The Nx Plugin for esbuild, an extremely fast JavaScript bundler.
Why should you use this plugin?
- Fast builds using esbuild.
- Type-checking using TypeScript, which esbuild does not handle.
- Intelligent
package.json
output. - Additional assets for the output.
Setting Up @nx/esbuild
Installation
Keep Nx Package Versions In SyncMake sure to install the @nx/esbuild
version that matches the version of nx
in your repository. If the version numbers get out of sync, you can encounter some difficult to debug errors. You can fix Nx version mismatches with this recipe.
In any Nx workspace, you can install @nx/esbuild
by running the following command:
❯
nx add @nx/esbuild
This will install the correct version of @nx/esbuild
.
Using the @nx/esbuild Plugin
Creating a new JS library
Directory Flag Behavior ChangesThe command below uses the as-provided
directory flag behavior, which is the default in Nx 16.8.0. If you're on an earlier version of Nx or using the derived
option, omit the --directory
flag. See the as-provided vs. derived documentation for more details.
You can add a new library that builds using esbuild with:
❯
nx g @nx/js:lib mylib --directory=libs/mylib --bundler=esbuild
This command will install the esbuild plugin if needed, and set @nx/esbuild:esbuild
executor for the build
target.
Adding esbuild target to existing libraries
If you already have a JS project that you want to use esbuild for, run this command:
❯
nx g @nx/esbuild:configuration mylib
This generator validates there isn't an existing build
target. If you want to overwrite the existing target you can pass the --skipValidation
option.
❯
nx g @nx/esbuild:configuration mylib --skipValidation
Using esbuild
You can run builds with:
❯
nx build mylib
Replace mylib
with the name or your project. This command works for both applications and libraries.
Copying assets
Assets are non-JS and non-TS files, such as images, CSS, etc. You can add them to the project configuration as follows.
1"build": {
2 "executor": "@nx/esbuild:esbuild",
3 "options": {
4 //...
5 "assets": [
6 { "input": "libs/mylib", "glob": "README.md", "output": "/" },
7 { "input": "libs/mylib", "glob": "logo.png", "output": "/" },
8 { "input": "libs/mylib", "glob": "docs/**/*.md", "output": "/docs" },
9 //...
10 ]
11 }
12}
13
Running nx build mylib
outputs something like this.
1dist/libs/mylib/
2├── README.md
3├── docs
4│ ├── CONTRIBUTING.md
5│ └── TESTING.md
6├── index.js
7├── logo.png
8└── package.json
9
Generating a metafile
A metafile can be generated by passing the --metafile
option. This file contains information about the build that can be analyzed by other tools, such as bundle buddy.
❯
nx build mylib --metafile
This command will generate a meta.json
file in the output directory.
1dist/libs/mylib/
2├── README.md
3├── index.js
4├── meta.json
5└── package.json
6
Custom esbuild options
Extra API options for esbuild can be passed in the esbuildOptions
object for your project configuration.
1"build": {
2 "executor": "@nx/esbuild:esbuild",
3 "options": {
4 //...
5 "esbuildOptions": {
6 "banner": { ".js": "// banner" },
7 "footer": { ".js": "// footer" }
8 }
9 }
10}
11