Prepare applications for deployment via CI
A common approach to deploying applications is via docker containers. Some applications can be built into bundles that are environment agnostic, while others depend on OS-specific packages being installed. For these situations, having just bundled code is not enough, we also need to have package.json
.
Nx supports the generation of the project's package.json
by identifying all the project's dependencies. The generated package.json
is created next to the built artifacts (usually at dist/apps/name-of-the-app
).
Additionally, we should generate pruned lock file according to the generated package.json
. This makes the installation in the container significantly faster as we only need to install a subset of the packages.
Nx offers two varieties of Webpack plugin which can be used to generate package.json
.
Basic Plugin Configuration
@nx/webpack/plugin
plugin is compatible with a conventional webpack configuration setup which offers a smooth integration with the Webpack CLI. It is configured in the plugins
array in nx.json
.
1{
2 "plugins": [
3 {
4 "plugin": "@nx/webpack/plugin",
5 "options": {
6 "buildTargetName": "build",
7 "serveTargetName": "serve",
8 "serveStaticTargetName": "serve-static",
9 "previewStaticTargetName": "preview"
10 }
11 }
12 ]
13}
14
Where build
, serve
, serve-static
and preview
in conjunction with your webpack.config.js
are the names of the targets that are used to build, serve, and preview the application respectively.
NxWebpackPlugin
The NxWebpackPlugin
plugin takes a main
entry file and produces a bundle in the output directory as defined in output.path
. You can also pass the index
option if it is a web app, which will handle outputting scripts and stylesheets in the output file.
To generate a package.json
we would declare it in the plugin options.
1const { NxWebpackPlugin } = require('@nx/webpack');
2const { join } = require('path');
3
4module.exports = {
5 output: {
6 path: join(__dirname, '../../dist/apps/acme'),
7 },
8 devServer: {
9 port: 4200,
10 },
11 plugins: [
12 new NxWebpackPlugin({
13 tsConfig: './tsconfig.app.json',
14 compiler: 'swc',
15 main: './src/main.tsx',
16 index: '.src/index.html',
17 styles: ['./src/styles.css'],
18 generatePackageJson: true,
19 }),
20 ],
21};
22
Programmatic usage
If you are using a custom setup that does not support the creation of a package.json
or a lock file, you can still use Nx to generate them via The createPackageJson
and createLockFile
functions which are exported from @nx/js
:
If you need to use a custom script, to build your application it should look similar to the following:
1const {
2 createProjectGraphAsync,
3 readCachedProjectGraph,
4 detectPackageManager,
5} = require('@nx/devkit');
6const {
7 createLockFile,
8 createPackageJson,
9 getLockFileName,
10} = require('@nx/js');
11const { writeFileSync } = require('fs');
12
13async function main() {
14 const outputDir = 'dist'; // You can replace this with the output directory you want to use
15 // Detect the package manager you are using (npm, yarn, pnpm)
16 const pm = detectPackageManager();
17 let projectGraph = readCachedProjectGraph();
18 if (!projectGraph) {
19 projectGraph = await createProjectGraphAsync();
20 }
21 // You can replace <NX_TASK_TARGET_PROJECT> with the name of the project if you want.
22 const projectName = process.env.NX_TASK_TARGET_PROJECT;
23 const packageJson = createPackageJson(projectName, projectGraph, {
24 isProduction: true, // Used to strip any non-prod dependencies
25 root: projectGraph.nodes[projectName].data.root,
26 });
27
28 const lockFile = createLockFile(
29 packageJson,
30 projectGraph,
31 detectPackageManager()
32 );
33
34 const lockFileName = getLockFileName(pm);
35
36 writeFileSync(`${outputDir}/package.json`, packageJson);
37 writeFileSync(`${outputDir}/${lockFileName}`, lockFile, {
38 encoding: 'utf8',
39 });
40
41 //... Any additional steps you want to run
42}
43
44main();
45
Then to run the script, update your package.json
to include the following:
1{
2 "scripts": {
3 "copy-package-json": "node scripts/create-package-json.js",
4 "custom-build": "nx build && npm run copy-package-json"
5 }
6}
7
Now, you can run npm run custom-build
to build your application and generate the package.json
and lock file.
You can replace npm with yarn or pnpm if you are using those package managers.
Vite is a build tool that is great for development, and we want to make sure that it is also great for production. We are working on an NxVitePlugin
plugin for Vite that will have parity with the NxWebpackPlugin
. Stay tuned for updates.