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[BUG] Platform-specific optional dependencies not being included in package-lock.json when reinstalling with node_modules present #4828

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JustinChristensen opened this issue Apr 29, 2022 · 196 comments
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Bug thing that needs fixing Needs Triage needs review for next steps Release 8.x work is associated with a specific npm 8 release

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@JustinChristensen
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JustinChristensen commented Apr 29, 2022

Is there an existing issue for this?

  • I have searched the existing issues

This issue exists in the latest npm version

  • I am using the latest npm

Current Behavior

[user@host:foo] $ npm -v
8.8.0
[user@host:foo] $ node
Welcome to Node.js v16.14.2.
Type ".help" for more information.
> process.arch
'arm64'

I'm working on a team that utilizes a mix of x64-based and m1-based macs, and has CI build processes that uses musl. We're seeing that npm is skipping platform-specific optional dependencies for packages such as @swc/core as a result of the package-lock.json file being generated without all of them included. In our case, this then causes linting to throw an exception, because one of our eslint plugins depends on @swc, which depends on having the platform specific @swc package also installed.

There seems to be at least two stages of cause to this. Firstly, when installing @swc/core from a clean slate working directory npm generates a package-lock.json with all of the optional dependencies for @swc/core listed:

[user@host:foo] $ npm install @swc/core
[user@host:foo] $ grep 'node_modules/@swc/core-*' package-lock.json
    "node_modules/@swc/core": {
    "node_modules/@swc/core-android-arm-eabi": {
    "node_modules/@swc/core-android-arm64": {
    "node_modules/@swc/core-darwin-arm64": {
    "node_modules/@swc/core-darwin-x64": {
    "node_modules/@swc/core-freebsd-x64": {
    "node_modules/@swc/core-linux-arm-gnueabihf": {
    "node_modules/@swc/core-linux-arm64-gnu": {
    "node_modules/@swc/core-linux-arm64-musl": {
    "node_modules/@swc/core-linux-x64-gnu": {
    "node_modules/@swc/core-linux-x64-musl": {
    "node_modules/@swc/core-win32-arm64-msvc": {
    "node_modules/@swc/core-win32-ia32-msvc": {
    "node_modules/@swc/core-win32-x64-msvc": {

And it only installs the platform specific package:

[user@host:foo] $ ls -l node_modules/@swc/
total 0
drwxr-xr-x  22 user  staff  704 Apr 29 15:39 core
drwxr-xr-x   6 user  staff  192 Apr 29 15:39 core-darwin-arm64

If I then remove my package-lock.json, leave my node_modules directory as-is, and then reinstall, I get:

[user@host:foo] $ rm -rf package-lock.json
[user@host:foo] $ npm install
[user@host:foo] $ grep 'node_modules/@swc/core-*' package-lock.json
    "node_modules/@swc/core": {
    "node_modules/@swc/core-darwin-arm64": {

That is, it then generates a package-lock.json with only the platform-specific dependency that was installed on this machine, and not with the other optional dependencies that should also be listed.

If you delete both node_modules AND package-lock.json, and then re-run npm install, it generates the correct lockfile with all of those optional dependencies listed.

The problem is that then, If the package-lock.json with the missing optional platform-specific dependencies gets checked into git and an x64 user pulls it down, or vice-versa, npm fails to detect that your platform's optional dependencies are missing in the lockfile and just silently skips installing the platform-specific dependency. For example, when I've got a package-lock.json that only contains the x64 @swc package because of the above problem (generated by my coworker on his x64 machine):

[user@host:foo] $ node
Welcome to Node.js v16.14.2.
Type ".help" for more information.
> process.arch
'arm64'
>
[user@host:foo] $ grep 'node_modules/@swc/core-*' package-lock.json
    "node_modules/@swc/core": {
    "node_modules/@swc/core-darwin-x64": {
[user@host:foo] $ ls
package-lock.json package.json

And I then install:

[user@host:foo] $ npm install
added 1 package in 341ms

1 package is looking for funding
  run `npm fund` for details
[user@host:foo] $ ls node_modules/@swc/
core

You can see that it fails to install the arm64 dependency or warn me in any way that the package-lock.json is missing my platform's dependency.

