Configuration
There are three top-level configuration files every Nx workspace has: workspace.json, nx.json, and tsconfig.base.json. Many Nx plugins will modify these files when generating new code, but you can also modify them manually.
workspace.json
The workspace.json configuration file contains information about the targets and generators. Let's look at the following example:
1{
2 "version": 2,
3 "projects": {
4 "myapp": {
5 "root": "apps/myapp/",
6 "sourceRoot": "apps/myapp/src",
7 "projectType": "application",
8 "targets": {
9 "build": {
10 "executor": "@nrwl/node:build",
11 "outputs": ["dist/apps/myapp"],
12 "options": {
13 "outputPath": "dist/packages/myapp",
14 "main": "packages/myapp/src/main.ts",
15 "tsConfig": "packages/myapp/tsconfig.app.json",
16 "assets": ["packages/myapp/src/assets"]
17 },
18 "configurations": {
19 "production": {
20 "optimization": true
21 }
22 }
23 },
24 "serve": {
25 "executor": "@nrwl/node:execute",
26 "options": {
27 "buildTarget": "myapp:build"
28 }
29 },
30 "test": {
31 "executor": "@nrwl/jest:jest",
32 "options": {
33 "jestConfig": "apps/myapp/jest.config.js"
34 }
35 }
36 }
37 },
38 "mylib": {
39 "root": "libs/mylib/",
40 "sourceRoot": "libs/mylib/src",
41 "projectType": "library",
42 "targets": {
43 "test": {
44 "executor": "@nrwl/jest:jest",
45 "options": {
46 "jestConfig": "libs/mylib/jest.config.js",
47 "tsConfig": "libs/mylib/tsconfig.spec.json"
48 }
49 },
50 "build": {
51 "executor": "@nrwl/node:package",
52 "options": {
53 "outputPath": "dist/libs/mylib",
54 "tsConfig": "libs/mylib/tsconfig.lib.json",
55 "packageJson": "libs/mylib/package.json",
56 "main": "libs/mylib/src/index.ts",
57 "assets": ["libs/mylib/*.md"]
58 }
59 }
60 }
61 }
62 },
63 "cli": {
64 "defaultCollection": "@nrwl/node"
65 },
66 "generators": {
67 "@nrwl/node:library": {
68 "js": true
69 }
70 }
71}
Projects
The projects property configures all apps and libs.
For instance, the following configures mylib.
1{
2 "mylib": {
3 "root": "libs/mylib/",
4 "sourceRoot": "libs/mylib/src",
5 "projectType": "library",
6 "targets": {}
7 }
8}
roottells Nx the location of the library including its sources and configuration files.sourceRoottells Nx the location of the library's source files.projectTypeis either 'application' or 'library'.targetsconfigures all the targets which define what tasks you can run against the library.
Targets
Let's look at the simple target:
1{
2 "test": {
3 "executor": "@nrwl/jest:jest",
4 "options": {
5 "jestConfig": "libs/mylib/jest.config.js"
6 }
7 }
8}
Target Name
The name of the target test means that you can invoke it as follows: nx test mylib or nx run mylib:test. The name isn't significant in any other way. If you rename it to, for example, mytest, you will be able to run as follows: nx run mylib:mytest.
Executor
The executor property tells Nx what function to invoke when you run the target. "@nrwl/jest:jest" tells Nx to find the @nrwl/jest package, find the executor named jest and invoke it with the options.
Options
The options provides a map of values that will be passed to the executor. The provided command line args will be merged into this map. I.e., nx test mylib --jestConfig=libs/mylib/another-jest.config.js will pass the following to the executor:
1{
2 "jestConfig": "libs/mylib/another-jest.config.js"
3}
Outputs
The outputs property lists the folders the executor will create files in. The property is optional. If not provided, Nx will assume it is dist/libs/mylib.
1{
2 "build": {
3 "executor": "@nrwl/node:package",
4 "options": {
5 "outputPath": "dist/libs/mylib",
6 "tsConfig": "libs/mylib/tsconfig.lib.json",
7 "packageJson": "libs/mylib/package.json",
8 "main": "libs/mylib/src/index.ts",
9 "assets": ["libs/mylib/*.md"]
10 }
11 }
12}
Configurations
The configurations property provides extra sets of values that will be merged into the options map.
1{
2 "build": {
3 "executor": "@nrwl/node:package",
4 "options": {
5 "outputPath": "dist/libs/mylib",
6 "tsConfig": "libs/mylib/tsconfig.lib.json",
7 "packageJson": "libs/mylib/package.json",
8 "main": "libs/mylib/src/index.ts",
9 "assets": ["libs/mylib/*.md"]
10 }
11 },
12 "configurations": {
13 "production": {
14 "packageJson": "libs/mylib/package.prod.json"
15 }
16 }
17}
You can select a configuration like this: nx build mylib --configuration=production or nx run mylib:build:configuration=production.
The following show how the executor options get constructed:
require(`@nrwl/jest`).executors['jest']({...options, ...selectedConfiguration, ...commandLineArgs}}) // PseudocodeThe selected configuration adds/overrides the default options, and the provided command line args add/override the configuration options.
