how to release localhost from Error: listen EADDRINUSE

i am testing a server written in nodejs on windows 7 and when i try to run the tester in the command line i get the following error

Error: listen EADDRINUSE
at errnoException (net.js:614:11)
at Array.0 (net.js:704:26)
at EventEmitter._tickCallback (node.js:192:40)

how can I fix it without rebooting?

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It means the address you are trying to bind the server to is in use. Try another port or close the program using that port.

The following command will give you a list of node processes running.

ps | grep node

To free up that port, stop the process using the following.

kill <processId>

Run:

ps -ax | grep node

You'll get something like:

60778 ??         0:00.62 /usr/local/bin/node abc.js

Then do:

kill -9 60778

On Linux (Ubuntu derivatives at least)

killall node

is easier than this form.

ps | grep <something>
kill <somepid>

Neither will work if you have a orphaned child holding the port. Instead, do this:

netstat -punta | grep <port>

If the port is being held you'll see something like this:

tcp           0      0.0.0.0:<port>          0.0.0.*       LISTEN     <pid>/<parent>

Now kill by pid:

kill -9 <pid>

When you get an error Error: listen EADDRINUSE,

Try running the following shell commands:

netstat -a -o | grep 8080
taskkill /F /PID 6204

I greped for 8080, because I know my server is running on port 8080. (static tells me when I start it: 'serving "." at http://127.0.0.1:8080'.) You might have to search for a different port.

I have node red installed on my Mac and my Raspberry Pi. Had the exact same problem and doing 'killall' didn't help. Once I shut down the Raspberry Pi and restarted my computer it worked fine.

you can change your port in app.js or in ur project configuration file.

default('port', 80)

and to see if port 80 is already in use you can do

netstat -antp |grep 80

netstat -antp |grep node

you might wanna see if node process is already running or not.

ps -ef |grep node

and if you find its already running, you can kill it using

killall node

In window, please execute this command:

taskkill /F /PID 1952

One possible solution that worked for me was simply to close the window in browser where I had the corresponding "http://localhost:3000/" script running.

I created 2 servers, listening on same port 8081, running from same code, while learning

1st server creation shud have worked 2nd server creation failed with EADDRINUSE

node.js callback delays might be reason behind neither worked, or 2nd server creation had exception, and program exited, so 1st server is also closed

2 server issue hint, I got from: How to fix Error: listen EADDRINUSE while using nodejs?

It may be possible that you have tried to run the npm start command in two different tabs .you cant run npm start when it is already running in some tab.check it once .

When you get an error

Error: listen EADDRINUSE

Open command prompt and type the following instructions:

netstat -a -o | grep 8080
taskkill /F /PID** <*ur Process ID no*>

after that restart phone gap interface.

If you want to know which process ID phonegap is using, open TASK MANAGER and look at the Column heading PID and find the PID no.

suppose your server is running on port 3000

lsof -i tcp:3000
COMMAND   PID USER   FD   TYPE DEVICE SIZE/OFF NODE NAME
node    11716 arun   11u  IPv6 159175      0t0  TCP *:3000 (LISTEN)

after that use kill -9 <pid>

in the above case sudo kill -9 11716

Error: listen EADDRINUSE to solve it in Ubuntu run in terminal netstat -nptl and after this kill -9 {process-number} this command is to kill node process and now you can try to run again node server.js command

Ex

listen EADDRINUSE :::8080

netstat -nptl

tcp6 0 0 :::9000 :::* LISTEN 9660/java
tcp6 0 0 :::5800 :::* LISTEN -
tcp6 0 0 :::5900 :::* LISTEN -
tcp6 0 0 :::8080 :::* LISTEN 10401/node
tcp6 0 0 :::20080 :::* LISTEN 9660/java
tcp6 0 0 :::80 :::* LISTEN -
tcp6 0 0 :::22 :::* LISTEN -
tcp6 0 0 :::10137 :::* LISTEN 9660/java

kill -9 10401

To anyone who has tried all of the above, but still can't find the rouge process, try them all again but make sure you include "sudo" in front of the commands.

If you like UI more, find the process Node.js in windows task manager and kill it.

ps -ef |grep node find app.js , kill pid of app.js

You are getting the error EADDRINUSE because the port, which your application wants to use, is occupied by another process. To release this port, you need to terminate the occupying process.

Since you are on Windows, you can terminate the process using the command prompt (cmd). With the cmd you can discover the process ID (PID) of the blocking application. You will need the PID in order to terminate / kill the process.

Here is a step-by-step guide...

  1. Find all processes which are running on a specified port (in this example, Port is "3000"):

    netstat -ano | find ":3000 "

  2. The netstat command will list up all processes running on the specified port. In the last column of the netstat results you can see the PIDs (in this example, PID is "8308"). You can find out more about a specific PID by running the following command:

    tasklist /fi "pid eq 8308"

  3. If you want to terminate a process, you can do that with the following command by using its PID (in this example, PID is "8308"):

    taskkill /pid 8308 /f

Screenshot

enter image description here

use below command to kill a process running at a certain port - 3000 in this example below

kill -9 $(lsof -t -i:3000)

simply kill the node as pkill -9 node in terminal of ubantu than start node

The aforementioned killall -9 node, suggested by Patrick works as expected and solves the problem but you may want to read the edit part of this very answer about why kill -9 may not be the best way to do it.

On top of that you might want to target a single process rather than blindly killing all active processes.

In that case, first get the process ID (PID) of the process running on that port (say 8888):

lsof -i tcp:8888

This will return something like:

COMMAND   PID    USER   FD   TYPE             DEVICE SIZE/OFF NODE NAME
node     57385   You   11u  IPv6 0xac745b2749fd2be3      0t0  TCP *:ddi-tcp-1

(LISTEN) Then just do (ps - actually do not. Please keep reading below):

kill -9 57385

This works on Mac:

Step 1.

sudo lsof -i tcp:3000 (or whatever port you want to kill)

Above command will give you the Process Id(s) currently holding the port.

Step 2.

Kill -9 <pid>

To kill node server first run this command in your terminal :

  1. top
  2. open another window then copy the server id from the previous window: PID number -9 kill so now you killed your node server try again to run your app.

Check the Process ID

sudo lsof -i:8081

Than kill the particular Process

sudo kill -9 2925

enter image description here

I used the command netstat -ano | grep "portnumber" in order to list out the port number/PID for that process. Then, you can use taskkill -f //pid 111111 to kill the process, last value being the pid you find from the first command.

One problem I run into at times is node respawning even after killing the process, so I have to use the good old task manager to manually kill the node process.

You will need to kill the port by trying to use the following command on the terminal

$ sudo killall -9 nodejs

It's might be too late but it's working like a charm.

You need pm2 to be installed

npm install -g pm2

To stoping the current running server (server.js):

pm2 stop -f server.js

I have solved this issue by adding below in my package.json for killing active PORT - 4000 (in my case) Running on WSL2/Linux/Mac

"scripts": {
"dev": "nodemon app.js",
"predev":"fuser -k 4000/tcp && echo 'Terminated' || echo 'Nothing was running on the PORT'",
}

Source

I Just delete that (cmd) Terminal and open another terminal and run again node myfile.js

it works awesomely for me.

It's year 2022 now and I am on Monterey (Mac user).

enter image description here

lsof -i tcp:3000
Kill -9 <PID shown in your list>