NPM Workspaces Tutorial
In this tutorial, you'll learn how to add Nx to a repository with an existing NPM workspaces setup. You'll see how Nx can provide immediate value with very little configuration and then you can gradually enable more features.
- Add Nx to the repository with a single command
- Configure caching for your existing tasks
- Configure a task pipeline
- Use Nx Plugins to automatically configure caching
Starting Repository
To get started, check out the sample repository on your local machine:
❯
git clone https://github.com/nrwl/tuskydesign.git
The repository has two React packages (under packages/buttons
and packages/forms
) that are used in a demo
application (located in apps/demo
) that was designed to be used with the Vite CLI. The root package.json
has a workspaces
property that tells NPM how to find the projects in the repository.
1{
2 "workspaces": ["packages/*", "apps/*"]
3}
4
Because of this setting, when the install command is run at the root, the correct packages are installed for each project. NPM will create dedicated node_modules
folders inside of each project folder where necessary.
❯
npm install
Now let's try running some tasks. To lint the demo
app, use the lint
npm script:
~/tuskydesigns❯
npm run lint -w @tuskdesign/demo
1> @tuskdesign/demo@0.0.0 lint
2> eslint . --ext ts,tsx --report-unused-disable-directives --max-warnings 0
3
If you try to build the demo
app, it will fail.
~/tuskydesigns❯
npm run build -w @tuskdesign/demo
1> @tuskdesign/demo@0.0.0 prebuild
2> npm run typecheck
3
4> @tuskdesign/demo@0.0.0 typecheck
5> tsc
6
7> @tuskdesign/demo@0.0.0 build
8> vite build
9
10vite v5.0.12 building for production...
11✓ 4 modules transformed.
12[commonjs--resolver] Failed to resolve entry for package "@tuskdesign/buttons". The package may have incorrect main/module/exports specified in its package.json.
13error during build:
14Error: Failed to resolve entry for package "@tuskdesign/buttons". The package may have incorrect main/module/exports specified in its package.json.
15 at packageEntryFailure (file:///Users/isaac/Documents/code/tuskydesign/node_modules/vite/dist/node/chunks/dep-9A4-l-43.js:29443:17)
16 at resolvePackageEntry (file:///Users/isaac/Documents/code/tuskydesign/node_modules/vite/dist/node/chunks/dep-9A4-l-43.js:29440:5)
17 at tryNodeResolve (file:///Users/isaac/Documents/code/tuskydesign/node_modules/vite/dist/node/chunks/dep-9A4-l-43.js:29210:20)
18 at Object.resolveId (file:///Users/isaac/Documents/code/tuskydesign/node_modules/vite/dist/node/chunks/dep-9A4-l-43.js:28978:28)
19 at file:///Users/isaac/Documents/code/tuskydesign/node_modules/vite/node_modules/rollup/dist/es/shared/node-entry.js:19579:40
20 at async PluginDriver.hookFirstAndGetPlugin (file:///Users/isaac/Documents/code/tuskydesign/node_modules/vite/node_modules/rollup/dist/es/shared/node-entry.js:19479:28)
21 at async resolveId (file:///Users/isaac/Documents/code/tuskydesign/node_modules/vite/node_modules/rollup/dist/es/shared/node-entry.js:18149:26)
22 at async ModuleLoader.resolveId (file:///Users/isaac/Documents/code/tuskydesign/node_modules/vite/node_modules/rollup/dist/es/shared/node-entry.js:18563:15)
23 at async Object.resolveId (file:///Users/isaac/Documents/code/tuskydesign/node_modules/vite/dist/node/chunks/dep-9A4-l-43.js:8141:10)
24 at async PluginDriver.hookFirstAndGetPlugin (file:///Users/isaac/Documents/code/tuskydesign/node_modules/vite/node_modules/rollup/dist/es/shared/node-entry.js:19479:28)
25npm ERR! Lifecycle script `build` failed with error:
26npm ERR! Error: command failed
27npm ERR! in workspace: @tuskdesign/demo@0.0.0
28npm ERR! at location: /Users/isaac/Documents/code/tuskydesign/apps/demo
29
The build
script fails because it needs the buttons
and forms
projects to be built first in order to work correctly. To do this, lets return to the root of the repository and run the build
task for every project in the repo:
❯
npm run build --ws
When the buttons
and forms
projects are built first, the demo
app can build successfully.
