Transitioning to Nx
Within an Nx workspace, you gain many capabilities that help you build applications and libraries using a monorepo approach. If you are currently using an Angular CLI workspace, you can transform it into an Nx workspace.
Prerequisites
- The major version of your
Angular CLI
must align with the version ofNx
you are upgrading to. For example, if you're using Angular CLI version 7, you must transition using the latest version 7 release of Nx. - Currently, transforming an Angular CLI workspace to an Nx workspace automatically only supports a single project. If you have more than one project in your Angular CLI workspace, you can still migrate manually.
Using the Nx CLI while preserving the existing structure
To use the Nx CLI in an existing Angular CLI workspace while keeping your existing file structure in place, use the ng add
command with the --preserve-angular-cli-layout
option:
ng add @nrwl/angular --preserve-angular-cli-layout
Note: If you specify a version of Nx (e.g. ng add @nrwl/angular@13.10.0
), please make sure to use the appropriate command as shown in the compatibility table below:
Nx version | Collection to use | Flag to use | Example |
---|---|---|---|
>= 13.10.0 | @nrwl/angular | --preserve-angular-cli-layout | ng add @nrwl/angular@13.10.0 --preserve-angular-cli-layout |
>= 13.8.4 < 13.10.0 | @nrwl/workspace | --preserve-angular-cli-layout | ng add @nrwl/workspace@13.8.4 --preserve-angular-cli-layout |
< 13.8.4 | @nrwl/workspace | --preserveAngularCLILayout | ng add @nrwl/workspace@13.5.0 --preserveAngularCLILayout |
This installs the @nrwl/angular
(or @nrwl/workspace
) package into your workspace and runs a generator (or schematic) to make following changes:
- Installs the
nx
and@nrwl/workspace
packages. - Creates an
nx.json
file in the root of your workspace. - Adds a
decorate-angular-cli.js
to the root of your workspace, and apostinstall
script in yourpackage.json
to run the script when your dependencies are updated. The script forwards theng
commands to the Nx CLI (nx
) to enable features such as Computation Caching.
After the process completes, you can continue using the same serve/build/lint/test
commands you are used to.
Transforming an Angular CLI workspace to an Nx workspace
To transform an Angular CLI workspace to an Nx workspace, run the following command:
ng add @nrwl/angular
Note: If you specify a version of Nx (e.g. ng add @nrwl/angular@13.10.0
), please make sure to use the appropriate command as shown in the compatibility table below:
Nx version | Command to run |
---|---|
>= 13.10.0 | ng add @nrwl/angular |
< 13.10.0 | ng add @nrwl/workspace |
This installs the @nrwl/angular
(or @nrwl/workspace
) package into your workspace and runs a generator (or schematic) to transform your workspace. The generator applies the following changes to your workspace:
- Installs the
nx
and@nrwl/workspace
packages. - Creates an
nx.json
file in the root of your workspace. - Creates configuration files for Prettier.
- Creates an
apps
folder for generating applications. - Creates a
libs
folder for generating libraries. - Creates a
tools
folder that includes files for custom workspace tooling, such as workspace-specific generators and scripts. - Moves your application into the
apps
folder, and updates the relevant file paths in your configuration files. - Moves your e2e suite into the
apps/{{app name}}-e2e
folder, and updates the relevant file paths in your configuration files. - Updates your
package.json
with scripts to run variousNx
workspace commands. - Updates your
angular.json
configuration to reflect the new paths.
After the changes are applied, your workspace file structure should look similar to the one below:
<workspace name>/
├── apps/
│ ├── <app name>/
│ │ ├── src/
│ │ │ ├── app/
│ │ │ ├── assets/
│ │ │ ├── environments/
│ │ │ ├── favicon.ico
│ │ │ ├── index.html
│ │ │ ├── main.ts
│ │ │ ├── polyfills.ts
│ │ │ ├── styles.css
│ │ │ └── test.ts
│ │ ├── .browserslistrc
│ │ ├── karma.conf.js
│ │ ├── tsconfig.app.json
│ │ └── tsconfig.spec.json
│ └── <app name>-e2e/
│ ├── src/
│ ├── protractor.conf.js | cypress.json
│ └── tsconfig.json
├── libs/
├── tools/
├── .editorconfig
├── .gitignore
├── .prettierignore
├── .prettierrc
├── angular.json
├── decorate-angular-cli.js
├── karma.conf.js
├── nx.json
├── package.json
├── README.md
└── tsconfig.base.json
Your workspace is now powered by Nx! You can verify out that your application still runs as intended:
- To serve, run
ng serve
. - To build, run
ng build
. - To run unit tests, run
ng test
. - To run e2e tests, run
ng e2e
. - To see your project graph, run
nx graph
.