Generators
You can configure default generator options in workspace.json as well. For instance, the following will tell Nx to always pass --js when creating new libraries.
1{
2 "generators": {
3 "@nrwl/node:library": {
4 "buildable": true
5 }
6 }
7}
You can also do it on the project level:
1{
2 "mylib": {
3 "root": "libs/mylib/",
4 "sourceRoot": "libs/mylib/src",
5 "projectType": "library",
6 "generators": {
7 "@nrwl/node:lib": {
8 "moreOptions": true
9 }
10 },
11 "targets": {}
12 }
13}
CLI Options
The following command will generate a new library: nx g @nrwl/node:lib mylib. If you set the defaultCollection property, you can generate the lib without mentioning the collection name: nx g lib mylib.
1{
2 "cli": {
3 "defaultCollection": "@nrwl/node"
4 }
5}
Version
When the version of workspace.json is set to 2, targets, generators and executor properties are used instead of the version 1 properties architect, schematics and builder.
nx.json
The nx.json file contains extra configuration options mostly related to the project graph.
1{
2 "npmScope": "happyorg",
3 "affected": {
4 "defaultBase": "master"
5 },
6 "tasksRunnerOptions": {
7 "default": {
8 "runner": "@nrwl/workspace/tasks-runners/default",
9 "options": {
10 "cacheableOperations": ["build", "lint", "test", "e2e"]
11 }
12 }
13 },
14 "implicitDependencies": {
15 "workspace.json": "*",
16 "package.json": {
17 "dependencies": "*",
18 "devDependencies": "*"
19 },
20 "tsconfig.base.json": "*",
21 "nx.json": "*"
22 },
23 "projects": {
24 "myapp": {
25 "tags": []
26 },
27 "mylib": {
28 "tags": []
29 },
30 "myapp-e2e": {
31 "tags": [],
32 "implicitDependencies": ["myapp"]
33 }
34 }
35}
NPM Scope
Tells Nx what prefix to use when generating library imports.
Affected
Tells Nx which branch and HEAD to use when calculating affected projects.
defaultBasedefines the default base branch, defaulted tomaster.
Tasks Runner Options
Tasks runners are invoked when you run nx test, nx build, nx run-many, nx affected, etc.. The tasks runner named "default" will be, unsurprisingly, used by default. But you can specify a different one by passing --runner.
A task is an invocation of a target.
Tasks runners can accept different options. The following are the options supported by "@nrwl/workspace/tasks-runners/default" and "@nrwl/nx-cloud".
cacheableOperationsdefines the list of targets/operations that will be cached by Nx.paralleldefines whether to run targets in parallelmaxParalleldefines the max number of processes used.captureStderrdefines whether the cache will capture stderr or just stdoutskipNxCachedefines whether the Nx Cache should be skipped. Defaults tofalsecacheDirectorydefines where the local cache is stored, which isnode_modules/.cache/nxby default.encryptionKey(when using"@nrwl/nx-cloud"only) defines an encryption key to support end-to-end encryption of your cloud cache. You may also provide an environment variable with the keyNX_CLOUD_ENCRYPTION_KEYthat contains an encryption key as its value. The Nx Cloud task runner will normalize the key length, so any length of key is acceptable.runtimeCacheInputsdefines the list of commands that will be run by the runner to include into the computation hash value.
runtimeCacheInputs can be set as follows:
1{
2 "tasksRunnerOptions": {
3 "default": {
4 "runner": "@nrwl/workspace/tasks-runners/default",
5 "options": {
6 "cacheableOperations": ["build", "lint", "test", "e2e"],
7 "runtimeCacheInputs": ["node -v"]
8 }
9 }
10 }
11}
You can configure parallel and maxParallel in nx.json, but you can also pass them in the terminal nx run-many --target=test --parallel.
Implicit Dependencies
Nx performs advanced source-code analysis to figure out the project graph of the workspace. So when you make a change, Nx can deduce what can be broken by this change. Some dependencies between projects and dependencies between shared files and projects cannot be inferred statically. You can configure those using implicitDependencies.
1{
2 "implicitDependencies": {
3 "workspace.json": "*",
4 "package.json": {
5 "dependencies": "*",
6 "devDependencies": {
7 "mypackage": ["mylib"]
8 },
9 "scripts": {
10 "check:*": "*"
11 }
12 },
13 "globalFile": ["myapp"],
14 "styles/**/*.css": ["myapp"]
15 }
16}
In the example above:
- Changing
workspace.jsonwill affect every project. - Changing the
dependenciesproperty inpackage.jsonwill affect every project. - Changing the
devDependenciesproperty inpackage.jsonwill only affectmylib. - Changing any of the custom check
scriptsinpackage.jsonwill affect every project. - Changing
globalFilewill only affectmyapp. - Changing any CSS file inside the
stylesdirectory will only affectmyapp.
You can also add dependencies between projects. For instance, the example below defines a dependency from myapp-e2e to myapp, such that every time myapp is affected, myapp-e2e is affected as well.
1{
2 "projects": {
3 "myapp": {
4 "tags": []
5 },
6 "myapp-e2e": {
7 "tags": [],
8 "implicitDependencies": ["myapp"]
9 }
10 }
11}