So yeah, two problems:

  1. npm is generating an inconsistent package-lock.json when node_modules has your platform-specific dependency installed.
  2. When installing from this inconsistent package-lock.json, npm fails to try to correct the problem by comparing the optional dependencies to what's listed upstream

Expected Behavior

  1. npm should preserve the full set of platform-specific optional deps for a package like @swc when rebuilding package-lock.json from an existing node_modules tree
  2. npm install should warn if the package-lock.json becomes inconsistent because of the first case

Steps To Reproduce

See above.

Environment

  • npm: 8.8.0
  • Node.js:
  • OS Name: OSX
  • System Model Name: Macbook Pro
[user@host:foo] $ npm -v
8.8.0
[user@host:foo] $ node -v
v16.14.2
[user@host:foo] $ uname -a
Darwin host.foo.com. 21.3.0 Darwin Kernel Version 21.3.0: Wed Jan  5 21:37:58 PST 2022; root:xnu-8019.80.24~20/RELEASE_ARM64_T8101 arm64
[user@host] $ npm config ls
; "user" config from /Users/user/.npmrc
; node bin location = /Users/user/.nvm/versions/node/v16.14.2/bin/node
; node version = v16.14.2
; npm local prefix = /Users/user/Development/foo
; npm version = 8.8.0
; cwd = /Users/user/Development/foo
; HOME = /Users/user
; Run `npm config ls -l` to show all defaults.
@JustinChristensen JustinChristensen added Bug thing that needs fixing Needs Triage needs review for next steps Release 8.x work is associated with a specific npm 8 release labels Apr 29, 2022
@JustinChristensen JustinChristensen changed the title [BUG] Platform-specific optional dependencies not being included in package-lock when reinstalling with node_modules/ present [BUG] Platform-specific optional dependencies not being included in package-lock when reinstalling with node_modules present Apr 29, 2022
@JustinChristensen JustinChristensen changed the title [BUG] Platform-specific optional dependencies not being included in package-lock when reinstalling with node_modules present [BUG] Platform-specific optional dependencies not being included in package-lock.json when reinstalling with node_modules present Apr 29, 2022
@JustinChristensen
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@nlf

Sorry to ping you out of the blue, but this issue has been open for 11 days now without any movement. Is there anyone working on npm right now that might have the bandwidth to at least validate that this is indeed a problem as I've described it?

Just so that when someone does become available to do some development work they know that this is in the queue?

Please and thank you.

@JustinChristensen
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Bump

@RobbieClarken
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I'm also encountering this issue with a Next.js project:

  • Deleting package-lock.json and running npm install on an M1 Mac results in a package-lock.json file that is no longer able to build the app on x86.
  • This can be fixed by deleting package-lock.json and node_modules and re-running npm install.

Unfortunately developers often don't realise the package-lock.json file is broken because everything continues to run fine on their machine. It is only when the build runs in CI that we learn it is broken.

Here is a reproduction:

$ node --version
v16.13.0
$ npm --version
8.12.1
$ npx create-next-app@latest
What is your project named? … my-app
Creating a new Next.js app in /Users/robbie/demo/my-app.
$ cd my-app/
$ npm install

up to date, audited 223 packages in 480ms

68 packages are looking for funding
  run `npm fund` for details

found 0 vulnerabilities
$ git status
On branch main
nothing to commit, working tree clean
$ rm package-lock.json
$ npm install

