README.md
1# `node-gyp` - Node.js native addon build tool
2
3[](https://github.com/nodejs/node-gyp/actions?query=workflow%3ATests+branch%3Amain)
4
5
6`node-gyp` is a cross-platform command-line tool written in Node.js for
7compiling native addon modules for Node.js. It contains a vendored copy of the
8[gyp-next](https://github.com/nodejs/gyp-next) project that was previously used
9by the Chromium team and extended to support the development of Node.js native
10addons.
11
12Note that `node-gyp` is _not_ used to build Node.js itself.
13
14Multiple target versions of Node.js are supported (i.e. `0.8`, ..., `4`, `5`, `6`,
15etc.), regardless of what version of Node.js is actually installed on your system
16(`node-gyp` downloads the necessary development files or headers for the target version).
17
18## Features
19
20 * The same build commands work on any of the supported platforms
21 * Supports the targeting of different versions of Node.js
22
23## Installation
24
25You can install `node-gyp` using `npm`:
26
27``` bash
28npm install -g node-gyp
29```
30
31Depending on your operating system, you will need to install:
32
33### On Unix
34
35 * [A supported version of Python](https://devguide.python.org/versions/)
36 * `make`
37 * A proper C/C++ compiler toolchain, like [GCC](https://gcc.gnu.org)
38
39### On macOS
40
41 * [A supported version of Python](https://devguide.python.org/versions/)
42 * `Xcode Command Line Tools` which will install `clang`, `clang++`, and `make`.
43 * Install the `Xcode Command Line Tools` standalone by running `xcode-select --install`. -- OR --
44 * Alternatively, if you already have the [full Xcode installed](https://developer.apple.com/xcode/download/), you can install the Command Line Tools under the menu `Xcode -> Open Developer Tool -> More Developer Tools...`.
45
46
47### On Windows
48
49Install the current [version of Python](https://devguide.python.org/versions/) from the
50[Microsoft Store](https://apps.microsoft.com/store/search?publisher=Python+Software+Foundation).
51
52Install tools and configuration manually:
53 * Install Visual C++ Build Environment: [Visual Studio Build Tools](https://visualstudio.microsoft.com/thank-you-downloading-visual-studio/?sku=BuildTools)
54 (using "Visual C++ build tools" if using a version older than VS2019, otherwise use "Desktop development with C++" workload) or [Visual Studio Community](https://visualstudio.microsoft.com/thank-you-downloading-visual-studio/?sku=Community)
55 (using the "Desktop development with C++" workload)
56
57 If the above steps didn't work for you, please visit [Microsoft's Node.js Guidelines for Windows](https://github.com/Microsoft/nodejs-guidelines/blob/master/windows-environment.md#compiling-native-addon-modules) for additional tips.
58
59 To target native ARM64 Node.js on Windows on ARM, add the components "Visual C++ compilers and libraries for ARM64" and "Visual C++ ATL for ARM64".
60
61 To use the native ARM64 C++ compiler on Windows on ARM, ensure that you have Visual Studio 2022 [17.4 or later](https://devblogs.microsoft.com/visualstudio/arm64-visual-studio-is-officially-here/) installed.
62
63### Configuring Python Dependency
64
65`node-gyp` requires that you have installed a [supported version of Python](https://devguide.python.org/versions/).
66If you have multiple versions of Python installed, you can identify which version
67`node-gyp` should use in one of the following ways:
68
691. by setting the `--python` command-line option, e.g.:
70
71``` bash
72node-gyp <command> --python /path/to/executable/python
73```
74
752. If `node-gyp` is called by way of `npm`, *and* you have multiple versions of
76Python installed, then you can set the `npm_config_python` environment variable
77to the appropriate path:
78``` bash
79export npm_config_python=/path/to/executable/python
80```
81 Or on Windows:
82```console
83py --list-paths # To see the installed Python versions
84set npm_config_python=C:\path\to\python.exe
85```
86
873. If the `PYTHON` environment variable is set to the path of a Python executable,
88then that version will be used if it is a supported version.
89
904. If the `NODE_GYP_FORCE_PYTHON` environment variable is set to the path of a
91Python executable, it will be used instead of any of the other configured or
92built-in Python search paths. If it's not a compatible version, no further
93searching will be done.
94
95### Build for Third Party Node.js Runtimes
96
97When building modules for third-party Node.js runtimes like Electron, which have
98different build configurations from the official Node.js distribution, you
99should use `--dist-url` or `--nodedir` flags to specify the headers of the
100runtime to build for.
101
102Also when `--dist-url` or `--nodedir` flags are passed, node-gyp will use the
103`config.gypi` shipped in the headers distribution to generate build
104configurations, which is different from the default mode that would use the
105`process.config` object of the running Node.js instance.
106
107Some old versions of Electron shipped malformed `config.gypi` in their headers
108distributions, and you might need to pass `--force-process-config` to node-gyp
109to work around configuration errors.
110
111## How to Use
112
113To compile your native addon first go to its root directory:
114
115``` bash
116cd my_node_addon
117```
118
119The next step is to generate the appropriate project build files for the current
120platform. Use `configure` for that:
121
122``` bash
123node-gyp configure
124```
125
126Auto-detection fails for Visual C++ Build Tools 2015, so `--msvs_version=2015`
127needs to be added (not needed when run by npm as configured above):
128``` bash
129node-gyp configure --msvs_version=2015
130```
131
132__Note__: The `configure` step looks for a `binding.gyp` file in the current
133directory to process. See below for instructions on creating a `binding.gyp` file.
