Implicit dependencies are not referenced in code and therefore TSC incremental builds are not applicable. ## Current Behavior A project using the `@nx/js:tsc` executor will fail to build if it has implicit dependencies on projects which do not use the `@nx/js:tsc` executor. To reproduce: * Clone https://github.com/cogwirrel/nx-tsc-batch-implicit-deps-example * `pnpm i && pnpm nx run-many --target build --batch --all` ## Expected Behavior - Implicit dependencies that do not use the `@nx/js:tsc` executor are permitted. For example, a TypeScript project may implicitly depend on a Python project, but the TypeScript project should still be buildable in batch mode. - Projects using the `@nx/js:tsc` executor will still fail to build if they have explicit dependencies on projects which do not use the `@nx/js:tsc` executor. Tested by publishing to the local registry, upgrading the [example repo](https://github.com/cogwirrel/nx-tsc-batch-implicit-deps-example) to use my local version, and built successfully in batch mode. ## Related Issue(s) Fixes #28839
2.1 KiB
Enable Typescript Batch Mode
{% callout type="check" title="Available since Nx 16.6.0" %}
The @nx/js:tsc batch implementation was introduced in Nx 16.6.0.
{% /callout %}
If you're using the @nx/js:tsc to build your projects, you can opt-in to use its batch implementation. The batch implementation uses the TypeScript APIs for incremental builds and batches the execution of the tasks into a single process. This results in a much faster build time when compared to the default implementation (the bigger the task graph to run, the more the performance improvements).
{% callout type="warning" title="Experimental feature" %} Executing tasks in batch mode is an experimental feature. {% /callout %}
{% callout type="info" title="Requirements" %}
Building a project with the @nx/js:tsc executor in batch mode requires all dependent projects (excluding implicit dependencies) to be buildable and built using the @nx/js:tsc executor.
{% /callout %}
To run your builds using the batch implementation, pass in --batch flag:
nx build my-project --batch
For optimal performance, you could set the clean option to false. Otherwise, the executor cleans the output folder before running the build, which results in the loss of the .tsbuildinfo file and, consequently, the loss of important optimizations performed by TypeScript. This is not a requirement. Even if the clean option is not set to false there are other important optimizations that are performed by the batch implementation.
{
"build": {
"executor": "@nx/js:tsc",
"options": {
"outputPath": "dist/libs/ts-lib",
"main": "libs/ts-lib/src/index.ts",
"tsConfig": "libs/ts-lib/tsconfig.lib.json",
"assets": ["libs/ts-lib/*.md"],
"clean": false
}
}
}
You can get a sense of the performance improvements over using the @nx/js:tsc default implementation in the tsc batch mode benchmark.