Determine project root from a running node.js application

There are many ways to approach this, each with their own pros and cons:

require.main.filename

From http://nodejs.org/api/modules.html:

When a file is run directly from Node, require.main is set to its module. That means that you can determine whether a file has been run directly by testing require.main === module

Because module provides a filename property (normally equivalent to __filename), the entry point of the current application can be obtained by checking require.main.filename.

So if you want the base directory for your app, you can do:

const { dirname } = require('path');
const appDir = dirname(require.main.filename);

Pros & Cons

This will work great most of the time, but if you're running your app with a launcher like pm2 or running mocha tests, this method will fail. This also won't work when using Node.js ES modules, where require.main is not available.

module.paths

Node publishes all the module search paths to module.paths. We can traverse these and pick the first one that resolves.

async function getAppPath() {
  const { dirname } = require('path');
  const { constants, promises: { access } } = require('fs');
  
  for (let path of module.paths) {
    try {
      await access(path, constants.F_OK);
      return dirname(path);
    } catch (e) {
      // Just move on to next path
    }
  }
}

Pros & Cons

This will sometimes work, but is not reliable when used in a package because it may return the directory that the package is installed in rather than the directory that the application is installed in.

Using a global variable

Node has a global namespace object called global — anything that you attach to this object will be available everywhere in your app. So, in your index.js (or app.js or whatever your main app file is named), you can just define a global variable:

// index.js
var path = require('path');
global.appRoot = path.resolve(__dirname);

// lib/moduleA/component1.js
require(appRoot + '/lib/moduleB/component2.js');

Pros & Cons

Works consistently, but you have to rely on a global variable, which means that you can't easily reuse components/etc.

process.cwd()

This returns the current working directory. Not reliable at all, as it's entirely dependent on what directory the process was launched from:

$ cd /home/demo/
$ mkdir subdir
$ echo "console.log(process.cwd());" > subdir/demo.js
$ node subdir/demo.js
/home/demo
$ cd subdir
$ node demo.js
/home/demo/subdir

app-root-path

To address this issue, I've created a node module called app-root-path. Usage is simple:

const appRoot = require('app-root-path');
const myModule = require(`${ appRoot }/lib/my-module.js`);

The app-root-path module uses several techniques to determine the root path of the app, taking into account globally installed modules (for example, if your app is running in /var/www/ but the module is installed in ~/.nvm/v0.x.x/lib/node/). It won't work 100% of the time, but it's going to work in most common scenarios.

Pros & Cons

Works without configuration in most circumstances. Also provides some nice additional convenience methods (see project page). The biggest con is that it won't work if:

  • You're using a launcher, like pm2
  • AND, the module isn't installed inside your app's node_modules directory (for example, if you installed it globally)

You can get around this by either setting a APP_ROOT_PATH environmental variable, or by calling .setPath() on the module, but in that case, you're probably better off using the global method.

NODE_PATH environmental variable

If you're looking for a way to determine the root path of the current app, one of the above solutions is likely to work best for you. If, on the other hand, you're trying to solve the problem of loading app modules reliably, I highly recommend looking into the NODE_PATH environmental variable.

Node's Modules system looks for modules in a variety of locations. One of these locations is wherever process.env.NODE_PATH points. If you set this environmental variable, then you can require modules with the standard module loader without any other changes.

For example, if you set NODE_PATH to /var/www/lib, the the following would work just fine:

require('module2/component.js');
// ^ looks for /var/www/lib/module2/component.js

A great way to do this is using npm:

{
  "scripts": {
    "start": "NODE_PATH=. node app.js"
  }
}

Now you can start your app with npm start and you're golden. I combine this with my enforce-node-path module, which prevents accidentally loading the app without NODE_PATH set. For even more control over enforcing environmental variables, see checkenv.

One gotcha: NODE_PATH must be set outside of the node app. You cannot do something like process.env.NODE_PATH = path.resolve(__dirname) because the module loader caches the list of directories it will search before your app runs.

[added 4/6/16] Another really promising module that attempts to solve this problem is wavy.


__dirname isn't a global; it's local to the current module so each file has its own local, different value.

If you want the root directory of the running process, you probably do want to use process.cwd().

If you want predictability and reliability, then you probably need to make it a requirement of your application that a certain environment variable is set. Your app looks for MY_APP_HOME (Or whatever) and if it's there, and the application exists in that directory then all is well. If it is undefined or the directory doesn't contain your application then it should exit with an error prompting the user to create the variable. It could be set as a part of an install process.

You can read environment variables in node with something like process.env.MY_ENV_VARIABLE.


1- create a file in the project root call it settings.js

2- inside this file add this code

module.exports = {
    POST_MAX_SIZE : 40 , //MB
    UPLOAD_MAX_FILE_SIZE: 40, //MB
    PROJECT_DIR : __dirname
};

3- inside node_modules create a new module name it "settings" and inside the module index.js write this code:

module.exports = require("../../settings");

4- and any time you want your project directory just use

var settings = require("settings");
settings.PROJECT_DIR; 

in this way you will have all project directories relative to this file ;)

Tags:

Node.Js