MR
Mayur Rathi
@github
⭐ 34.1k GitHub stars

Sandbox-Npm-Install

Sandbox-Npm-Install是一款code方向的AI技能,核心价值是Install npm packages in a Docker sandbox environment,可用于解决开发者在code领域的实际问题,帮助用户提升效率、自动化重复任务或优化工作流。

Install npm packages in a Docker sandbox environment. Use this skill whenever you need to install, reinstall, or update node_modules inside a container where the workspace is mounted via virtiofs. Nat

Last verified on: 2026-05-30
mkdir -p ./skills/sandbox-npm-install && curl -sfL https://raw.githubusercontent.com/github/awesome-copilot/main/skills/sandbox-npm-install/SKILL.md -o ./skills/sandbox-npm-install/SKILL.md

Run in terminal / PowerShell. Requires curl (Unix) or PowerShell 5+ (Windows).

Skill Content

# Sandbox npm Install


When to Use This Skill


Use this skill whenever:

- You need to install npm packages for the first time in a new sandbox session

- `package.json` or `package-lock.json` has changed and you need to reinstall

- You encounter native binary crashes with errors like `SIGILL`, `SIGSEGV`, `mmap`, or `unaligned sysNoHugePageOS`

- The `node_modules` directory is missing or corrupted


Prerequisites


- A Docker sandbox environment with a virtiofs-mounted workspace

- Node.js and npm available in the container

- A `package.json` file in the target workspace


Background


Docker sandbox workspaces are typically mounted via **virtiofs** (file sync between the host and Linux VM). Native Go and Rust binaries (esbuild, lightningcss, rollup, etc.) crash with mmap alignment failures when executed from virtiofs on aarch64. The fix is to install on the container's local ext4 filesystem and symlink back into the workspace.


Step-by-Step Installation


Run the bundled install script from the workspace root:


bash
bash scripts/install.sh

Common Options


| Option | Description |

|---|---|

| `--workspace <path>` | Path to directory containing `package.json` (auto-detected if omitted) |

| `--playwright` | Also install Playwright Chromium browser for E2E testing |


What the Script Does


1. Copies `package.json`, `package-lock.json`, and `.npmrc` (if present) to a local ext4 directory

2. Runs `npm ci` (or `npm install` if no lockfile) on the local filesystem

3. Symlinks `node_modules` back into the workspace

4. Verifies known native binaries (esbuild, rollup, lightningcss, vite) if present

5. Optionally installs Playwright browsers and system dependencies (uses `sudo` when available)


If verification fails, run the script again — crashes can be intermittent during initial setup.


Post-Install Verification


After the script completes, verify your toolchain works. For example:


bash
npm test             # Run project tests
npm run build        # Build the project
npm run dev          # Start dev server

Important Notes


- The local install directory (e.g., `/home/agent/project-deps`) is **container-local** and is NOT synced back to the host

- The `node_modules` symlink appears as a broken link on the host — this is harmless since `node_modules` is typically gitignored

- Running `npm ci` or `npm install` on the host naturally replaces the symlink with a real directory

- After any `package.json` or `package-lock.json` change, re-run the install script

- Do NOT run `npm ci` or `npm install` directly in the mounted workspace — native binaries will crash


Troubleshooting


| Problem | Solution |

|---|---|

| `SIGILL` or `SIGSEGV` when running dev server | Re-run the install script; ensure you're not running `npm install` directly in the workspace |

| `node_modules` not found after install | Check that the symlink exists: `ls -la node_modules` |

| Permission errors during install | Ensure the local deps directory is writable by the current user |

| Verification fails intermittently | Run the script again — native binary crashes can be non-deterministic on first load |


Vite Compatibility


If your project uses Vite, you may need to allow the symlinked path in `server.fs.allow`. Add the symlink target's parent directory (e.g., `/home/agent/project-deps/`) to your Vite config so that Vite can serve files through the symlink.

🎯 Best For

  • Claude users
  • GitHub Copilot users
  • Software engineers
  • Development teams
  • Tech leads

💡 Use Cases

  • Code quality improvement
  • Best practice enforcement

📖 How to Use This Skill

  1. 1

    Install the Skill

    Copy the install command from the Terminal tab and run it. The SKILL.md file downloads to your local skills directory.

  2. 2

    Load into Your AI Assistant

    Open Claude or GitHub Copilot and reference the skill. Paste the SKILL.md content or use the system prompt tab.

  3. 3

    Apply Sandbox-Npm-Install to Your Work

    Open your project in the AI assistant and ask it to apply the skill. Start with a small module to verify the output quality.

  4. 4

    Review and Refine

    Review AI suggestions before committing. Run tests, check for regressions, and iterate on the skill output.

❓ Frequently Asked Questions

Is Sandbox-Npm-Install compatible with Cursor and VS Code?

Yes — this skill works with any AI coding assistant including Cursor, VS Code with Copilot, and JetBrains IDEs.

Do I need specific dependencies for Sandbox-Npm-Install?

Check the install command and Works With section. Most code skills only require the AI assistant and your codebase.

How do I install Sandbox-Npm-Install?

Copy the install command from the Terminal tab and run it. The skill downloads to ./skills/sandbox-npm-install/SKILL.md, ready to use.

Can I customize this skill for my team?

Absolutely. Edit the SKILL.md file to add team-specific instructions, examples, or workflows.

⚠️ Common Mistakes to Avoid

Skipping validation

Always test AI-generated code changes, even for simple refactors.

Missing dependency updates

Check if the skill requires updated dependencies or new packages.

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