What is @nrwl/jest?
The @nrwl/jest package is part of the Nx suite of tools, designed to enhance the development experience with Jest in a monorepo setup. It provides seamless integration of Jest into Nx workspaces, enabling efficient unit testing configurations, execution, and optimizations tailored for projects managed within an Nx workspace.
What are @nrwl/jest's main functionalities?
Simplified Jest Configuration
Allows for simplified and centralized Jest configuration within an Nx workspace, making it easier to manage and share configurations across multiple library and application projects.
{
"jestConfig": "./jest.config.js",
"tsConfig": "./tsconfig.spec.json",
"setupFile": "./src/test-setup.ts"
}
Parallel Test Execution
Enables parallel execution of tests across multiple projects within the workspace, significantly reducing the total time required for running tests in large projects.
nx run-many --target=test --all --parallel
Test Affected Projects
Identifies and runs tests only for the projects affected by recent changes, improving efficiency in continuous integration pipelines by skipping tests for unchanged projects.
nx affected:test
Other packages similar to @nrwl/jest
jest
Jest is the underlying testing framework that @nrwl/jest configures and enhances for use within Nx workspaces. While Jest can be used independently for testing JavaScript and TypeScript projects, @nrwl/jest provides additional integrations and optimizations for monorepo setups.
mocha
Mocha is another popular JavaScript test framework that can be used for unit and integration testing. Unlike @nrwl/jest, which is tailored for Jest and Nx workspaces, Mocha offers a more general-purpose testing solution without specific optimizations for monorepos or Nx.
karma
Karma is a test runner developed by the AngularJS team, designed to work with any framework. It differs from @nrwl/jest by focusing on executing tests in real browsers, providing a more integrated environment for testing browser-specific features. However, it lacks the monorepo-specific enhancements provided by @nrwl/jest.
What is Nx?
π Extensible Dev Tools for Monorepos.
Nx Helps You
Use Modern Tools
Using Nx, you can add TypeScript, Cypress, Jest, Prettier, and Nest into your dev workflow. Nx sets up these tools and allows you to use them seamlessly. Nx fully integrates with the other modern tools you already use and love.
Build Full-Stack Applications
With Nx, you can build full-stack applications using modern frameworks. You can share code between the frontend and the backend. And you can use the same build/test/serve
commands throughout the whole dev experience.
Develop like Google, Facebook, and Microsoft
With Nx, you can develop multiple full-stack applications holistically and share code between them all in the same workspace. Nx provides advanced tools which help you scale your enterprise development. Nx also helps enforce your organizationβs standards and community best practices.
Getting Started
Creating an Nx Workspace
Using npx
npx create-nx-workspace myworkspace
Using npm init
npm init nx-workspace myworkspace
Using yarn create
yarn create nx-workspace myworkspace
If it's your first Nx project, the command will recommend you to install @nrwl/cli
globally, so you can invoke nx
directly without going through yarn or npm.
Adding Nx to an Existing Angular CLI workspace
If you are an Angular user, you can also add Nx to your existing Angular CLI project by running:
ng add @nrwl/workspace
Creating First Application
By default, an Nx workspace starts blank. There are no applications to build, serve, and test. To create one, you need to add capabilities to the workspace.
To add a web components app, run:
yarn add @nrwl/web
nx g @nrwl/web:app myapp
npm install --save-dev @nrwl/web
nx g @nrwl/web:app myapp
To add an Angular app, run:
yarn add @nrwl/angular
nx g @nrwl/angular:app myapp
npm install --save-dev @nrwl/angular
nx g @nrwl/angular:app myapp
To add a React app, run:
yarn add @nrwl/react
nx g @nrwl/react:app myapp
npm install --save-dev @nrwl/react
nx g @nrwl/react:app myapp
If nx g
fails, use: yarn nx g @nrwl/web:app myapp
or npm run nx -- g @nrwl/web:app myapp
.
Regardless of what framework you chose, the resulting file tree will look like this:
<workspace name>/
βββ apps/
βΒ Β βββ myapp/
βΒ Β βββ myapp-e2e/
βββ libs/
βββ tools/
βββ nx.json
βββ package.json
βββ tsconfig.json
βββ tslint.json
Serving Application
- Run
nx serve myapp
to serve the newly generated application! - Run
nx test myapp
to test it. - Run
nx e2e myapp-e2e
to run e2e tests for it.
Angular users can also run ng g/serve/test/e2e
.
You are good to go!
Quick Start & Documentation
Documentation
Books
Videos
Talks
Misc
Want to help?
If you want to file a bug or submit a PR, read up on our guidelines for contributing.
Core Team