366

Is there a way to make npm install work behind a proxy? I tried changing the proxy variable in the .npmrc file but it didn't work. I'm trying to avoid doing a manual download.

33 Answers 33

436

Setup npm proxy

For HTTP:

npm config set proxy http://proxy_host:port 

For HTTPS:

use the https proxy address if there is one

npm config set https-proxy https://proxy.company.com:8080 

else reuse the http proxy address

npm config set https-proxy http://proxy.company.com:8080 

Note: The https-proxy doesn't have https as the protocol, but http.

Sign up to request clarification or add additional context in comments.

6 Comments

Note that the https-proxy doesn't have 'https' as the protocol, but 'http'. Changing this solved the problem for me.
@peterhil Thanks for that tip. It's crazy but I spent hours to resolve this with "https". Any idea why it works like this?
@ManojNV, the connection to the proxy server isn't encrypted. It's not talking HTTPS to the proxy server, just HTTP. The payload is SSL between the client and the destination server. If it were HTTPS to the proxy server, then things would be getting encrypted/decrypted twice.
How do i find my proxy address?\
Thank you so much for all nice ideas from you guys here! I used command 1, 3 and then run this command npm config set registry "http://registry.npmjs.org/". It worked :)
|
425

I solved this problem this way:

  1. I run this command:

    npm config set strict-ssl false 
  2. Then set npm to run with http, instead of https:

    npm config set registry "http://registry.npmjs.org/" 
  3. Then I install packages using this syntax:

    npm --proxy http://username:[email protected]:80 install packagename 

Skip the username:password part if proxy doesn't require you to authenticate

EDIT: A friend of mine just pointed out that you may get NPM to work behind a proxy by setting BOTH HTTP_PROXY and HTTPS_PROXY environment variables, then issuing normally the command npm install express (for example)

EDIT2: As @BStruthers commented, keep in mind that passwords containing "@" wont be parsed correctly, if contains @ put the entire password in quotes

17 Comments

Heads up, if your password contains "@" npm won't parse your proxy setting correctly. A potential workaround is to put a bogus username:password in the npm config, and use a local proxy (like fiddler) to modify the request's Proxy-Authorization header to have the correct username:password. Keep in mind that the username:password stored in Proxy-Authorization is base64 encoded.
If your password contains an @ symbol, you can pass it by putting your username and password inside quotes.
You can have special characters in your password, but they must be url-encoded. So if your password was my@password, your .npmrc file should have my%40passwordfor the password part. Putting it in quotes works in some cases, but encoding it is foolproof.
Another gotcha! If you have previous set system variables HTTP-PROXY make sure you clear them!
You legend! I had given up on trying to get npm to work at work, but this finally resolved it.
|
133

When in doubt, try all these commands, as I do:

npm config set registry http://registry.npmjs.org/ npm config set proxy http://myusername:[email protected]:8080 npm config set https-proxy http://myusername:[email protected]:8080 npm config set strict-ssl false set HTTPS_PROXY=http://myusername:[email protected]:8080 set HTTP_PROXY=http://myusername:[email protected]:8080 export HTTPS_PROXY=http://myusername:[email protected]:8080 export HTTP_PROXY=http://myusername:[email protected]:8080 export http_proxy=http://myusername:[email protected]:8080 npm --proxy http://myusername:[email protected]:8080 \ --without-ssl --insecure -g install 

=======

UPDATE

Put your settings into ~/.bashrc or ~/.bash_profile so you don't have to worry about your settings everytime you open a new terminal window!

If your company is like mine, I have to change my password pretty often. So I added the following into my ~/.bashrc or ~/.bash_profile so that whenever I open a terminal, I know my npm is up to date!

