The issue in this card can occur if the node_modules
directory is checked into your Git repository. We usually recommend to exclude node_modules
from version control.
In any case you should document which version of node to use in your project in a .nvmrc
file.
I saw a strange behaviour after we introduced webpack in one of our projects and finally found out the reason: The person who committed the files used a node version that is older than mine.
Every time I wanted to run my rails dev server I was asked to check my yarn integrity:
error Integrity check failed
error Found 1 errors.
========================================
Your Yarn packages are out of date!
Please run `yarn install --check-files` to update.
========================================
To disable this check, please change `check_yarn_integrity`
to `false` in your webpacker config file (config/webpacker.yml).
yarn check v1.16.0
info Visit https://yarnpkg.com/en/docs/cli/check for documentation about this command.
Exiting
After doing exactly that with yarn install --check-files
I had file changes in node_modules/.yarn-integrity
:
{
- "systemParams": "linux-x64-57",
+ "systemParams": "linux-x64-64",
"modulesFolders": [
"node_modules"
],
- "flags": [],
+ "flags": [
+ "checkFiles"
+ ],
"linkedModules": [],
"topLevelPatterns": [
"@rails/webpacker@4.x",
There were also changes in node_modules/node-sass/vendor/linux-x64-64/binding.node
.
After I switched to the "correct" version of node the problems were gone.