up to date, audited 223 packages in 579ms

68 packages are looking for funding
  run `npm fund` for details

found 0 vulnerabilities
$ # ************ package-lock.json is now incompatible with x86 ************
$ git diff
diff --git a/package-lock.json b/package-lock.json
index cbbf946..a87c1e5 100644
--- a/package-lock.json
+++ b/package-lock.json
@@ -96,36 +96,6 @@
         "glob": "7.1.7"
       }
     },
-    "node_modules/@next/swc-android-arm-eabi": {
-      "version": "12.1.6",
-      "resolved": "https://registry.npmjs.org/@next/swc-android-arm-eabi/-/swc-android-arm-eabi-12.1.6.tgz",
-      "integrity": "sha512-BxBr3QAAAXWgk/K7EedvzxJr2dE014mghBSA9iOEAv0bMgF+MRq4PoASjuHi15M2zfowpcRG8XQhMFtxftCleQ==",
-      "cpu": [
-        "arm"
-      ],
-      "optional": true,
-      "os": [
-        "android"
-      ],
-      "engines": {
-        "node": ">= 10"
-      }
-    },
-    "node_modules/@next/swc-android-arm64": {
-      "version": "12.1.6",
-      "resolved": "https://registry.npmjs.org/@next/swc-android-arm64/-/swc-android-arm64-12.1.6.tgz",
-      "integrity": "sha512-EboEk3ROYY7U6WA2RrMt/cXXMokUTXXfnxe2+CU+DOahvbrO8QSWhlBl9I9ZbFzJx28AGB9Yo3oQHCvph/4Lew==",
-      "cpu": [
-        "arm64"
-      ],
-      "optional": true,
-      "os": [
-        "android"
-      ],
-      "engines": {
-        "node": ">= 10"
-      }
-    },
[...]
$ rm -r package-lock.json node_modules
$ npm install

added 222 packages, and audited 223 packages in 2s

68 packages are looking for funding
  run `npm fund` for details

found 0 vulnerabilities
$ # ************ package-lock.json is now ok again ************
$ git status
On branch main
nothing to commit, working tree clean

@pete55104
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I am also having this issue. I'm trying to run tests using jest with swc. The test runner is a linux image, but my dev machine is darwin. I can get it to work by either using --force to install the linux dependency, or I can install packages from inside the container... but github CI stands up the docker container in such a way that I can't easily install packages from in there, and that also prevents me from maintaining a cached node modules etc.

@johnculviner
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bump

@nikkhn
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nikkhn commented Jul 12, 2022

bump - cannot get optional dependencies (namely @swc/core-linux-arm64-gnu) to install on my linux distro

@sgoodluck
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bump

@alcuadrado
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Confirming that this issue is still present. It's particularly important for projects using NAPI modules, as tons of them use platform-specific packages.

jfsoul added a commit to guardian/prosemirror-typerighter that referenced this issue Sep 26, 2022
@AboldUSER
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Ran into this issue when creating a CI process for a repo where I use a Windows machine and the CI process is using Linux. My quick "fix" for now is to start the CI process by deleting the package-lock.json and running npm install instead of npm ci. I know this is not good practice, so looking forward to a real fix to come through.

@eliotSmithNYC
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bump

@douglassllc
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I am having a similar issue. My project uses @ffmpeg-installer/ffmpeg. While using npm v6 all optional dependencies (arch specific) are installed. After my upgrade to npm v8 the optional dependencies no longer install. Per the npm documentation I attempted using --include=optional, but this did not resolve the issue.

What has changed between v6 and v8 and is there an npm config option that will have v8 work similar to v6 when it comes to optional dependencies?

carloscasalar added a commit to casrpg/traveller-rpg-tools that referenced this issue Oct 19, 2024
@majdarov
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I run Docker development containers based on the node:20 image. An error occurred in the backend container related to the @sws/core and @swc/cli packages. There is also an error in the frontend container: "Error: I can't find the @rollup/rollup-linux-x64-musl " module.

After several days of searching and temporary solutions, I realized that the error occurs when using the node:20 image based on alpine. If you use the node:20-bookworm or node:20-bullseye images, there will be no error. Maybe this will be useful to someone.

vitebo added a commit to quero-edu/quero-challenge-frontend-vue that referenced this issue Oct 23, 2024
npm has a bug related to optional dependencies (npm/cli#4828).
vitebo added a commit to quero-edu/quero-challenge-frontend-react that referenced this issue Oct 23, 2024
npm has a bug related to optional dependencies (npm/cli#4828).
scristobal added a commit to scristobal/webgpu-experiments that referenced this issue Oct 26, 2024
@saiichihashimoto
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For whatever reason, after every merge conflict I have to fix this and I'll eventually get it fixed, only to fail in my CI. I'm having to delete package-lock.json and node_modules locally, npm install, npm run build, git push, only to have it fail again in CI and repeat until it works for every merge.

saiichihashimoto added a commit to saiichihashimoto/sanity-typed that referenced this issue Oct 28, 2024
saiichihashimoto added a commit to saiichihashimoto/sanity-typed that referenced this issue Oct 28, 2024
@lpknv
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lpknv commented Oct 29, 2024

I am also experiencing a similar issue using node:22-alpine for my sveltekit / vite docker deployment and currently trying out different node docker version (bookworm, slim etc).