  1. Simply paste the following code at the bottom of your ~/.bashrc file:

    ###################### # User Variables (Edit These!) ###################### username="myusername" password="mypassword" proxy="mycompany:8080" ###################### # Environement Variables # (npm does use these variables, and they are vital to lots of applications) ###################### export HTTPS_PROXY="http://$username:$password@$proxy" export HTTP_PROXY="http://$username:$password@$proxy" export http_proxy="http://$username:$password@$proxy" export https_proxy="http://$username:$password@$proxy" export all_proxy="http://$username:$password@$proxy" export ftp_proxy="http://$username:$password@$proxy" export dns_proxy="http://$username:$password@$proxy" export rsync_proxy="http://$username:$password@$proxy" export no_proxy="127.0.0.10/8, localhost, 10.0.0.0/8, 172.16.0.0/12, 192.168.0.0/16" ###################### # npm Settings ###################### npm config set registry http://registry.npmjs.org/ npm config set proxy "http://$username:$password@$proxy" npm config set https-proxy "http://$username:$password@$proxy" npm config set strict-ssl false echo "registry=http://registry.npmjs.org/" > ~/.npmrc echo "proxy=http://$username:$password@$proxy" >> ~/.npmrc echo "strict-ssl=false" >> ~/.npmrc echo "http-proxy=http://$username:$password@$proxy" >> ~/.npmrc echo "http_proxy=http://$username:$password@$proxy" >> ~/.npmrc echo "https_proxy=http://$username:$password@$proxy" >> ~/.npmrc echo "https-proxy=http://$username:$password@$proxy" >> ~/.npmrc ###################### # WGET SETTINGS # (Bonus Settings! Not required for npm to work, but needed for lots of other programs) ###################### echo "https_proxy = http://$username:$password@$proxy/" > ~/.wgetrc echo "http_proxy = http://$username:$password@$proxy/" >> ~/.wgetrc echo "ftp_proxy = http://$username:$password@$proxy/" >> ~/.wgetrc echo "use_proxy = on" >> ~/.wgetrc ###################### # CURL SETTINGS # (Bonus Settings! Not required for npm to work, but needed for lots of other programs) ###################### echo "proxy=http://$username:$password@$proxy" > ~/.curlrc 
  2. Then edit the "username", "password", and "proxy" fields in the code you pasted.

  3. Open a new terminal

  4. Check your settings by running npm config list and cat ~/.npmrc

  5. Try to install your module using

    • npm install __, or
    • npm --without-ssl --insecure install __, or
    • override your proxy settings by using npm --without-ssl --insecure --proxy http://username:password@proxy:8080 install __.
    • If you want the module to be available globally, add option -g

10 Comments

The last command worked for me. All the ones before that failed
i read about 50 answer concerning this fu***ing proxy configuration...the only that worked was your answer...thank you!!!
Thanks guys!! Glad it's working! This has been a huge headache at work so I'm glad i can help others out :P
+1. This works. I used commands- npm config set registry http://registry.npmjs.org/, npm config set proxy http://myusername:[email protected]:8080, npm config set https-proxy http://myusername:[email protected]:8080, npm config set strict-ssl false for npm config and then installed npm package using npm --proxy http://myusername:[email protected]:8080 --without-ssl --insecure -g install {packagename}. Thanks
After three days of trying this solution worked for me.
|
39

Have you tried command-line options instead of the .npmrc file?

I think something like npm --proxy http://proxy-server:8080/ install {package-name} worked for me.

I've also seen the following: npm config set proxy http://proxy-server:8080/

Comments

23

Though there are already many good advice, for my environment(Windows 7, using PowerShell) and the last version available of node.js ( v8.1.2 ) all the above did not worked, except when I followed brunowego settings.

So check your settings with :

npm config list 

Settings behind a proxy:

npm config set registry http://registry.npmjs.org/ npm config set http-proxy http://username:password@ip:port npm config set https-proxy http://username:password@ip:port npm config set proxy http://username:password@ip:port npm set strict-ssl false 

Hope this will save time to someone

6 Comments

how do i find my proxy address?
@Robin One way, if using windows, IE stores them. You can go under IE and view LAN settings under connection, and it will show it there.
@Robin of course depends on the browser, but usually is under settings
@Robin in the browers under setting you should see / check proxy setting. Usually there is a file with .pac where last like should be : PROXY YourProxyAdress:PORT
I have set proxy values for npm: npm config set proxy 127.0.0.1:8080, npm config set http-proxy 127.0.0.1:8080 , npm config set https-proxy 127.0.0.1:8080. With these proxy settings I am not able to visit https pages
|
20

This works for me in Windows:

npm config set proxy http://domain%5Cuser:pass@host:port 

If you are not in any domain, use:

npm config set proxy http://user:pass@host:port 

If your password contains special characters such as ",@,: and so on, replace them by their URL encoded values. For example "->%22, @->%40, :->%3A. %5C is used for the character \.

