This PR updates examples in `.md` files (both docs and blog posts) to use positional args. Nx 20 changes the position arg to be either `directory` for apps/libs or `path` for artifacts (e.g. components). So before you'd do this: ``` nx g app myapp --directory=apps/myapp nx g lib mylib --directory=libs/mylib nx g lib mylib --directory=libs/nested/mylib nx g lib @acme/foo --directory=libs/@acme/foo --importPath=@acme/foo nx g component foo --directory=libs/ui/src/foo --pascalCaseFiles ``` Will now be simplified to ``` nx g app apps/myapp nx g lib libs/mylib nx g lib libs/nested/mylib nx g lib libs/@acme/foo # name and import path are both "@acme/foo" nx g component libs/ui/src/foo/Foo ``` For cases where `name` and `importPath` need to be changed, you can always manually specify them. ``` nx g lib libs/nested/foo # name is foo nx g lib libs/nested/foo --name=nested-foo # specify name with prefix nx g lib libs/@acme/foo --name # use "foo" as name and don't match importPath nx g lib libs/@internal/foo --importPath=@acme/foo # different importPath from name <!-- If this is a particularly complex change or feature addition, you can request a dedicated Nx release for this pull request branch. Mention someone from the Nx team or the `@nrwl/nx-pipelines-reviewers` and they will confirm if the PR warrants its own release for testing purposes, and generate it for you if appropriate. --> ## Current Behavior <!-- This is the behavior we have today --> ## Expected Behavior <!-- This is the behavior we should expect with the changes in this PR --> ## Related Issue(s) <!-- Please link the issue being fixed so it gets closed when this is merged. --> Fixes #
105 lines
4.0 KiB
Markdown
105 lines
4.0 KiB
Markdown
---
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title: Overview of the Nx Nuxt Plugin
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description: The Nx Plugin for Nuxt contains generators for managing Nuxt applications within a Nx workspace. This page also explains how to configure Nuxt on your Nx workspace.
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---
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The Nx plugin for [Nuxt](https://nuxt.com/).
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## Setting up a new Nx workspace with @nx/nuxt
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You can create a new workspace that uses Nuxt with one of the following commands:
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- Generate a new monorepo with a Nuxt app
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```shell
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npx create-nx-workspace@latest --preset=nuxt
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```
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### Installation
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{% callout type="note" title="Keep Nx Package Versions In Sync" %}
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Make sure to install the `@nx/nuxt` 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](/recipes/tips-n-tricks/keep-nx-versions-in-sync).
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{% /callout %}
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In any Nx workspace, you can install `@nx/nuxt` by running the following command:
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```shell {% skipRescope=true %}
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nx add @nx/nuxt
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```
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This will install the correct version of `@nx/nuxt`.
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### How @nx/nuxt Infers Tasks
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The `@nx/nuxt` plugin will create a task for any project that has an Nuxt configuration file present. Any of the following files will be recognized as an Nuxt configuration file:
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- `nuxt.config.js`
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- `nuxt.config.ts`
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- `nuxt.config.mjs`
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- `nuxt.config.mts`
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- `nuxt.config.cjs`
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- `nuxt.config.cts`
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### View Inferred Tasks
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To view inferred tasks for a project, open the [project details view](/concepts/inferred-tasks) in Nx Console or run `nx show project my-project --web` in the command line.
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### @nx/nuxt Configuration
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The `@nx/nuxt/plugin` is configured in the `plugins` array in `nx.json`.
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```json {% fileName="nx.json" %}
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{
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"plugins": [
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{
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"plugin": "@nx/nuxt/plugin",
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"options": {
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"buildTargetName": "build",
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"testTargetName": "test",
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"serveTargetName": "serve",
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"buildStaticTargetName": "build-static",
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"serveStaticTargetName": "serve-static"
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}
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}
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]
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}
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```
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The `buildTargetName`, `testTargetName` and `serveTargetName` options control the names of the inferred Nuxt tasks. The default names are `build`, `test` and `serve`.
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The `buildStaticTargetName` and `serveStaticTargetName` options control the names of the inferred Nuxt static tasks. The default names are `build-static` and `serve-static`.
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## Using Nuxt
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### Generate a new Nuxt app
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```shell
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nx g @nx/nuxt:app apps/my-app
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```
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### Deploy a Nuxt app
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Once you are ready to deploy your Nuxt application, you have absolute freedom to choose any hosting provider that fits your needs.
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We have detailed [how to deploy your Nuxt application to Vercel in a separate guide](/recipes/nuxt/deploy-nuxt-to-vercel).
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### E2E testing
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By default `nuxt` **does not** generate static HTML files when you run the `build` command. However, Nx provides a `build-static` target that you can use to generate static HTML files for your Nuxt application. Essentially, this target runs the `nuxt build --prerender` command to generate static HTML files.
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To perform end-to-end (E2E) testing on static HTML files using a test runner like Cypress. When you create a Nuxt application, Nx automatically creates a `serve-static` target. This target is designed to serve the static HTML files produced by the `build-static` command.
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This feature is particularly useful for testing in continuous integration (CI) pipelines, where resources may be constrained. Unlike the `serve` target, `serve-static` does not require a Nuxt's Nitro server to operate, making it more efficient and faster by eliminating background processes, such as file change monitoring.
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To utilize the `serve-static` target for testing, run the following command:
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```shell
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nx serve-static my-nuxt-app-e2e
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```
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This command performs several actions:
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1. It will build the Nuxt application and generate the static HTML files.
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2. It will serve the static HTML files using a simple HTTP server.
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3. It will run the Cypress tests against the served static HTML files.
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