
).
Many ENOENT
/ ENOTEMPTY
errors in output
npm is written to use resources efficiently on install, and part of this is that it tries to do as many things concurrently as is practical. Sometimes this results in race conditions and other synchronization issues. As of npm 2.0.0, a very large number of these issues were addressed. If you see ENOENT lstat
, ENOENT chmod
, ENOTEMPTY unlink
, or something similar in your log output, try updating npm to the latest version. If the problem persists, look at npm/npm#6043 and see if somebody has already discussed your issue.
cb() never called!
when using shrinkwrapped dependencies
Take a look at issue #5920. We’re working on fixing this one, but it’s a fairly subtle race condition and it’s taking us a little time. You might try moving your This has been fixed in versions of npm newer than npm-shrinkwrap.json
file out of the way until we have this fixed.[email protected]
, so update to [email protected]
.
npm login
errors
Sometimes npm login
fails for no obvious reason. The first thing to do is to log in at https://www.npmjs.com/login and check that your e-mail address on npmjs.com
matches the email address you are giving to npm login
.
If that’s not the problem, or if you are seeing the message "may not mix password_sha and pbkdf2"
, then
- Log in at https://npmjs.com/
- Change password at https://npmjs.com/password – you can even «change» it to the same password
- Clear login-related fields from
~/.npmrc
– e.g., by runningsed -ie '/registry.npmjs.org/d' ~/.npmrc
npm login
and it generally seems to work.
See https://github.com/npm/npm/issues/6641#issuecomment-72984009 for the history of this issue.
npm
hangs on Windows at addRemoteTarball
Check if you have two temp directories set in your .npmrc
:
> npm config ls -l
Look for lines defining the tmp
config variable. If you find more than one, remove all but one of them.
See https://github.com/npm/npm/issues/7590 for more about this unusual problem.
Why isn’t npm running the latest version on my Windows machine?
See the section about Windows here.
HTTP-errors module is used for generating errors for Node.js applications. It is very easy to use. We can use it with express, Koa, etc. applications. We will implement this module in an express application.
Installation and Setup: First, initialize the application with package.json file with the following command:
npm init
Then, install the module by the following command:
npm install http-errors --save
Also, we are using an express application, therefore, install the express module by the following command:
npm install express --save
Now, create a file and name it app.js. You can name your file whatever you want.
For importing the modules in your application, write the following code in your app.js file:
javascript
const createError = require(
'http-errors'
);
const express = require(
'express'
);
const app = express();
Implementation: Here, comes the main part of our application. For using this module, write the following code in your app.js file:
javascript
var
createError = require(
'http-errors'
);
var
express = require(
'express'
);
var
app = express();
app.use((req, res, next) => {
if
(!req.user)
return
next(
createError(401,
'Login Required!!'
));
next();
});
app.listen(8080, (err) => {
if
(err) console.log(err);
console.log(
`Server Running at http:
});
Here, we are importing the http-errors module and storing it in a variable named as createError. Next, in app.use(), if the user is not authenticated, then our application will create a 401 error saying Login Required!!. The createError is used for generating errors in an application.
To run the code, run the following command in the terminal:
node app.js
and navigate to http://localhost:8080. The output for the above code will be:
List of all Status Code with their Error Message:
Status Code Error Message 400 BadRequest 401 Unauthorized 402 PaymentRequired 403 Forbidden 404 NotFound 405 MethodNotAllowed 406 NotAcceptable 407 ProxyAuthenticationRequired 408 RequestTimeout 409 Conflict 410 Gone 411 LengthRequired 412 PreconditionFailed 413 PayloadTooLarge 414 URITooLong 415 UnsupportedMediaType 416 RangeNotSatisfiable 417 ExpectationFailed 418 ImATeapot 421 MisdirectedRequest 422 UnprocessableEntity 423 Locked 424 FailedDependency 425 UnorderedCollection 426 UpgradeRequired 428 PreconditionRequired 429 TooManyRequests 431 RequestHeaderFieldsTooLarge 451 UnavailableForLegalReasons 500 InternalServerError 501 NotImplemented 502 BadGateway 503 ServiceUnavailable 504 GatewayTimeout 505 HTTPVersionNotSupported 506 VariantAlsoNegotiates 507 InsufficientStorage 508 LoopDetected 509 BandwidthLimitExceeded 510 NotExtended 511 NetworkAuthenticationRequired
Conclusion: The http-errors module is very useful for developers for quick generation of errors with their message. In this article, we learned about the http-errors module for Node.js. We have also seen its installation and Implementation.