@hrishikeshs
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Running into this issue on my gitlab instance for CI runners. Our project is quite large and caching node_modules when package-lock.json hasn't changed makes a significant difference (time taken reduces from 30 mins to around 10 mins). This issue is preventing us from setting up our pipeline to me more efficient :(

saiichihashimoto added a commit to saiichihashimoto/sanity-typed that referenced this issue Oct 29, 2024
dan-j added a commit to versori/versori-js-sdk that referenced this issue Oct 30, 2024
@Abadii
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Abadii commented Oct 30, 2024

I encountered a similar issue, and here’s how I resolved it.

I’m working on a MacBook Pro with an M2 Pro chip, while my GitLab pipeline runs on a Linux (x64) environment.

In my case, the problem stemmed from the rollup package not installing certain optional dependencies:

"optionalDependencies": {
        "@rollup/rollup-android-arm-eabi": "4.22.4",
        "@rollup/rollup-android-arm64": "4.22.4",
        "@rollup/rollup-darwin-arm64": "4.22.4",
        "@rollup/rollup-darwin-x64": "4.22.4",
        "@rollup/rollup-linux-arm-gnueabihf": "4.22.4",
        "@rollup/rollup-linux-arm-musleabihf": "4.22.4",
        "@rollup/rollup-linux-arm64-gnu": "4.22.4",
        "@rollup/rollup-linux-arm64-musl": "4.22.4",
        "@rollup/rollup-linux-powerpc64le-gnu": "4.22.4",
        "@rollup/rollup-linux-riscv64-gnu": "4.22.4",
        "@rollup/rollup-linux-s390x-gnu": "4.22.4",
        "@rollup/rollup-linux-x64-gnu": "4.22.4",
        "@rollup/rollup-linux-x64-musl": "4.22.4",
        "@rollup/rollup-win32-arm64-msvc": "4.22.4",
        "@rollup/rollup-win32-ia32-msvc": "4.22.4",
        "@rollup/rollup-win32-x64-msvc": "4.22.4",
        "fsevents": "~2.3.2"
      }

This package list is required by: @angular-devkit/build-angular@18.2.10 -> @angular/build@18.2.10 -> rollup@4.22.4.

In my package-lock.json, the necessary @rollup/rollup-darwin-arm64 was missing, even though it seemed required. Oddly, it was marked as optional. Running npm install --include=optional fixed this locally, updating my package-lock.json to include the needed packages, allowing ng serve to run smoothly.

To ensure consistency, I deleted the package-lock.json (a potentially risky step) and ran a fresh npm install --include=optional. This worked on my local machine but not in the pipeline, where the required linux-x64 packages were still missing.

To address this, I deleted package-lock.json again and ran npm install --platform=linux --arch=x64, adding include=optional to my .npmrc file. This generated a package-lock.json with all the necessary OS/architecture packages. Following this, npm install succeeded both locally and in the pipeline. Each environment correctly installed only the relevant packages (Darwin for macOS locally and Linux for the pipeline).

If you don’t mind deleting package-lock.json, this method might work for you too. Ensure the required packages are in package-lock.json before rerunning npm install with include=optional.

Best of luck!

@Abadii
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Abadii commented Oct 30, 2024

I encountered a similar issue, and here’s how I resolved it.

I’m working on a MacBook Pro with an M2 Pro chip, while my GitLab pipeline runs on a Linux (x64) environment.

