163 lines
4.3 KiB
Markdown
163 lines
4.3 KiB
Markdown
# Workspace Watching
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Nx can watch your workspace and execute commands based on project or files changes.
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{% callout type="note" title="Nx Versioning" %}
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Workspace watching is available with Nx version 15.4.0 and higher.
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{% /callout %}
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Imagine the following project graph with these projects:
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{% graph height="450px" %}
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```json
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{
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"projects": [
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{
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"type": "lib",
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"name": "main-lib",
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"data": {
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"tags": []
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}
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},
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{
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"type": "lib",
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"name": "lib",
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"data": {
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"tags": []
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}
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},
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{
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"type": "lib",
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"name": "lib2",
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"data": {
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"tags": []
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}
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},
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{
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"type": "lib",
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"name": "lib3",
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"data": {
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"tags": []
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}
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}
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],
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"groupByFolder": false,
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"dependencies": {
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"main-lib": [
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{
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"target": "lib",
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"source": "main-lib",
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"type": "direct"
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},
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{
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"target": "lib2",
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"source": "main-lib",
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"type": "direct"
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},
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{
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"target": "lib3",
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"source": "main-lib",
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"type": "direct"
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}
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],
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"lib": [],
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"lib2": [],
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"lib3": []
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},
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"workspaceLayout": {
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"appsDir": "apps",
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"libsDir": "libs"
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},
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"affectedProjectIds": [],
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"focus": null,
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"groupByFolder": false,
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"exclude": []
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}
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```
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{% /graph %}
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Traditionally, if you want to rebuild your projects whenever they change, you would have to set up an ad-hoc watching system to watch each project. Rather than setting up a watch manually, Nx can be used to watch projects and execute a command whenever they change.
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With the following command, Nx is told to watch all projects, and execute `nx run $NX_PROJECT_NAME:build` for each change.
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```shell
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nx watch --all -- nx run \$NX_PROJECT_NAME:build
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```
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{% callout type="note" title="Escaping" %}
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Note the backslash (`\`) before the `$`. This is needed so that your shell doesn't automatically interpolate the variables.
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There are also some quirks if this command is ran with a package manager. [Find out how to run this command with those managers here.](#running-nx-watch-with-package-managers)
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{% /callout %}
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Now every time a package changes, Nx will run the build.
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If multiple packages change at the same time, Nx will run the callback for each changed project. Then if additional changes happen while a command is in progress, Nx will batch those changes, and execute them once the current command completes.
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## Watch Environment Variables
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Nx will run the watch callback command with the `NX_PROJECT_NAME` and `NX_FILE_CHANGES` environment variables set.
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- `NX_PROJECT_NAME` will be the name of the project.
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- `NX_FILE_CHANGES` will be a list of files that changed formatted in stdin (ie, if `file1.txt`, and `file2.txt` change, `NX_FILE_CHANGES` will be `file1.txt file2.txt`. This allows you to pass the list of files to other commands that accept this format.)
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### Running Nx watch with package managers
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In the examples above, the `nx watch` command was run directly in the terminal. Usually environments aren't set up to include node_module bins automatically in the shell path, so using the package manager's run/exec command is used. For example, `npx`, `yarn`, `pnpm run`.
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When running `npx nx watch --all -- echo \$NX_PROJECT_NAME`, (or equivalent), the watch command may not execute as expected. For example, the environment variables seem to be blank.
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Below are the ways to run the watch with each package manager.
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#### pnpm
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```shell
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pnpm nx watch --all -- echo \$NX_PROJECT_NAME
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```
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#### yarn
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```shell
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yarn nx -- watch --all -- echo \$NX_PROJECT_NAME
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```
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#### npx
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```shell
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npx -c 'nx watch --all -- echo \$NX_PROJECT_NAME'
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```
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{% callout type="note" title="Windows" %}
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If you're running these commands on Windows Powershell (not WSL), the environment variables need to be wrapped in `%`.
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For example:
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```shell
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yarn nx -- watch --all -- echo %NX_PROJECT_NAME%
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```
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{% /callout %}
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## Additional Use Cases
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### Watching for specific projects
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To watch for specific projects and echo the changed files, run this command:
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```shell
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nx watch --projects=app1,app2 -- echo \$NX_FILE_CHANGES
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```
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### Watching for dependent projects
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To watch for a project and it's dependencies, run this command:
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```shell
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nx watch --projects=app1 --includeDependentProjects -- echo \$NX_PROJECT_NAME
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```
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