You will encounter various kinds of errors while developing Node.js
applications, but most can be avoided or easily mitigated with the right coding
practices. However, most of the information to fix these problems are currently
scattered across various GitHub issues and forum posts which could lead to
spending more time than necessary when seeking solutions.
Therefore, we’ve compiled this list of 15 common Node.js errors along with one
or more strategies to follow to fix each one. While this is not a comprehensive
list of all the errors you can encounter when developing Node.js applications,
it should help you understand why some of these common errors occur and feasible
solutions to avoid future recurrence.
🔭 Want to centralize and monitor your Node.js error logs?
Head over to Logtail and start ingesting your logs in 5 minutes.
1. ECONNRESET
ECONNRESET
is a common exception that occurs when the TCP connection to
another server is closed abruptly, usually before a response is received. It can
be emitted when you attempt a request through a TCP connection that has already
been closed or when the connection is closed before a response is received
(perhaps in case of a timeout). This exception will usually
look like the following depending on your version of Node.js:
Output
Error: socket hang up
at connResetException (node:internal/errors:691:14)
at Socket.socketOnEnd (node:_http_client:466:23)
at Socket.emit (node:events:532:35)
at endReadableNT (node:internal/streams/readable:1346:12)
at processTicksAndRejections (node:internal/process/task_queues:83:21) {
code: 'ECONNRESET'
}
If this exception occurs when making a request to another server, you should
catch it and decide how to handle it. For example, you can retry the request
immediately, or queue it for later. You can also investigate your timeout
settings if you’d like to wait longer for the request to be
completed.
On the other hand, if it is caused by a client deliberately closing an
unfulfilled request to your server, then you don’t need to do anything except
end the connection (res.end()
), and stop any operations performed in
generating a response. You can detect if a client socket was destroyed through
the following:
app.get("/", (req, res) => {
// listen for the 'close' event on the request
req.on("close", () => {
console.log("closed connection");
});
console.log(res.socket.destroyed); // true if socket is closed
});
2. ENOTFOUND
The ENOTFOUND
exception occurs in Node.js when a connection cannot be
established to some host due to a DNS error. This usually occurs due to an
incorrect host
value, or when localhost
is not mapped correctly to
127.0.0.1
. It can also occur when a domain goes down or no longer exists.
Here’s an example of how the error often appears in the Node.js console:
Output
Error: getaddrinfo ENOTFOUND http://localhost
at GetAddrInfoReqWrap.onlookup [as oncomplete] (node:dns:71:26) {
errno: -3008,
code: 'ENOTFOUND',
syscall: 'getaddrinfo',
hostname: 'http://localhost'
}
If you get this error in your Node.js application or while running a script, you
can try the following strategies to fix it:
Check the domain name
First, ensure that you didn’t make a typo while entering the domain name. You
can also use a tool like DNS Checker to confirm that
the domain is resolving successfully in your location or region.
Check the host value
If you’re using http.request()
or https.request()
methods from the standard
library, ensure that the host
value in the options object contains only the
domain name or IP address of the server. It shouldn’t contain the protocol,
port, or request path (use the protocol
, port
, and path
properties for
those values respectively).
// don't do this
const options = {
host: 'http://example.com/path/to/resource',
};
// do this instead
const options = {
host: 'example.com',
path: '/path/to/resource',
};
http.request(options, (res) => {});
Check your localhost mapping
If you’re trying to connect to localhost
, and the ENOTFOUND
error is thrown,
it may mean that the localhost
is missing in your hosts file. On Linux and
macOS, ensure that your /etc/hosts
file contains the following entry:
You may need to flush your DNS cache afterward:
sudo killall -HUP mDNSResponder # macOS
On Linux, clearing the DNS cache depends on the distribution and caching service
in use. Therefore, do investigate the appropriate command to run on your system.