Now that you have a basic understanding of the repository we're working with, let's see how Nx can help us.
Add Nx
Nx offers many features, but at its core, it is a task runner. Out of the box, it can cache your tasks and ensure those tasks are run in the correct order. After the initial set up, you can incrementally add on other features that would be helpful in your organization.
To enable Nx in your repository, run a single command:
❯
npx nx@latest init
This command will download the latest version of Nx and help set up your repository to take advantage of it.
First, the script will propose installing some plugins based on the packages that are being used in your repository.
- Deselect both proposed plugins so that we can explore what Nx provides without any plugins.
Second, the script asks a series of questions to help set up caching for you.
Which scripts need to be run in order?
- Choosebuild
Which scripts are cacheable?
- Choosetypecheck
,build
andlint
Does the "typecheck" script create any outputs?
- Enter nothingDoes the "build" script create any outputs?
- Enterdist
Does the "lint" script create any outputs?
- Enter nothingWould you like remote caching to make your build faster?
- ChooseSkip for now
~/tuskydesigns❯
npx nx@latest init
1 NX Recommended Plugins:
2
3Add these Nx plugins to integrate with the tools used in your workspace.
4
5✔ Which plugins would you like to add? · No items were selected
6
7 NX 🐳 Nx initialization
8
9 NX 🧑🔧 Please answer the following questions about the scripts found in your workspace in order to generate task runner configuration
10
11✔ Which scripts need to be run in order? (e.g. before building a project, dependent projects must be built) · build
12✔ Which scripts are cacheable? (Produce the same output given the same input, e.g. build, test and lint usually are, serve and start are not) · typecheck, build, lint
13✔ Does the "typecheck" script create any outputs? If not, leave blank, otherwise provide a path relative to a project root (e.g. dist, lib, build, coverage) ·
14✔ Does the "build" script create any outputs? If not, leave blank, otherwise provide a path relative to a project root (e.g. dist, lib, build, coverage) · dist
15✔ Does the "lint" script create any outputs? If not, leave blank, otherwise provide a path relative to a project root (e.g. dist, lib, build, coverage) ·
16✔ Would you like remote caching to make your build faster? · skip
17
18 ...
19
20 NX 👀 Explore Your Workspace
21
22Run "nx graph" to show the graph of the workspace. It will show tasks that you can run with Nx.
23Read this guide on exploring your workspace: https://nx.dev/features/explore-graph
24
Explore Your Workspace
If you run nx graph
as instructed, you'll see the dependencies between your projects.
❯
npx nx graph
Nx uses this graph to determine the order tasks are run and enforce module boundaries. You can also leverage this graph to gain an accurate understanding of the architecture of your codebase. Part of what makes this graph invaluable is that it is derived directly from your codebase, so it will never become out of date.
Caching Pre-configured
Nx has been configured to run your build
, typecheck
and lint
tasks. You can run a single task like this:
❯
npx nx build @tuskdesign/demo
Or all tasks with a certain name like this:
❯
npx nx run-many -t typecheck
During the init
script, Nx also configured caching for these tasks. You can see in the nx.json
file that the build
, typecheck
and lint
targets have the cache
property set to true
and the build
target specifies that its output goes to the project's dist
folder.
1{
2 "$schema": "./node_modules/nx/schemas/nx-schema.json",
3 "targetDefaults": {
4 "build": {
5 "dependsOn": ["^build"],
6 "outputs": ["{projectRoot}/dist"],
7 "cache": true
8 },
9 "typecheck": {
10 "cache": true
11 },
12 "lint": {
13 "cache": true
14 }
15 },
16 "defaultBase": "main"
17}
18
Try running build
for the demo
app a second time:
❯
npx nx build @tuskdesign/demo
The first time nx build
was run, it took about 5 seconds - just like running npm run build
. But the second time you run nx build
, it completes instantly and displays this message:
1Nx read the output from the cache instead of running the command for 3 out of 3 tasks.
2
You can see the same caching behavior working when you run npx nx lint
or npx nx typecheck
.