In my case, the problem stemmed from the rollup package not installing certain optional dependencies:

"optionalDependencies": {
        "@rollup/rollup-android-arm-eabi": "4.22.4",
        "@rollup/rollup-android-arm64": "4.22.4",
        "@rollup/rollup-darwin-arm64": "4.22.4",
        "@rollup/rollup-darwin-x64": "4.22.4",
        "@rollup/rollup-linux-arm-gnueabihf": "4.22.4",
        "@rollup/rollup-linux-arm-musleabihf": "4.22.4",
        "@rollup/rollup-linux-arm64-gnu": "4.22.4",
        "@rollup/rollup-linux-arm64-musl": "4.22.4",
        "@rollup/rollup-linux-powerpc64le-gnu": "4.22.4",
        "@rollup/rollup-linux-riscv64-gnu": "4.22.4",
        "@rollup/rollup-linux-s390x-gnu": "4.22.4",
        "@rollup/rollup-linux-x64-gnu": "4.22.4",
        "@rollup/rollup-linux-x64-musl": "4.22.4",
        "@rollup/rollup-win32-arm64-msvc": "4.22.4",
        "@rollup/rollup-win32-ia32-msvc": "4.22.4",
        "@rollup/rollup-win32-x64-msvc": "4.22.4",
        "fsevents": "~2.3.2"
      }

This package list is required by: @angular-devkit/build-angular@18.2.10 -> @angular/build@18.2.10 -> rollup@4.22.4.

In my package-lock.json, the necessary @rollup/rollup-darwin-arm64 was missing, even though it seemed required. Oddly, it was marked as optional. Running npm install --include=optional fixed this locally, updating my package-lock.json to include the needed packages, allowing ng serve to run smoothly.

To ensure consistency, I deleted the package-lock.json (a potentially risky step) and ran a fresh npm install --include=optional. This worked on my local machine but not in the pipeline, where the required linux-x64 packages were still missing.

To address this, I deleted package-lock.json again and ran npm install --platform=linux --arch=x64, adding include=optional to my .npmrc file. This generated a package-lock.json with all the necessary OS/architecture packages. Following this, npm install succeeded both locally and in the pipeline. Each environment correctly installed only the relevant packages (Darwin for macOS locally and Linux for the pipeline).

If you don’t mind deleting package-lock.json, this method might work for you too. Ensure the required packages are in package-lock.json before rerunning npm install with include=optional.

Best of luck!

I encountered a similar issue, and here’s how I resolved it.

I’m working on a MacBook Pro with an M2 Pro chip, while my GitLab pipeline runs on a Linux (x64) environment.

In my case, the problem stemmed from the rollup package not installing certain optional dependencies:

"optionalDependencies": {
        "@rollup/rollup-android-arm-eabi": "4.22.4",
        "@rollup/rollup-android-arm64": "4.22.4",
        "@rollup/rollup-darwin-arm64": "4.22.4",
        "@rollup/rollup-darwin-x64": "4.22.4",
        "@rollup/rollup-linux-arm-gnueabihf": "4.22.4",
        "@rollup/rollup-linux-arm-musleabihf": "4.22.4",
        "@rollup/rollup-linux-arm64-gnu": "4.22.4",
        "@rollup/rollup-linux-arm64-musl": "4.22.4",
        "@rollup/rollup-linux-powerpc64le-gnu": "4.22.4",
        "@rollup/rollup-linux-riscv64-gnu": "4.22.4",
        "@rollup/rollup-linux-s390x-gnu": "4.22.4",
        "@rollup/rollup-linux-x64-gnu": "4.22.4",
        "@rollup/rollup-linux-x64-musl": "4.22.4",
        "@rollup/rollup-win32-arm64-msvc": "4.22.4",
        "@rollup/rollup-win32-ia32-msvc": "4.22.4",
        "@rollup/rollup-win32-x64-msvc": "4.22.4",
        "fsevents": "~2.3.2"
      }

This package list is required by: @angular-devkit/build-angular@18.2.10 -> @angular/build@18.2.10 -> rollup@4.22.4.

In my package-lock.json, the necessary @rollup/rollup-darwin-arm64 was missing, even though it seemed required. Oddly, it was marked as optional. Running npm install --include=optional fixed this locally, updating my package-lock.json to include the needed packages, allowing ng serve to run smoothly.

To ensure consistency, I deleted the package-lock.json (a potentially risky step) and ran a fresh npm install --include=optional. This worked on my local machine but not in the pipeline, where the required linux-x64 packages were still missing.