3. ETIMEDOUT
The ETIMEDOUT
error is thrown by the Node.js runtime when a connection or HTTP
request is not closed properly after some time. You might encounter this error
from time to time if you configured a timeout on your
outgoing HTTP requests. The general solution to this issue is to catch the error
and repeat the request, preferably using an
exponential backoff
strategy so that a waiting period is added between subsequent retries until the
request eventually succeeds, or the maximum amount of retries is reached. If you
encounter this error frequently, try to investigate your request timeout
settings and choose a more appropriate value for the endpoint
if possible.
4. ECONNREFUSED
The ECONNREFUSED
error is produced when a request is made to an endpoint but a
connection could not be established because the specified address wasn’t
reachable. This is usually caused by an inactive target service. For example,
the error below resulted from attempting to connect to http://localhost:8000
when no program is listening at that endpoint.
Error: connect ECONNREFUSED 127.0.0.1:8000
at TCPConnectWrap.afterConnect [as oncomplete] (node:net:1157:16)
Emitted 'error' event on ClientRequest instance at:
at Socket.socketErrorListener (node:_http_client:442:9)
at Socket.emit (node:events:526:28)
at emitErrorNT (node:internal/streams/destroy:157:8)
at emitErrorCloseNT (node:internal/streams/destroy:122:3)
at processTicksAndRejections (node:internal/process/task_queues:83:21) {
errno: -111,
code: 'ECONNREFUSED',
syscall: 'connect',
address: '127.0.0.1',
port: 8000
}
The fix for this problem is to ensure that the target service is active and
accepting connections at the specified endpoint.
5. ERRADDRINUSE
This error is commonly encountered when starting or restarting a web server. It
indicates that the server is attempting to listen for connections at a port that
is already occupied by some other application.
Error: listen EADDRINUSE: address already in use :::3001
at Server.setupListenHandle [as _listen2] (node:net:1330:16)
at listenInCluster (node:net:1378:12)
at Server.listen (node:net:1465:7)
at Function.listen (/home/ayo/dev/demo/node_modules/express/lib/application.js:618:24)
at Object.<anonymous> (/home/ayo/dev/demo/main.js:16:18)
at Module._compile (node:internal/modules/cjs/loader:1103:14)
at Object.Module._extensions..js (node:internal/modules/cjs/loader:1157:10)
at Module.load (node:internal/modules/cjs/loader:981:32)
at Function.Module._load (node:internal/modules/cjs/loader:822:12)
at Function.executeUserEntryPoint [as runMain] (node:internal/modules/run_main:77:12)
Emitted 'error' event on Server instance at:
at emitErrorNT (node:net:1357:8)
at processTicksAndRejections (node:internal/process/task_queues:83:21) {
code: 'EADDRINUSE',
errno: -98,
syscall: 'listen',
address: '::',
port: 3001
}
The easiest fix for this error would be to configure your application to listen
on a different port (preferably by updating an environmental variable). However,
if you need that specific port that is in use, you can find out the process ID
of the application using it through the command below:
Output
COMMAND PID USER FD TYPE DEVICE SIZE/OFF NODE NAME
node 2902 ayo 19u IPv6 781904 0t0 TCP *:3001 (LISTEN)
Afterward, kill the process by passing the PID
value to the kill
command:
After running the command above, the application will be forcefully closed
freeing up the desired port for your intended use.