Use Task Pipelines
You may be wondering why the caching message in the previous section mentioned 3 tasks when you only ran the build
task from the terminal. When we said that build
tasks must be run in order during the setup script, Nx created a simple task pipeline. You can see the configuration for it in the nx.json
file:
1{
2 "targetDefaults": {
3 "build": {
4 "dependsOn": ["^build"]
5 }
6 }
7}
8
This configuration means that if you run build
on any project, Nx will first run build
for the dependencies of that project and then run build
on the project itself. The ^build
text means "the build
tasks of the project's dependencies." You can visualize this in the Nx graph by selecting the Tasks
dropdown in the top left and clicking Show all tasks
:
❯
npx nx graph
With this pipeline in place, you will never run into the error we hit at the beginning of the tutorial where the forms
and buttons
packages weren't built so the demo
app couldn't build. Test this out by deleting the packages/forms/dist
folder and then re-running the build
task for the demo
app.
~/tuskydesigns❯
npx nx build @tuskdesign/demo
1...
2
3 NX Successfully ran target build for project @tuskdesign/demo and 2 tasks it depends on (40ms)
4
5Nx read the output from the cache instead of running the command for 3 out of 3 tasks.
6
Not only does the build complete successfully, but it finishes instantly and the packages/forms/dist
folder is put back in place thanks to the caching.
Create a Task Pipeline
You may have noticed in the apps/demo/package.json
file, there is a prebuild
script that runs typecheck
before the build
script in order to catch any type errors. Let's set up this same behavior in the Nx task pipeline as well.
1{
2 "$schema": "./node_modules/nx/schemas/nx-schema.json",
3 "targetDefaults": {
4 "build": {
5 "dependsOn": ["^build", "typecheck"],
6 "outputs": ["{projectRoot}/dist"],
7 "cache": true
8 },
9 "typecheck": {
10 "cache": true
11 },
12 "lint": {
13 "cache": true
14 }
15 },
16 "defaultBase": "main"
17}
18
The dependsOn
line makes Nx run the typecheck
task for the current project and the build
task for any dependencies before running the current project's build
task. Now nx build
will run the typecheck
task just like npm run build
does.
Use Nx Plugins to Enhance Vite Tasks with Caching
You may remember that we defined the outputs
property in nx.json
when we were answering questions in the nx init
script. The value is currently hard-coded so that if you change the output path in your vite.config.ts
, you have to remember to also change the outputs
array in the build
task configuration. This is where plugins can help. They directly infer information from the actual tooling configuration files (vite.config.ts
in this case).
Nx plugins can:
- automatically configure caching for you, including inputs and outputs based on the underlying tooling configuration
- infer tasks that can be run on a project because of the tooling present
- provide code generators to help scaffold out projects
- automatically keep the tooling versions and configuration files up to date
For this tutorial, we'll just focus on the automatic caching configuration.
First, let's delete the outputs
array from nx.json
so that we don't override the inferred values from the plugin. Your nx.json
should look like this:
1{
2 "$schema": "./node_modules/nx/schemas/nx-schema.json",
3 "targetDefaults": {
4 "build": {
5 "dependsOn": ["^build", "typecheck"],
6 "cache": true
7 },
8 "typecheck": {
9 "cache": true
10 },
11 "lint": {
12 "cache": true
13 }
14 },
15 "defaultBase": "main"
16}
17
Now let's add the @nx/vite
plugin:
~/tuskydesign❯
npx nx add @nx/vite
1✔ Installing /vite...
2✔ Initializing /vite...
3
4 NX Package /vite added successfully.
5
The nx add
command installs the version of the plugin that matches your repo's Nx version and runs that plugin's initialization script. For @nx/vite
, the initialization script registers the plugin in the plugins
array of nx.json
and updates any package.json
scripts that execute Vite related tasks. Open the project details view for the demo
app and look at the build
task.
❯
npx nx show project @tuskdesign/demo
If you hover over the settings for the vite:build
task, you can see where those settings come from. The inputs
and outputs
are defined by the @nx/vite
plugin from the vite.config.ts
file where as the dependsOn
property we set earlier in the tutorial in the targetDefaults
in the nx.json
file.
Now let's change where the build
results are output to in the vite.config.ts
file.