To address this, I deleted package-lock.json again and ran npm install --platform=linux --arch=x64, adding include=optional to my .npmrc file. This generated a package-lock.json with all the necessary OS/architecture packages. Following this, npm install succeeded both locally and in the pipeline. Each environment correctly installed only the relevant packages (Darwin for macOS locally and Linux for the pipeline).

If you don’t mind deleting package-lock.json, this method might work for you too. Ensure the required packages are in package-lock.json before rerunning npm install with include=optional.

Best of luck!

To clarify, now my package-lock.json includes the following:

......
"node_modules/@rollup/rollup-darwin-arm64": {
      "version": "4.22.4",
      "resolved": "xxx",
      "integrity": "xxx",
      "cpu": [
        "arm64"
      ],
      "dev": true,
      "license": "MIT",
      "optional": true,
      "os": [
        "darwin"
      ]
    },
    "node_modules/@rollup/rollup-darwin-x64": {
      "version": "4.22.4",
       "resolved": "xxx",
      "integrity": "xxx",
      "cpu": [
        "x64"
      ],
      "dev": true,
      "license": "MIT",
      "optional": true,
      "os": [
        "darwin"
      ]
    },
    "node_modules/@rollup/rollup-linux-arm-gnueabihf": {
      "version": "4.22.4",
       "resolved": "xxx",
      "integrity": "xxx",,
      "cpu": [
        "arm"
      ],
      "dev": true,
      "license": "MIT",
      "optional": true,
      "os": [
        "linux"
      ]
    },
    "node_modules/@rollup/rollup-linux-arm-musleabihf": {
      "version": "4.22.4",
       "resolved": "xxx",
      "integrity": "xxx",
      "cpu": [
        "arm"
      ],
      "dev": true,
      "license": "MIT",
      "optional": true,
      "os": [
        "linux"
      ]
    },
    "node_modules/@rollup/rollup-linux-arm64-gnu": {
      "version": "4.22.4",
       "resolved": "xxx",
      "integrity": "xxx",
      "cpu": [
        "arm64"
      ],
      "dev": true,
      "license": "MIT",
      "optional": true,
      "os": [
        "linux"
      ]
    },
etc ....

Before, these packages were missing in the package-lock.json file.

@lpknv
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lpknv commented Oct 30, 2024

I encountered a similar issue, and here’s how I resolved it.

I’m working on a MacBook Pro with an M2 Pro chip, while my GitLab pipeline runs on a Linux (x64) environment.

In my case, the problem stemmed from the rollup package not installing certain optional dependencies:

"optionalDependencies": {
        "@rollup/rollup-android-arm-eabi": "4.22.4",
        "@rollup/rollup-android-arm64": "4.22.4",
        "@rollup/rollup-darwin-arm64": "4.22.4",
        "@rollup/rollup-darwin-x64": "4.22.4",
        "@rollup/rollup-linux-arm-gnueabihf": "4.22.4",
        "@rollup/rollup-linux-arm-musleabihf": "4.22.4",
        "@rollup/rollup-linux-arm64-gnu": "4.22.4",
        "@rollup/rollup-linux-arm64-musl": "4.22.4",
        "@rollup/rollup-linux-powerpc64le-gnu": "4.22.4",
        "@rollup/rollup-linux-riscv64-gnu": "4.22.4",
        "@rollup/rollup-linux-s390x-gnu": "4.22.4",
        "@rollup/rollup-linux-x64-gnu": "4.22.4",
        "@rollup/rollup-linux-x64-musl": "4.22.4",
        "@rollup/rollup-win32-arm64-msvc": "4.22.4",
        "@rollup/rollup-win32-ia32-msvc": "4.22.4",
        "@rollup/rollup-win32-x64-msvc": "4.22.4",
        "fsevents": "~2.3.2"
      }

This package list is required by: @angular-devkit/build-angular@18.2.10 -> @angular/build@18.2.10 -> rollup@4.22.4.

In my package-lock.json, the necessary @rollup/rollup-darwin-arm64 was missing, even though it seemed required. Oddly, it was marked as optional. Running npm install --include=optional fixed this locally, updating my package-lock.json to include the needed packages, allowing ng serve to run smoothly.

To ensure consistency, I deleted the package-lock.json (a potentially risky step) and ran a fresh npm install --include=optional. This worked on my local machine but not in the pipeline, where the required linux-x64 packages were still missing.

