Add an Astro Project
The code for this example is available on GitHub:
Example repository/nrwl/nx-recipes/tree/main/astro-standalone
Supported Features
Because we are not using an Nx plugin for Astro, there are few items we'll have to configure manually. We'll have to configure our own build system. There are no pre-created Astro-specific code generators. And we'll have to take care of updating any framework dependencies as needed.
✅ Run Tasks ✅ Cache Task Results ✅ Remote Caching ✅ Explore the Graph ✅ Distribute Task Execution ✅ Integrate with Editors ✅ Automate Updating Nx ✅ Enforce Project Boundaries 🚫 Use Task Executors 🚫 Use Code Generators 🚫 Automate Updating Framework Dependencies
Create an astro app
❯
npm create astro@latest
Add Nx
We can leverage nx init
to add Nx to the Astro application.
~/astro-app❯
npx nx@latest init
> NX 🐳 Nx initialization
> NX 🧑🔧 Please answer the following questions about the scripts found in your package.json in order to generate task runner configuration
✔ Which of the following scripts are cacheable? (Produce the same output given the same input, e.g. build, test and lint usually are, serve and start are not). You can use spacebar to select one or more scripts. · build
✔ Does the "build" script create any outputs? If not, leave blank, otherwise provide a path (e.g. dist, lib, build, coverage) · dist
✔ Enable distributed caching to make your CI faster · No
> NX 📦 Installing dependencies
> NX 🎉 Done!
- Enabled computation caching!
- Learn more at https://nx.dev/recipes/adopting-nx/adding-to-existing-project.
You can add a task as cacheable after the fact by updating the cacheableOperations
in the nx.json
file. Learn more about caching task results or how caching works.
Running Tasks
Because Nx understands package.json scripts, You can run the predefined scripts via Nx.
❯
nx build
If you plan on using your package manager to run the tasks, then you'll want to use nx exec
to wrap the command
i.e.
{
"scripts": {
"e2e": "nx exec -- playwright test"
}
}
Now when running npm run e2e
Nx will be able to check if there is a cache hit or not.
If you plan to only run tasks with the Nx CLI, then you can omit nx exec
. The safest way is to always include it in the package.json script.
Using Other Plugins
With Nx plugins, you can create projects to help break out functionality of the project. For example, using the @nx/js:library
to contain our reusable .astro
components.
Install @nx/js
plugin.
Note: you should make sure any first party,
@nx/
scoped, plugins match thenx
package version
❯
npm i -DE @nx/js@<nx-version>
Then generate a project
> NX Generating @nx/js:library
✔ What name would you like to use for the library? · ui
✔ Which unit test runner would you like to use? · none
✔ Which bundler would you like to use to build the library? Choose 'none' to skip build setup. · none
CREATE ui/tsconfig.json
CREATE ui/src/index.ts
CREATE ui/src/lib/ui.ts
CREATE ui/tsconfig.lib.json
CREATE ui/project.json
CREATE ui/.eslintrc.json
UPDATE tsconfig.json
If you plan to import .astro
files within .ts
files, then you can install the @astrojs/ts-plugin
.
{
"extends": "astro/tsconfigs/strict",
"compilerOptions": {
"baseUrl": ".",
"plugins": [
{
"name": "@astrojs/ts-plugin"
}
],
"paths": {
"@myrepo/ui": ["ui/src/index.ts"]
}
}
}
An easier option is to allow importing the files directly instead of reexporting the .astro
files via the index.ts
. You can do this by allowing deep imports in the tsconfig paths
{
"extends": "astro/tsconfigs/strict",
"compilerOptions": {
"baseUrl": ".",
"paths": {
// Note: the * allowing the deep imports
"@myrepo/ui/*": ["ui/src/*"]
}
}
}
This allows imports in our .astro
files from other projects like so.
import Card from '@myrepo/ui/Card.astro';
import Footer from '@myrepo/ui/Footer.astro';
import Header from '@myrepo/ui/Header.astro';