1import { defineConfig } from 'vite';
2import react from '@vitejs/plugin-react';
3
4// https://vitejs.dev/config/
5export default defineConfig({
6 plugins: [react()],
7 build: {
8 outDir: '../../dist/demo',
9 },
10});
11
Now if you look at project details view again, you'll see that the outputs
property for Nx's caching has been updated to stay in sync with the setting in the vite.config.ts
file.
You can also add the @nx/eslint
plugin to see how it infers lint
tasks based on the ESLint configuration files.
Summary
After following this tutorial, the repository is still using all the same tools to run tasks, but now Nx runs those tasks in a smarter way. The tasks are efficiently cached so that there is no repeated work and the cache configuration settings are automatically synced with your tooling configuration files by Nx plugins. Also, any task dependencies are automatically executed whenever needed because we configured task pipelines for the projects.
The final task graph for demo
app's build
task looks like this:
Manage Releases
If you decide to publish the forms
or buttons
packages on NPM, Nx can also help you manage the release process. Release management involves updating the version of your package, populating a changelog, and publishing the new version to the NPM registry.
First you'll need to define which projects Nx should manage releases for by setting the release.projects
property in nx.json
:
1{
2 "release": {
3 "projects": ["packages/*"]
4 }
5}
6
Now you're ready to use the nx release
command to publish the forms
and buttons
packages. The first time you run nx release
, you need to add the --first-release
flag so that Nx doesn't try to find the previous version to compare against. It's also recommended to use the --dry-run
flag until you're sure about the results of the nx release
command, then you can run it a final time without the --dry-run
flag.
To preview your first release, run:
❯
nx release --first-release --dry-run
The command will ask you a series of questions and then show you what the results would be. Once you are happy with the results, run it again without the --dry-run
flag:
❯
nx release --first-release
After this first release, you can remove the --first-release
flag and just run nx release --dry-run
. There is also a dedicated feature page that goes into more detail about how to use the nx release
command.
Set Up CI for Your NPM Workspace
This tutorial walked you through how Nx can improve the local development experience, but the biggest difference Nx makes is in CI. As repositories get bigger, making sure that the CI is fast, reliable and maintainable can get very challenging. Nx provides a solution.
- Nx reduces wasted time in CI with the
affected
command. - Nx Replay's remote caching will reuse task artifacts from different CI executions making sure you will never run the same computation twice.
- Nx Agents efficiently distribute tasks across machines ensuring constant CI time regardless of the repository size. The right number of machines is allocated for each PR to ensure good performance without wasting compute.
- Nx Atomizer automatically splits large e2e tests to distribute them across machines. Nx can also automatically identify and rerun flaky e2e tests.
Generate a CI Workflow
If you are starting a new project, you can use the following command to generate a CI workflow file.
❯
npx nx generate ci-workflow --ci=github
You can choose github
, circleci
, azure
, bitbucket-pipelines
, or gitlab
for the ci
flag.
This generator creates a .github/workflows/ci.yml
file that contains a CI pipeline that will run the lint
, test
, build
and e2e
tasks for projects that are affected by any given PR.
The key line in the CI pipeline is:
1- run: npx nx affected -t lint test build
2
Connect to Nx Cloud
Nx Cloud is a companion app for your CI system that provides remote caching, task distribution, e2e tests deflaking, better DX and more.
To connect to Nx Cloud:
- Commit and push your changes to GitHub
- Go to https://cloud.nx.app, create an account, and connect your repository
Connect to Nx Cloud Manually
If you are not able to connect via the automated process at nx.app, you can connect your workspace manually by running:
❯
npx nx connect
You will then need to merge your changes and connect to your workspace on https://cloud.nx.app.
Enable a Distributed CI Pipeline
The current CI pipeline runs on a single machine and can only handle small workspaces. To transform your CI into a CI that runs on multiple machines and can handle workspaces of any size, uncomment the npx nx-cloud start-ci-run
line in the .github/workflows/ci.yml
file.
1- run: npx nx-cloud start-ci-run --distribute-on="5 linux-medium-js" --stop-agents-after="e2e-ci"
2
For more information about how Nx can improve your CI pipeline, check out one of these detailed tutorials:
Next Steps
Connect with the rest of the Nx community with these resources:
- Join the Official Nx Discord Server to ask questions and find out the latest news about Nx.
- Follow Nx on Twitter to stay up to date with Nx news
- Read our Nx blog
- Subscribe to our Youtube channel for demos and Nx insights