Extending Nx with Plugins

Nx's core functionality focuses on task running and understanding your project and task graph. Nx plugins leverage that functionality to enforce best practices, seamlessly integrate tooling and allow developers to get up and running quickly.

As your repository grows, you'll discover more reasons to create your own plugin

  • You can help encourage your coworkers to consistently follow best practices by creating code generators that are custom built for your repository.
  • You can remove duplicate configuration and ensure accurate caching settings by writing your own inferred tasks.
  • For organizations with multiple monorepos, you can encourage consistency across repositories by providing a repository preset and writing migrations that will help keep every project in sync.
  • You can write a plugin that integrates a tool or framework into Nx and then share your plugin with the broader community.

Create Your Own Plugin

Get started developing your own plugin with a few terminal commands:

Create a plugin in a new workspace

npx create-nx-plugin my-plugin

Add a plugin to an existing workspace

npx nx add @nx/plugin

npx nx g plugin my-plugin

Learn by Doing

You can follow along with one of the step by step tutorials below that is focused on a particular use-case. These tutorials expect you to already have the following skills:

Create Your First Code Generator

Wire up a new generator with this terminal command:

npx nx g generator library-with-readme --directory=my-plugin/src/generators/library-with-readme

Understand the Generator Functionality

This command will register the generator in the plugin's generators.json file and create some default generator code in the library-with-readme folder. The libraryWithReadmeGenerator function in the generator.ts file is where the generator functionality is defined.

my-plugin/src/generators/library-with-readme/generator.ts
1export async function libraryWithReadmeGenerator( 2 tree: Tree, 3 options: LibraryWithReadmeGeneratorSchema 4) { 5 const projectRoot = `libs/${options.name}`; 6 addProjectConfiguration(tree, options.name, { 7 root: projectRoot, 8 projectType: 'library', 9 sourceRoot: `${projectRoot}/src`, 10 targets: {}, 11 }); 12 generateFiles(tree, path.join(__dirname, 'files'), projectRoot, options); 13 await formatFiles(tree); 14} 15

This generator calls the following functions:

  • addProjectConfiguration - Create a new project configured for TypeScript code.
  • generateFiles - Create files in the new project based on the template files in the files folder.
  • formatFiles - Format the newly created files with Prettier.

You can find more helper functions in the Nx Devkit reference documentation.

Create a README Template File

We can remove the generated index.ts.template file and add our own README.md.template file in the files folder.

my-plugin/src/generators/library-with-readme/files/README.md.template
1# <%= name %> 2 3This was generated by the `library-with-readme` generator! 4

The template files that are used in the generateFiles function can inject variables and functionality using the EJS syntax. Our README template will replace <%= name %> with the name specified in the generator. Read more about the EJS syntax in the creating files with a generator recipe.

Run Your Generator

You can test your generator in dry-run mode with the following command:

npx nx g my-plugin:library-with-readme mylib --dry-run

If you're happy with the files that are generated, you can actually run the generator by removing the --dry-run flag.

Next Steps