Affected
Before reading this guide, check out the mental model guide. It will help you understand how computation caching fits into the rest of Nx.
Overview
When you run nx test app1
, you are telling Nx to run the app1:test task plus all the tasks it depends on.
When you run nx run-many --target=test --projects=app1,lib
, you are telling Nx to do the same for two tasks app1:test
and lib:test.
When you run nx run-many --target=test --all
, you are telling Nx to do this for all the projects.
As your workspace grows, retesting all projects becomes too slow. To address this Nx implements code change analysis to get the min set of projects that need to be retested. How does it work?
When you run nx affected --target=test
, Nx looks at the files you changed in your PR, it will look at the nature of
change (what exactly did you update in those files), and it uses this to figure the list of projects in the workspace
that can be affected by this change. It then runs the run-many
command with that list.
For instance, if my PR changes lib
, and I then run nx affected --target=test
, Nx figures out that app1
and app2
depend on lib
, so it will invoke nx run-many --target=test --projects=app1,app2,lib
.
Nx analyzes the nature of the changes. For example, if you change the version of Next.js in the package.json, Nx knows
that app2
cannot be affected by it, so it only retests app1
.
Project Graph
To visualise what is affected, run:
nx affected:graph
CI
The SHAs you pass must be defined in the git repository. The main
and HEAD
SHAs are what you normally use while developing. Most likely you will want to provision other SHAs in your CI environment.
nx affected:build --base= origin/main --head=$PR_BRANCH_NAME # where PR_BRANCH_NAME is defined by your CI system
nx affected:build --base= origin/main~1 --head= origin/main # rerun what is affected by the last commit in main
You can also set the base and head SHAs as env variables:
NX_BASE=origin/main~1
NX_HEAD=origin/main
Ignoring Files from Affected Commands
Nx provides two methods to exclude glob patterns (files and folders) from affected:*
commands.
- Glob patterns defined in your
.gitignore
file are ignored. - Glob patterns defined in an optional
.nxignore
file are ignored.
Not Using Git
If you aren't using Git, you can pass --files
to any affected command to indicate what files have been changed.