3 Comments

Thanks for the advice, this worked for me. You can open up your javascript console with ctrl+shift+j and type encodeURIComponent("YourP@ssword") to get the encoded version of your password.
I have set proxy values for npm: npm config set proxy 127.0.0.1:8080, npm config set http-proxy 127.0.0.1:8080 , npm config set https-proxy 127.0.0.1:8080. With these proxy settings I am not able to visit https pages
Is your proxy on localhost (127.0.0.1)?
16

To setup the http proxy have the -g flag set:

sudo npm config set proxy http://proxy_host:port -g

For https proxy, again make sure the -g flag is set:

sudo npm config set https-proxy http://proxy_host:port -g

3 Comments

what is the meaning of -g?
sets it up globally, not for the local installation
I have set proxy values for npm: npm config set proxy 127.0.0.1:8080, npm config set http-proxy 127.0.0.1:8080 , npm config set https-proxy 127.0.0.1:8080. With these proxy settings I am not able to visit https pages . I tried with -g also
13

Finally i have managed to solve this problem being behinde proxy with AD authentication. I had to execute:

npm config set proxy http://domain%5Cuser:password@proxy:port/ npm config set https-proxy http://domain%5Cuser:password@proxy:port/ 

It is very important to URL encode any special chars like backshlash or # In my case i had to encode

  1. backshlash with %5C so domain\user will be domain%5Cuser
  2. # sign with %23%0A so password like Password#2 will be Password%23%0A2

I have also added following settings:

npm config set strict-ssl false npm config set registry http://registry.npmjs.org/ 

1 Comment

I have set proxy values for npm: npm config set proxy 127.0.0.1:8080, npm config set http-proxy 127.0.0.1:8080 , npm config set https-proxy 127.0.0.1:8080. With these proxy settings I am not able to visit https pages
9

This worked for me-

npm config set proxy http://proxy.company.com:8080 npm config set https-proxy http://proxy.company.com:8080 npm set strict-ssl=false 

1 Comment

I have set proxy values for npm: npm config set proxy 127.0.0.1:8080, npm config set http-proxy 127.0.0.1:8080 , npm config set https-proxy 127.0.0.1:8080. With these proxy settings I am not able to visit https pages
8
$ npm config set proxy http://login:pass@host:port $ npm config set https-proxy http://login:pass@host:port 

Comments

7

Though i set proxy with config, problem was not solved but after This one worked for me:

npm --https-proxy http://XX.AA.AA.BB:8080 install cordova-plugins

npm --proxy http://XX.AA.AA.BB:8080 install

1 Comment

This one work for me , no other change . Open command window and use above and it will work
7

vim ~/.npmrc in your Linux machine and add following. Don't forget to add registry part as this cause failure in many cases.

proxy=http://<proxy-url>:<port> https-proxy=https://<proxy-url>:<port> registry=http://registry.npmjs.org/ 

1 Comment

Many proxies support tunneling https requests, but they will not handle a https connection to themselves. As such, when running into trouble, try modifying https-proxy=https://.. into https-proxy=http://..
7
npm config set proxy <http://...>:<port_number> npm config set registry http://registry.npmjs.org/ 

This solved my problem.

1 Comment

The crucial thing was to change the link to the registry: instead of https I had before to http link.
6

I tried all of these options, but my proxy wasn't having any of it for some reason. Then, born out of desparation/despair, I randomly tried curl in my Git Bash shell, and it worked.

Unsetting all of the proxy options using

npm config rm proxy npm config rm https-proxy 

And then running npm install in my Git Bash shell worked perfectly. I don't know how it's set up correctly for the proxy and the Windows cmd prompt isn't, but it worked.

Comments

6

On Windows system

Try removing the proxy and registry settings (if already set) and set environment variables on command line via

SET HTTP_PROXY=http://username:password@domain:port SET HTTPS_PROXY=http://username:password@domain:port 

then try to run npm install. By this, you'll not set the proxy in .npmrc but for that session it will work.

