You can get the latest version from http://nodejs.org/download/.
Or, you may want to use a version from your operating system's package manager: https://github.com/joyent/node/wiki/Installing-Node.js-via-package-manager
Clone the repository from GitHub:
$ git clone git@github.com:node-red/node-red.git
From the top-level directory of Node-RED, run:
$ npm install
This will install the core pre-requisite modules.
From the top-level directory, run:
$ node red.js
You can then access Node-RED at http://localhost:1880.
Online documentation is available at http://nodered.org/docs.
When Node-RED starts, it attempts to load the nodes from the nodes/
directory. Each will have its own set of dependencies that will need to be installed before the node is available in the palette.
To help identify the dependencies, Node-RED logs any modules it fails to find for a particular node. You don't have to install these unless you want or need that node to appear.
Alternatively, a node's .js
file can be examined to identify the modules it explicitly requires. For example, the Twitter node is defined in nodes/social/27-twitter.js
and contains:
var RED = require("../../red/red"); var ntwitter = require('ntwitter'); var OAuth= require('oauth').OAuth;
Of these, ntwitter
and oauth
are neither built-in modules nor ones provided by Node-RED itself. They can subsequently be installed by running:
$ npm install ntwitter oauth