To address this, I deleted package-lock.json again and ran npm install --platform=linux --arch=x64, adding include=optional to my .npmrc file. This generated a package-lock.json with all the necessary OS/architecture packages. Following this, npm install succeeded both locally and in the pipeline. Each environment correctly installed only the relevant packages (Darwin for macOS locally and Linux for the pipeline).

If you don’t mind deleting package-lock.json, this method might work for you too. Ensure the required packages are in package-lock.json before rerunning npm install with include=optional.

Best of luck!

Thanks for this Infos. I will give it a try because I am experiencing similar issue.

@dultsch
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dultsch commented Nov 7, 2024

In the end it worked for me to add the following optional dependencies to get the standard angular 18 project running on my windows machine and the linux pipeline:

{
  "os": [
    "win32",
    "linux"
  ],
  "optionalDependencies": {
    "@lmdb/lmdb-linux-x64": "^3.0.13",
    "@lmdb/lmdb-win32-x64": "^3.0.13",
    "@rollup/rollup-win32-x64-msvc": "4.22.4",
    "@rollup/rollup-linux-x64-gnu": "4.22.4"
  }
}

As I had a fresh project, I regenerated the complete package-lock.json.

muodov added a commit to duckduckgo/autoconsent that referenced this issue Nov 7, 2024
* easylist experiment

* update easylist

* Tweak easylist hack

* delay easylist detection

* increase the easylist timeout

* update easylist

* Use fanboy-cookiemonster in the test extension

* Initialize and apply cosmetic filters together with prehide rules

* Fall back to filterist when no pop-up is found

* Remove easylist rule

* WIP

* WIP: add perf metrics

* add performance metrics

* Allow disabling autoconsent per site (in the test extension)

* Use uBO version of easylist cookie

* remove the perf metrics code

* Use constructed stylesheets for cosmetic styles

* minify the extension content script

* filterlist experiment

* Add filterlist overrides

* Update bundled filterlist

* minor filterlist changes

* Logging tweaks

* Tweak logs

* Add a rule for wise.com

* add a rule for nike

* Add a rule for dan.com

* Remove generic-cosmetic rule (too many false positives)

* add rule for medium.com

* Add a rule for abc.net.au

* Lint fix

* removed unused file

* support mobile aliexpress

* Update rule for temu

* Add rule for american airlines

* Add rule for tesla

* Wrap filterlist code in try catch

* Add a rule for admiral GDPR popups

* Tweak ensighten rule for britishairways.com

* Address minor PR comments

* comment overrides

* update the adblocker library and use the provided style override

* Bundle filterlist in JS

* Update filterlist on every release

* Tweak watch command

* Remove outdated comments

* Disable filterlist by default

* Move log to a more appropriate place

* remove unused ignore

* Lint fix in auto-generated file

* Update filterlist

* Remove autogenerated filterlist from git index

* Do not commit changes to filterlist

* Update the build scripts to update filterlist when necessary

* Regenerate package-lock (see npm/cli#4828)

* remove performance marks

* Produce separate builds with and without filterlist

* Avoid generating filterlist twice in ci

* Export json rules

* Do not commit filterlist file during release

* Build filterlist from easylist source

* Update readme

* add link to DDG download page

* cliqz/adblocker is renamed to ghostery/adblocker

* Address minor PR comments

* Track the resulting filterlist in git

* Add a ci job to update EasyList
jschaf added a commit to jschaf/bazel-rules-js-vite that referenced this issue Nov 7, 2024
I tried both optionalDependencies and dependencies.

