I am having angular 12 in my local and building project which runs fine without any error.
My local setup:
Angular CLI: 12.0.5
Node: 12.16.3
Package Manager: npm 6.14.4
OS: win32 x64
Angular: 12.0.5
But while building my project on the linux server it is giving this error with nothing much to work with.
Server setup:
Angular CLI: 12.0.5
Node: 14.18.1
Package Manager: npm 6.14.15
OS: linux x64
Angular: 12.0.5
Error: src/app/app-routing.module.ts:34:14 - error NG6002: Appears in the NgModule.imports of AppModule, but itself has errors
34 export class AppRoutingModule { }
app.module.ts
import { NgModule } from '@angular/core';
import { BrowserModule } from '@angular/platform-browser';
import { AppRoutingModule } from './app-routing.module';
import { AppComponent } from './app.component';
import { HomeComponent } from './home/home.component';
import { HeaderComponent } from './header/header.component';
import { FooterComponent } from './footer/footer.component';
import { NotifyFormComponent } from './notify-form/notify-form.component';
import { LoginComponent } from './login/login.component';
@NgModule({
declarations: [
AppComponent,
HomeComponent,
HeaderComponent,
FooterComponent,
NotifyFormComponent,
LoginComponent
],
imports: [
AppRoutingModule,
BrowserModule
],
providers: [],
bootstrap: [AppComponent]
})
export class AppModule { }
app-routing.module.ts
import { LoginComponent } from './login/login.component';
import { NgModule } from '@angular/core';
import { RouterModule, Routes } from '@angular/router';
import { NotifyFormComponent } from './notify-form/notify-form.component';
import { HomeComponent } from './home/home.component';
const routes: Routes = [
{path:'',redirectTo:'/',pathMatch: 'full'},
{
path:'',
component: HomeComponent,
children:[
]
},
{
path:'notify',
component: NotifyFormComponent
},
{
path:'login',
component: LoginComponent
}
// {
// path:'**',
// component: HomeComponent
// }
];
@NgModule({
imports: [RouterModule.forRoot(routes)],
exports: [RouterModule]
})
export class AppRoutingModule { }
tsconfig.json
{
"compileOnSave": false,
"compilerOptions": {
"baseUrl": "./",
"outDir": "./dist/out-tsc",
"forceConsistentCasingInFileNames": true,
"strict": true,
"noImplicitReturns": true,
"noFallthroughCasesInSwitch": true,
"sourceMap": true,
"declaration": false,
"downlevelIteration": true,
"experimentalDecorators": true,
"moduleResolution": "node",
"importHelpers": true,
"target": "es2017",
"module": "es2020",
"lib": [
"es2018",
"dom"
]
},
"angularCompilerOptions": {
"enableI18nLegacyMessageIdFormat": false,
"strictInjectionParameters": true,
"strictInputAccessModifiers": true,
"strictTemplates": true
}
}
Please help me if I am doing anything horribly wrong here. It is just a simple project to test with. Thanks a lot in advance.
CodePudding user response:
I went on a bit of a research spree and here's an official issue for it https://github.com/angular/angular/issues/35399. Also here's another question for it error NG6002: Appears in the NgModule.imports of AppModule, but could not be resolved to an NgModule class. But I'll go ahead and summarize things I've found anyways.
For many people it worked simply restarting and rebuilding the project, or doing a full forced npm cache clear and reinstalling node_modules and rebuilding it.
People have suggested disabling "ivy" in tsconfig works, however it's also been mentioned that while it works it's not the recommended way of fixing it.
This can apparently also happen if you've added components to imports instead of declarations.
This can apparently also happen if you've installed some packages as root or if you for some reason don't have permissions on all the packages. Which was fixed with doing a chown on the directory, however the real solution is to install packages correctly in the first place and configuring the npm config so you don't ever install packages with root permissions. So essentially if you installed packages with root and try and run the project as non root, it will give this issue.
Some people got the error when they added a service to imports instead of providers.
People also get this error if they name the package incorrectly i.e. SomeComponent instead of SomeComponentModule.
In your specific case, you've imported the app router before browser module, I have no idea if that could cause an issue but everywhere I've seen the browser module is added before the app, so swap them around if nothing else work and see if that works.
That's about everything I could find.
CodePudding user response:
you have to check whether you import everything needed into the app.module.ts and then check the linux maybe there is any other component you need to add but it should work fine this way