Your project graph will grow as you add, and use more applications and libraries. You can add the
--watch
flag tonx graph
to see this changes in-browser as you add them.
Learn more about the advantages of Nx in the following guides:
- Using Cypress for e2e tests
- Using Jest for unit tests
- Computation Caching
- Rebuilding and Retesting What is Affected
Transitioning Manually
If you are unable to automatically transform your Angular CLI workspace to an Nx workspace using the ng add method, there are some manual steps you can take to move your project(s) into an Nx workspace.
Generating a new workspace
To start, run the command to generate an Nx workspace with an Angular application.
Using npx
npx create-nx-workspace myorg --preset=angular
Using npm init
npm init nx-workspace myorg --preset=angular
Using yarn create
yarn create nx-workspace myorg --preset=angular
When prompted for the application name
, enter the project name from your current angular.json
file.
A new Nx workspace with your org name
as the folder name, and your application name
as the first application is generated.
<workspace name>/
├── apps/
│ ├── <app name>/
│ │ ├── src/
│ │ │ ├── app/
│ │ │ ├── assets/
│ │ │ ├── environments/
│ │ │ ├── favicon.ico
│ │ │ ├── index.html
│ │ │ ├── main.ts
│ │ │ ├── polyfills.ts
│ │ │ ├── styles.css
│ │ │ └── test.ts
│ │ ├── browserslist
│ │ ├── jest.conf.js
│ │ ├── tsconfig.app.json
│ │ ├── tsconfig.json
│ │ ├── tslint.json
│ │ └── tsconfig.spec.json
│ └── <app name>-e2e/
│ ├── src/
│ ├── cypress.json
│ ├── tsconfig.e2e.json
│ ├── tslint.json
│ └── tsconfig.json
├── libs/
├── tools/
├── .prettierignore
├── .prettierrc
├── README.md
├── angular.json
├── jest.config.js
├── nx.json
├── package.json
├── tsconfig.base.json
└── tslint.json
Copying over application files
Your application code is self-contained within the src
folder of your Angular CLI workspace.
- Copy the
src
folder from your Angular CLI project to theapps/<app name>
folder, overwriting the existingsrc
folder. - Copy any project-specific files, such as
browserslist
, or service worker configuration files into their relative path under theapps/<app name>
folder. - Transfer the
assets
,scripts
,styles
, and build-specific configuration, such as service worker configuration, from your Angular CLIangular.json
to the Nx workspaceangular.json
file.
Verify your app runs correctly by running:
ng serve <app name>
Updating your unit testing configuration
Nx uses Jest by default. If you have any custom Jest configuration, you need to update the workspace Jest configuration also.
Verify your tests run correctly by running:
ng test <app name>
If you are using Karma
for unit testing:
- Copy the
karma.conf.js
file to yourapps/<app name>
folder. - Copy the
test.ts
file to yourapps/<app name>/src
folder. - Copy the
test
target in yourarchitect
configuration from your Angular CLIangular.json
file into your Nx workspaceangular.json
file. - Update your
test
target to prependapps/<app name>
to each of the file paths.
1{
2 "projects": {
3 "<app name>": {
4 "projectType": "application",
5 "schematics": {},
6 "root": "apps/<app name>",
7 "sourceRoot": "apps/<app name>/src",
8 "prefix": "myapp",
9 "architect": {
10 "test": {
11 "builder": "@angular-devkit/build-angular:karma",
12 "options": {
13 "main": "apps/<app name>/src/test.ts",
14 "polyfills": "apps/<app name>/src/polyfills.ts",
15 "tsConfig": "apps/<app name>/tsconfig.spec.json",
16 "karmaConfig": "apps/<app name>/karma.conf.js",
17 "assets": [
18 "apps/<app name>/src/favicon.ico",
19 "apps/<app name>/src/assets"
20 ],
21 "styles": ["apps/<app name>/src/styles.css"],
22 "scripts": []
23 }
24 }
25 }
26 }
27 },
28 "cli": {
29 "defaultCollection": "@nrwl/angular"
30 },
31 "schematics": {
32 "@nrwl/angular:application": {
33 "unitTestRunner": "jest",
34 "e2eTestRunner": "cypress"
35 },
36 "@nrwl/angular:library": {
37 "unitTestRunner": "jest"
38 }
39 },
40 "defaultProject": "<app name>"
41}
Jest will be used by default when generating new applications. If you want to continue using
Karma
, set theunitTestRunner
tokarma
in theschematics
section of theangular.json
file.