Doesn't work. Fails with the same error:

```
/private/var/tmp/_bazel_joe/1713d43747a35eb7e2009bc8fd9406b7/execroot/_main/bazel-out/darwin_arm64-fastbuild/bin/vite_/vite.runfiles/_main/node_modules/.aspect_rules_js/rollup@4.24.3/node_modules/rollup/dist/native.js:63
                throw new Error(
                      ^

Error: Cannot find module @rollup/rollup-darwin-arm64. npm has a bug related to optional dependencies (npm/cli#4828). Please try `npm i` again after removing both package-lock.json and node_modules directory.
    at requireWithFriendlyError (/private/var/tmp/_bazel_joe/1713d43747a35eb7e2009bc8fd9406b7/execroot/_main/bazel-out/darwin_arm64-fastbuild/bin/vite_/vite.runfiles/_main/node_modules/.aspect_rules_js/rollup@4.24.3/node_modules/rollup/dist/native.js:63:9)
    at Object.<anonymous> (/private/var/tmp/_bazel_joe/1713d43747a35eb7e2009bc8fd9406b7/execroot/_main/bazel-out/darwin_arm64-fastbuild/bin/vite_/vite.runfiles/_main/node_modules/.aspect_rules_js/rollup@4.24.3/node_modules/rollup/dist/native.js:72:76)
    ... 3 lines matching cause stack trace ...
    at Module._load (node:internal/modules/cjs/loader:1104:12)
    at cjsLoader (node:internal/modules/esm/translators:346:17)
    at ModuleWrap.<anonymous> (node:internal/modules/esm/translators:286:7)
    at ModuleJob.run (node:internal/modules/esm/module_job:234:25)
    at async ModuleLoader.import (node:internal/modules/esm/loader:473:24)
```
jschaf added a commit to jschaf/bazel-rules-js-vite that referenced this issue Nov 7, 2024
Results in same error. Rollup declares an optional dependency on the arm64 variant.

```
pnpm install && bazelisk run //:vite -- --help

private/var/tmp/_bazel_joe/1713d43747a35eb7e2009bc8fd9406b7/execroot/_main/bazel-out/darwin_arm64-fastbuild/bin/vite_/vite.runfiles/_main/node_modules/.aspect_rules_js/rollup@4.24.3/node_modules/rollup/dist/native.js:63
                throw new Error(
                      ^

Error: Cannot find module @rollup/rollup-darwin-arm64. npm has a bug related to optional dependencies (npm/cli#4828). Please try `npm i` again after removing both package-lock.json and node_modules directory.
    at requireWithFriendlyError (/private/var/tmp/_bazel_joe/1713d43747a35eb7e2009bc8fd9406b7/execroot/_main/bazel-out/darwin_arm64-fastbuild/bin/vite_/vite.runfiles/_main/node_modules/.aspect_rules_js/rollup@4.24.3/node_modules/rollup/dist/native.js:63:9)
```

It looks like rules_js doesn't link optional dependencies and also doesn't use the
package.json `pnpm.packageExtensions` override.

```
ls -lh $BAZEL_OUT/darwin_arm64-fastbuild/bin/vite_/vite.runfiles/_main/node_modules/.aspect_rules_js/rollup@4.24.4/node_modules

drwxr-xr-x@ 3 joe  wheel    96B Nov  7 13:35 @types
lrwxr-xr-x@ 1 joe  wheel   176B Nov  7 13:35 rollup -> $BAZEL_OUT/darwin_arm64-fastbuild/bin/node_modules/.aspect_rules_js/rollup@4.24.4/node_modules/rollup
```

https://bazelbuild.slack.com/archives/CEZUUKQ6P/p1731014606302199?thread_ts=1730916056.708769&cid=CEZUUKQ6P
ha-ccoon added a commit to kuna-mata/kuna-talk-web that referenced this issue Nov 9, 2024
Error: Cannot find module @rollup/rollup-linux-x64-gnu. npm has a bug related to optional dependencies (npm/cli#4828). Please try `npm i` again after removing both package-lock.json and node_modules directory.
ha-ccoon added a commit to kuna-mata/kuna-talk-web that referenced this issue Nov 9, 2024
Cannot find module @rollup/rollup-linux-x64-gnu.(npm/cli#4828).
SLaks added a commit to SLaks/tikkun.io that referenced this issue Nov 13, 2024
…4828

I deleted package-lock.json and node_modules, then ran `npm install --platform=linux --arch=x64 --include=optional`
SLaks added a commit to SLaks/tikkun.io that referenced this issue Nov 13, 2024
…4828

I deleted package-lock.json and node_modules, then ran `npm install --platform=linux --arch=x64 --include=optional`
freekh added a commit to valbuild/val that referenced this issue Nov 13, 2024
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