Awesome-copilot sandbox-npm-install

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. Native binaries (esbuild, lightningcss, rollup) crash on virtiofs, so packages must be installed on the local ext4 filesystem and symlinked back.

install
source · Clone the upstream repo
git clone https://github.com/github/awesome-copilot
Claude Code · Install into ~/.claude/skills/
T=$(mktemp -d) && git clone --depth=1 https://github.com/github/awesome-copilot "$T" && mkdir -p ~/.claude/skills && cp -r "$T/skills/sandbox-npm-install" ~/.claude/skills/github-awesome-copilot-sandbox-npm-install && rm -rf "$T"
manifest: skills/sandbox-npm-install/SKILL.md
source 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 scripts/install.sh

Common Options

OptionDescription
--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:

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

ProblemSolution
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 installEnsure the local deps directory is writable by the current user
Verification fails intermittentlyRun 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.