The Node Plugin contains generators and executors to manage Node applications within an Nx workspace. It provides:
Setting Up Node
To add the Node plugin to an existing workspace, run one of the following:
For npm users
npm install -D @nrwl/node
For yarn users
yarn add -D @nrwl/node
Creating Applications
You can add a new application with the following:
nx g @nrwl/node:application my-new-app
You can run your application with nx serve my-new-app
, which starts it in watch mode.
Creating Libraries
Node libraries are a good way to separate features within your organization. To create a Node library run the following command:
nx g @nrwl/js:node my-new-lib
If you want the library to be buildable or publishable to npm
nx g @nrwl/node:lib my-new-lib --buildable
nx g @nrwl/node:lib my-new-lib \
--publishable \
--importPath=@myorg/my-new-lib
Using Node
Testing Projects
You can run unit tests with:
nx test my-new-app
nx test my-new-lib
Replace my-new-app
with the name or your project. This command works for both applications and libraries.
Building Projects
Node applications can be build with:
nx build my-new-app
And if you generated a library with --buildable
, then you can build a library as well:
nx build my-new-lib
The output is in the dist
folder. You can customize the output folder by setting outputPath
in the project's project.json
file.
Application Proxies
Generating Node applications has an option to configure other projects in the workspace to proxy API requests. This can be done by passing the --frontendProject
with the project name you wish to enable proxy support for.
nx g @nrwl/node:application my-new-app \
--frontendProject my-react-app
Debugging
Debugging is set to use a random port that is available on the system. The port can be changed by setting the port option in the serve
architect in the project.json. Or by running the serve command with --port <number>
.
For additional information on how to debug Node applications, see the Node.js debugging getting started guide.