- Update
test-setup.ts
totest.ts
in thefiles
array of theapps/<app name>/tsconfig.spec.json
file.
1{
2 "extends": "./tsconfig.json",
3 "compilerOptions": {
4 "outDir": "../../dist/out-tsc",
5 "module": "commonjs",
6 "types": ["node"]
7 },
8 "files": ["src/test.ts", "src/polyfills.ts"],
9 "include": ["**/*.spec.ts", "**/*.d.ts"]
10}
Verify your tests run correctly by running:
ng test <app name>
Updating your E2E testing configuration
Nx uses Cypress by default. If you are already using Cypress, copy your E2E setup files into the apps/<app name>-e2e
folder and verify your tests still run correctly by running:
ng e2e <app name>-e2e
If you are using Protractor
for E2E testing:
- Delete the
apps/<app name>-e2e
folder that was generated to use Cypress. - Copy the
e2e
folder from your Angular CLI workspace into theapps
file to yourapps/<app name>
folder. - Rename the
e2e
folder to<app name>-e2e
. - In the Nx workspace
angular.json
, update your<app name>-e2e
project with theProtractor
configuration.
1{
2 "version": 1,
3 "projects": {
4 "<app name>-e2e": {
5 "root": "apps/<app name>-e2e",
6 "projectType": "application",
7 "architect": {
8 "e2e": {
9 "builder": "@angular-devkit/build-angular:protractor",
10 "options": {
11 "protractorConfig": "apps/<app name>-e2e/protractor.conf.js",
12 "devServerTarget": "<app name>:serve"
13 },
14 "configurations": {
15 "production": {
16 "devServerTarget": "<app name>:serve:production"
17 }
18 }
19 },
20 "lint": {
21 "builder": "@angular-devkit/build-angular:tslint",
22 "options": {
23 "tsConfig": "apps/<app name>-e2e/tsconfig.e2e.json",
24 "exclude": ["**/node_modules/**", "!apps/<app name>-e2e/**/*"]
25 }
26 }
27 }
28 }
29 },
30 "cli": {
31 "defaultCollection": "@nrwl/angular"
32 },
33 "schematics": {
34 "@nrwl/angular:application": {
35 "unitTestRunner": "jest",
36 "e2eTestRunner": "cypress"
37 },
38 "@nrwl/angular:library": {
39 "unitTestRunner": "jest"
40 }
41 },
42 "defaultProject": "<app name>"
43}
Create a tsconfig.e2e.json
file under apps/<app name>-e2e
folder:
1{
2 "extends": "./tsconfig.json",
3 "compilerOptions": {
4 "outDir": "../../dist/out-tsc"
5 }
6}
Update the apps/<app name>/tsconfig.json
to extend the root tsconfig.json
:
1{
2 "extends": "../../tsconfig.json",
3 "compilerOptions": {
4 "outDir": "../../out-tsc/<app name>-e2e",
5 "module": "commonjs",
6 "target": "es5",
7 "types": ["jasmine", "jasminewd2", "node"]
8 }
9}
Verify your E2E tests run correctly by running:
ng e2e <app name>-e2e
Cypress will be used by default when generating new applications. If you want to continue using
Protractor
, set thee2eTestRunner
toprotractor
in theschematics
section of theangular.json
file.
Updating your linting configuration
For lint rules, migrate your existing rules into the root tslint.json
file.
Verify your lint checks run correctly by running:
npm run lint
OR
yarn lint
Learn more about the advantages of Nx in the following guides:
Using Cypress for e2e tests
Using Jest for unit tests
Rebuilding and Retesting What is Affected