134
135Now you will have either a `Makefile` (on Unix platforms) or a `vcxproj` file
136(on Windows) in the `build/` directory. Next, invoke the `build` command:
137
138``` bash
139node-gyp build
140```
141
142Now you have your compiled `.node` bindings file! The compiled bindings end up
143in `build/Debug/` or `build/Release/`, depending on the build mode. At this point,
144you can require the `.node` file with Node.js and run your tests!
145
146__Note:__ To create a _Debug_ build of the bindings file, pass the `--debug` (or
147`-d`) switch when running either the `configure`, `build` or `rebuild` commands.
148
149## The `binding.gyp` file
150
151A `binding.gyp` file describes the configuration to build your module, in a
152JSON-like format. This file gets placed in the root of your package, alongside
153`package.json`.
154
155A barebones `gyp` file appropriate for building a Node.js addon could look like:
156
157```python
158{
159 "targets": [
160 {
161 "target_name": "binding",
162 "sources": [ "src/binding.cc" ]
163 }
164 ]
165}
166```
167
168## Further reading
169
170The **[docs](./docs/)** directory contains additional documentation on specific node-gyp topics that may be useful if you are experiencing problems installing or building addons using node-gyp.
171
172Some additional resources for Node.js native addons and writing `gyp` configuration files:
173
174 * ["Going Native" a nodeschool.io tutorial](http://nodeschool.io/#goingnative)
175 * ["Hello World" node addon example](https://github.com/nodejs/node/tree/main/test/addons/hello-world)
176 * [gyp user documentation](https://gyp.gsrc.io/docs/UserDocumentation.md)
177 * [gyp input format reference](https://gyp.gsrc.io/docs/InputFormatReference.md)
178 * [*"binding.gyp" files out in the wild* wiki page](./docs/binding.gyp-files-in-the-wild.md)
179
180## Commands
181
182`node-gyp` responds to the following commands:
183
184| **Command** | **Description**
185|:--------------|:---------------------------------------------------------------
186| `help` | Shows the help dialog
187| `build` | Invokes `make`/`msbuild.exe` and builds the native addon
188| `clean` | Removes the `build` directory if it exists
189| `configure` | Generates project build files for the current platform
190| `rebuild` | Runs `clean`, `configure` and `build` all in a row
191| `install` | Installs Node.js header files for the given version
192| `list` | Lists the currently installed Node.js header versions
193| `remove` | Removes the Node.js header files for the given version
194
195
196## Command Options
197
198`node-gyp` accepts the following command options:
199
200| **Command** | **Description**
201|:----------------------------------|:------------------------------------------
202| `-j n`, `--jobs n` | Run `make` in parallel. The value `max` will use all available CPU cores
203| `--target=v6.2.1` | Node.js version to build for (default is `process.version`)
204| `--silly`, `--loglevel=silly` | Log all progress to console
205| `--verbose`, `--loglevel=verbose` | Log most progress to console
206| `--silent`, `--loglevel=silent` | Don't log anything to console
207| `debug`, `--debug` | Make Debug build (default is `Release`)
208| `--release`, `--no-debug` | Make Release build
209| `-C $dir`, `--directory=$dir` | Run command in different directory
210| `--make=$make` | Override `make` command (e.g. `gmake`)
211| `--thin=yes` | Enable thin static libraries
212| `--arch=$arch` | Set target architecture (e.g. ia32)
213| `--tarball=$path` | Get headers from a local tarball
214| `--devdir=$path` | SDK download directory (default is OS cache directory)
215| `--ensure` | Don't reinstall headers if already present
216| `--dist-url=$url` | Download header tarball from custom URL
217| `--proxy=$url` | Set HTTP(S) proxy for downloading header tarball
218| `--noproxy=$urls` | Set urls to ignore proxies when downloading header tarball
219| `--cafile=$cafile` | Override default CA chain (to download tarball)
220| `--nodedir=$path` | Set the path to the node source code
221| `--python=$path` | Set path to the Python binary
222| `--msvs_version=$version` | Set Visual Studio version (Windows only)
223| `--solution=$solution` | Set Visual Studio Solution version (Windows only)
224| `--force-process-config` | Force using runtime's `process.config` object to generate `config.gypi` file
225
226## Configuration
227
228### Environment variables
229
230Use the form `npm_config_OPTION_NAME` for any of the command options listed
231above (dashes in option names should be replaced by underscores).
232
233For example, to set `devdir` equal to `/tmp/.gyp`, you would:
234
235Run this on Unix:
236
237```bash
238export npm_config_devdir=/tmp/.gyp
239```
240
241Or this on Windows:
242
243```console
244set npm_config_devdir=c:\temp\.gyp
245```
246
247### `npm` configuration for npm versions before v9
248
249Use the form `OPTION_NAME` for any of the command options listed above.
250
251For example, to set `devdir` equal to `/tmp/.gyp`, you would run:
252
253```bash
254npm config set [--global] devdir /tmp/.gyp
255```
256
257**Note:** Configuration set via `npm` will only be used when `node-gyp`
258is run via `npm`, not when `node-gyp` is run directly.
259
260## License
261
262`node-gyp` is available under the MIT license. See the [LICENSE
263file](LICENSE) for details.
264