1 Comment

This worked for me. The equals symbol is what seemed to get it all to work. Before that I was just using SET HTTP_PROXY http://username:password@domain:port but switching to SET HTTP_PROXY=http://username:password@domain:port seemed to get everything working
6

In my case, I forgot to set the "http://" in my config files (can be found in C: \Users \ [USERNAME] \ .npmrc) proxy adresses. So instead of having

proxy=http://[IPADDRESS]:[PORTNUMBER] https-proxy=http://[IPADDRESS]:[PORTNUMBER] 

I had

proxy=[IPADDRESS]:[PORTNUMBER] https-proxy=[IPADDRESS]:[PORTNUMBER] 

Which of course did not work, but the error messages didnt help much either...

Comments

6

After tying different answers finally, @Kayvar answers's first four lines help me to solve the issue:

npm config set registry http://registry.npmjs.org/ npm config set proxy http://myusername:[email protected]:8080 npm config set https-proxy http://myusername:[email protected]:8080 npm config set strict-ssl false 

Comments

5

This worked for me. Set the http and https proxy.

Comments

5

For me even though python etc will all work though our corporate proxy npm would not.

I tried

npm config set proxy http://proxyccc.xxx.ca:8080 npm config set https-proxy https://proxyccc.xxx.ca:8080 npm config set registry http://registry.npmjs.org/

as instructed but kept getting the same error.

It was only when I removed https-proxy https://proxyccc.xxx.ca:8080 from the .npmrc file that npm install electron --save-dev worked

1 Comment

Your https-proxy is probably not https:. At least, having the same port for each is probably not correct, but I think they both probably have the same value.
5

Here are the steps that I've followed (Windows):

  1. Edit the following file C:\Users\<WIN_USERNAME>\.npmrc
  2. Export the certificate to your file system from the following address:https://registry.npmjs.org

  3. Navigate to the exported certificate location and issue the following command:

    npm config set cafile npm_certificate.cer

  4. Add the following changes to the file: registry=https://registry.npmjs.org/ strict-ssl=false https-proxy=http://[proxy_user]:[proxy_password]@[proxy_ip]:[proxy_port]/ cafile=npm_certificate.cer

Now you should be ready to go!

1 Comment

f-in brilliant brother! it worked, and I'm behind the worst proxy in the world.
5

There is good information on curl's page on SSL and certificate issues. I base most of my answer on the information there.

Using strict-ssl false is bad practice and can create issues. What we can do instead is add the certificate that is being injected, by the "man in the middle" certificate.

How to solve this on Windows:

  1. Download the CA Certificates from curl based on Mozilla's CA bundle. You can also use curl's "firefox-db2pem.sh" shellscript to convert your local Firefox database.
  2. Go to a webpage using https, for example Stackoverflow in Chrome or Internet Explorer
  3. Click the lock icon, click View certificates or "Valid" in Chrome
  4. Navigate to the Certification path. The top certificate, or the root certificate is the one we want to extract. Click that certificate and then "view certificate"
  5. Click the second tab, "Details". Click "Copy to file". Pick the DER format and make note of where you save the file. Pick a suitable filename, like rootcert.cer
  6. If you have Git installed you will have openssl.exe. Otherwise, install git for windows at this stage. Most likely the openssl executable will be at C:\Program Files\git\usr\bin\openssl.exe. We will use openssl to convert the file to the PEM format we need for NPM to understand it.
  7. Convert the file you saved in step 5 by using this command:
    openssl x509 -inform DES -in **rootcert**.cer -out outcert.pem -text
    where rootcert is the filename of the certificate you saved in step 5.
  8. Open the outcert.pem in a text-editor smart enough to understand line-endings, so not notepad.
  9. Find -----BEGIN CERTIFICATE----- lots of characters -----END CERTIFICATE----- and copy all text between them and also including the BEGIN / END lines
  10. Now we will paste that content to the end of the CA Cert bundle made in step 1. So open the cacert.pem in your advanced texteditor. Go to the end of the file and paste the content from previous step to the end of file. (Preserve the empty line below what you just pasted)
  11. Copy the saved cabundle.pem to a suitable place. Eg your %userprofile% or ~. Make note of the location of the file.
  12. Now we will tell npm/yarn to use the new bundle. In a commandline, write
    npm config set cafile **C:\Users\username\cacert.pem**
    where C:\Users\username\cacert.pem is the path from step 10.
  13. Optionally: turn on strict-ssl again, npm config set strict-ssl true

Phew! We made it! Now npm can understand how to connect. Bonus is that you can tell curl to use the same cabundle.pem and it will also understand HTTPs.

