'Azure Linux App Service with .Net Core Stack. Unable to use NodeJS
I am hosting a .NET Core Application on MS Azure (on a Linux Service Plan) and I want to run some NodeJS code in the .NET Core Application. I did this a while ago on a Windows Service Plan, there it was working. Now I am trying with a Linux Plan and it is not working.
First I was trying to use "Jering.Javascript.NodeJS" and then also "INodeServices" from Microsoft (which is obsolete). But "node" was not found. I also tried to start directly a Process (Code below), but also not working. "node" is not found.
var proc = new System.Diagnostics.Process
{
StartInfo = new System.Diagnostics.ProcessStartInfo
{
FileName = "node",
Arguments = " -v",
RedirectStandardOutput = true
}
};
result += "RUN: " + proc.StartInfo.FileName;
proc.Start();
var reader = proc.StandardOutput;
NodeJS is installed on the server and also the command works there but it seems that the .NET Core app is hosted as docker and does not have any access outside to run NodeJS. Image
Solution 1:[1]
I think I found a better solution ;) In an app service you can mount a storage. In my case I mounted a storage, which contains the nodeJS lib. Azure Portal Screenshot
Now i can execute the following code:
string result = "";
var proc = new System.Diagnostics.Process
{
StartInfo = new System.Diagnostics.ProcessStartInfo
{
FileName = "/externallibs/node/bin/node",
Arguments = " -v",
RedirectStandardOutput = true
}
};
result += "RUN: " + proc.StartInfo.FileName;
proc.Start();
var reader = proc.StandardOutput;
return result + reader.ReadToEnd();
Solution 2:[2]
I found a useful information here.
The problem is that Node is not present in the container so it is necessary to have a script to install and start it before starting the app itself.
Here is my script:
//using System.Diagnostics;
ProcessStartInfo startinfo = new ProcessStartInfo();
startinfo.FileName = "bash";
//startinfo.FileName = "/etc/opt/nodejs/14.15.0/bin/node"; //it's no use even node package located here.
Process process = new Process();
process.StartInfo = startinfo;
process.StartInfo.UseShellExecute = false;
process.StartInfo.RedirectStandardInput = true;
process.StartInfo.RedirectStandardOutput = true;
process.Start();
//install and start nodejs
process.StandardInput.WriteLine("apt-get install curl");
process.StandardInput.WriteLine("curl -sL https://deb.nodesource.com/setup_12.x | bash");
process.StandardInput.WriteLine("apt-get install -y nodejs");
//Run "node -v"
process.StandardInput.WriteLine("node -v");
string line = string.Empty;
while (!process.StandardOutput.EndOfStream)
{
line = process.StandardOutput.ReadLine();
_logger.LogInformation(line);
}
process.WaitForExit();
return string.Empty;
Solution 3:[3]
You can create on azure portal an environment var named POST_BUILD_COMMAND with a command to fix your environment path.
Linux Service Plans runs on Oryx which is documented here
POST_BUILD_COMMAND=PATH=/usr/bin/node:$PATH
Sources
This article follows the attribution requirements of Stack Overflow and is licensed under CC BY-SA 3.0.
Source: Stack Overflow
| Solution | Source |
|---|---|
| Solution 1 | Wai Ha Lee |
| Solution 2 | |
| Solution 3 | Jone Polvora |


