- Get node binary (node.exe) from http://nodejs.org/download/
- Create the folder where node will reside and move node.exe to it
- Download the last zip version of npm from http://nodejs.org/dist/npm
- Unpack the zip inside the node folder
- Download the last tgz version of npm from http://nodejs.org/dist/npm
- Open the tgz file and unpack only the file bin/npm (without extension) directly on the node folder.
- Add the the node folder and the packages/bin folder to PATH
- On a command prompt execute
npm install -g npmto update npm to the latest version
Now you can use npm and node from windows cmd or from bash shell like Git Bash of msysgit.
git log --graph --oneline --decorate ( git fsck --no-reflog | awk '/dangling commit/ {print $3}' )This will show you all the commits at the tips of your commit graph which are no longer referenced from any branch or tag – every lost commit, including every stash commit you’ve ever created, will be somewhere in that graph.
Eric Bidelman has documented some of the common workflows possible with headless Chrome over in https://developers.google.com/web/updates/2017/04/headless-chrome.
If you're looking at this in 2016 and beyond, I strongly recommend investigating real headless Chrome: https://chromium.googlesource.com/chromium/src/+/lkgr/headless/README.md
Windows and Mac users might find using Justin Ribeiro's Docker setup useful here while full support for these platforms is being worked out.
| // Source of https://www.npmjs.com/package/physical-cpu-count | |
| 'use strict' | |
| const os = require('os') | |
| const childProcess = require('child_process') | |
| function exec (command) { | |
| const output = childProcess.execSync(command, {encoding: 'utf8'}) | |
| return output |