1 Comment

via commands: echo | openssl s_client -showcerts -servername www.domain.com -connect www.domain.com:443 2>/dev/null | sed -ne '/-BEGIN CERTIFICATE-/,/-END CERTIFICATE-/p' > cacert.crt to get the crt file first; And then generate the pem file via: openssl x509 -inform PEM -in cacert.crt -out cert.pem -text; And add pem file into npm cafile via: npm config set cafile /path/to/cert.perm
4

Use below command at cmd or GIT Bash or other prompt

$ npm config set proxy "http://192.168.1.101:4128"

$ npm config set https-proxy "http://192.168.1.101:4128"

where 192.168.1.101 is proxy ip and 4128 is port. change according to your proxy settings. its works for me.

1 Comment

I got to use a domain for authentication, and I used escaped back-slash: with this string %5C . It worked finally!
4

Try to find .npmrc in C:\Users\.npmrc

then open (notepad), write, and save inside :

proxy=http://<username>:<pass>@<proxyhost>:<port> 

PS : remove "<" and ">" please !!

Comments

4

A lot of applications (e.g. npm) can use proxy setting from user environment variables.

You can just add to your environment following variables HTTP_PROXY and HTTPS_PROXY that will have the same value for each one

http://user:password@proxyAddress:proxyPort

For example if you have Windows you can add proxy as follow:

How it looks on Windows

Comments

4

There has been many answers above for this question, but none of those worked for me. All of them mentioned to add http:// prefix. So I added it too. All failed.

It finally works after I accidentally removed http:// prefix. Final config is like this:

npm config set registry http://registry.npmjs.org/ npm config set http-proxy ip:port npm config set https-proxy ip:port npm config set proxy ip:port npm set strict-ssl false 

I don't know the logic behind this, but it worked. If none of answers above works for you, maybe you can have a try on this way. Hope this one is useful.

Comments

4

Just open the new terminal and type npm config edit and npm config -g edit. Reset to defaults. After that close terminal, open the new one and type npm --without-ssl --insecure --proxy http://username:password@proxy:8080 install <package> if you need globally just add -g.

It worked for me, hope it`ll work for you :)

Comments

2

when I give without http/http prefix in the proxy settings npm failed even when the proxy host and port were right values. It worked only after adding the protocol prefix.

Comments

2

My issue came down to a silly mistake on my part. As I had quickly one day dropped my proxies into a windows *.bat file (http_proxy, https_proxy, and ftp_proxy), I forgot to escape the special characters for the url-encoded domain\user (%5C) and password having the question mark '?' (%3F). That is to say, once you have the encoded command, don't forget to escape the '%' in the bat file command.

I changed

set http_proxy=http://domain%5Cuser:password%3F@myproxy:8080 

to

set http_proxy=http://domain%%5Cuser:password%%3F@myproxy:8080 

Maybe it's an edge case but hopefully it helps someone.

Comments

2

Following Marco's answer, it worked for me. Sharing the .npmrc configuration that worked for me:

  1. Download the certificate from https://registry.npmjs.org/ and save it in C:\Users\USER_NAME\Desktop\

  2. Edit .npmrc config file located at: C:\Users\USER_NAME\.npmrc

  3. Put the following in the .npmrc file

registry=https://registry.npmjs.org/ cafile=C:\Users\USER_NAME\Desktop\registry.npmjs.org.crt strict-ssl=false https-proxy=http://proxy.host.internal.net:8090/ 

(update the path at line 2 and url:port at line 4)

  1. Download the package to your local from it's github - you can use npm pack to repack it into tar.gz npm package
  2. Use npm install <package.tar.gz> to install the package

Comments

1

Go TO Environment Variables and Either Remove or set it to empty

HTTP_PROXY and HTTPS_PROXY

it will resolve proxy issue for corporate env too

Comments

Start asking to get answers

Find the answer to your question by asking.

Ask question

Explore related questions

See similar questions with these tags.