6. EADDRNOTAVAIL
This error is similar to EADDRINUSE
because it results from trying to run a
Node.js server at a specific port. It usually indicates a configuration issue
with your IP address, such as when you try to bind your server to a static IP:
const express = require('express');
const app = express();
const server = app.listen(3000, '192.168.0.101', function () {
console.log('server listening at port 3000......');
});
Output
Error: listen EADDRNOTAVAIL: address not available 192.168.0.101:3000
at Server.setupListenHandle [as _listen2] (node:net:1313:21)
at listenInCluster (node:net:1378:12)
at doListen (node:net:1516:7)
at processTicksAndRejections (node:internal/process/task_queues:84:21)
Emitted 'error' event on Server instance at:
at emitErrorNT (node:net:1357:8)
at processTicksAndRejections (node:internal/process/task_queues:83:21) {
code: 'EADDRNOTAVAIL',
errno: -99,
syscall: 'listen',
address: '192.168.0.101',
port: 3000
}
To resolve this issue, ensure that you have the right IP address (it may
sometimes change), or you can bind to any or all IPs by using 0.0.0.0
as shown
below:
var server = app.listen(3000, '0.0.0.0', function () {
console.log('server listening at port 3000......');
});
7. ECONNABORTED
The ECONNABORTED
exception is thrown when an active network connection is
aborted by the server before reading from the request body or writing to the
response body has completed. The example below demonstrates how this problem can
occur in a Node.js program:
const express = require('express');
const app = express();
const path = require('path');
app.get('/', function (req, res, next) {
res.sendFile(path.join(__dirname, 'new.txt'), null, (err) => {
console.log(err);
});
res.end();
});
const server = app.listen(3000, () => {
console.log('server listening at port 3001......');
});
Output
Error: Request aborted
at onaborted (/home/ayo/dev/demo/node_modules/express/lib/response.js:1030:15)
at Immediate._onImmediate (/home/ayo/dev/demo/node_modules/express/lib/response.js:1072:9)
at processImmediate (node:internal/timers:466:21) {
code: 'ECONNABORTED'
}
The problem here is that res.end()
was called prematurely before
res.sendFile()
has had a chance to complete due to the asynchronous nature of
the method. The solution here is to move res.end()
into sendFile()
‘s
callback function:
app.get('/', function (req, res, next) {
res.sendFile(path.join(__dirname, 'new.txt'), null, (err) => {
console.log(err);
res.end();
});
});
8. EHOSTUNREACH
An EHOSTUNREACH
exception indicates that a TCP connection failed because the
underlying protocol software found no route to the network or host. It can also
be triggered when traffic is blocked by a firewall or in response to information
received by intermediate gateways or switching nodes. If you encounter this
error, you may need to check your operating system’s routing tables or firewall
setup to fix the problem.
9. EAI_AGAIN
Node.js throws an EAI_AGAIN
error when a temporary failure in domain name
resolution occurs. A DNS lookup timeout that usually indicates a problem with
your network connection or your proxy settings. You can get this error when
trying to install an npm
package:
Output
npm ERR! code EAI_AGAIN
npm ERR! syscall getaddrinfo
npm ERR! errno EAI_AGAIN
npm ERR! request to https://registry.npmjs.org/nestjs failed, reason: getaddrinfo EAI_AGAIN registry.npmjs.org
If you’ve determined that your internet connection is working correctly, then
you should investigate your DNS resolver settings (/etc/resolv.conf
) or your
/etc/hosts
file to ensure it is set up correctly.
10. ENOENT
This error is a straightforward one. It means «Error No Entity» and is raised
when a specified path (file or directory) does not exist in the filesystem. It
is most commonly encountered when performing an operation with the fs
module
or running a script that expects a specific directory structure.
fs.open('non-existent-file.txt', (err, fd) => {
if (err) {
console.log(err);
}
});
Output
[Error: ENOENT: no such file or directory, open 'non-existent-file.txt'] {
errno: -2,
code: 'ENOENT',
syscall: 'open',
path: 'non-existent-file.txt'
}
To fix this error, you either need to create the expected directory structure or
change the path so that the script looks in the correct directory.
11. EISDIR
If you encounter this error, the operation that raised it expected a file
argument but was provided with a directory.
// config is actually a directory
fs.readFile('config', (err, data) => {
if (err) throw err;
console.log(data);
});
Output
[Error: EISDIR: illegal operation on a directory, read] {
errno: -21,
code: 'EISDIR',
syscall: 'read'
}
Fixing this error involves correcting the provided path so that it leads to a
file instead.
12. ENOTDIR
This error is the inverse of EISDIR
. It means a file argument was supplied
where a directory was expected. To avoid this error, ensure that the provided
path leads to a directory and not a file.
fs.opendir('/etc/passwd', (err, _dir) => {
if (err) throw err;
});
Output
[Error: ENOTDIR: not a directory, opendir '/etc/passwd'] {
errno: -20,
code: 'ENOTDIR',
syscall: 'opendir',
path: '/etc/passwd'
}
13. EACCES
The EACCES
error is often encountered when trying to access a file in a way
that is forbidden by its access permissions. You may also encounter this error
when you’re trying to install a global NPM package (depending on how you
installed Node.js and npm
), or when you try to run a server on a port lower
than 1024.
fs.readFile('/etc/sudoers', (err, data) => {
if (err) throw err;
console.log(data);
});
Output
[Error: EACCES: permission denied, open '/etc/sudoers'] {
errno: -13,
code: 'EACCES',
syscall: 'open',
path: '/etc/sudoers'
}
Essentially, this error indicates that the user executing the script does not
have the required permission to access a resource. A quick fix is to prefix the
script execution command with sudo
so that it is executed as root, but this is
a bad idea
for security reasons.
The correct fix for this error is to give the user executing the script the
required permissions to access the resource through the chown
command on Linux
in the case of a file or directory.
sudo chown -R $(whoami) /path/to/directory
If you encounter an EACCES
error when trying to listen on a port lower than
1024, you can use a higher port and set up port forwarding through iptables
.
The following command forwards HTTP traffic going to port 80 to port 8080
(assuming your application is listening on port 8080):
sudo iptables -t nat -I PREROUTING -p tcp --dport 80 -j REDIRECT --to-port 8080
If you encounter EACCES
errors when trying to install a global npm
package,
it usually means that you installed the Node.js and npm
versions found in your
system’s repositories. The recommended course of action is to uninstall those
versions and reinstall them through a Node environment manager like
NVM or Volta.
14. EEXIST
The EEXIST
error is another filesystem error that is encountered whenever a
file or directory exists, but the attempted operation requires it not to exist.
For example, you will see this error when you attempt to create a directory that
already exists as shown below:
const fs = require('fs');
fs.mkdirSync('temp', (err) => {
if (err) throw err;
});
Output
Error: EEXIST: file already exists, mkdir 'temp'
at Object.mkdirSync (node:fs:1349:3)
at Object.<anonymous> (/home/ayo/dev/demo/main.js:3:4)
at Module._compile (node:internal/modules/cjs/loader:1099:14)
at Object.Module._extensions..js (node:internal/modules/cjs/loader:1153:10)
at Module.load (node:internal/modules/cjs/loader:975:32)
at Function.Module._load (node:internal/modules/cjs/loader:822:12)
at Function.executeUserEntryPoint [as runMain] (node:internal/modules/run_main:77:12)
at node:internal/main/run_main_module:17:47 {
errno: -17,
syscall: 'mkdir',
code: 'EEXIST',
path: 'temp'
}
The solution here is to check if the path exists through fs.existsSync()
before attempting to create it:
const fs = require('fs');
if (!fs.existsSync('temp')) {
fs.mkdirSync('temp', (err) => {
if (err) throw err;
});
}
15. EPERM
The EPERM
error may be encountered in various scenarios, usually when
installing an npm
package. It indicates that the operation being carried out
could not be completed due to permission issues. This error often indicates that
a write was attempted to a file that is in a read-only state although you may
sometimes encounter an EACCES
error instead.
Here are some possible fixes you can try if you run into this problem:
- Close all instances of your editor before rerunning the command (maybe some
files were locked by the editor). - Clean the
npm
cache withnpm cache clean --force
. - Close or disable your Anti-virus software if have one.
- If you have a development server running, stop it before executing the
installation command once again. - Use the
--force
option as innpm install --force
. - Remove your
node_modules
folder withrm -rf node_modules
and install them
once again withnpm install
.
Conclusion
In this article, we covered 15 of the most common Node.js errors you are likely
to encounter when developing applications or utilizing Node.js-based tools, and
we discussed possible solutions to each one. This by no means an exhaustive list
so ensure to check out the
Node.js errors documentation or the
errno(3) man page for a
more comprehensive listing.
Thanks for reading, and happy coding!
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