Launch Templates
A launch template defines the setup steps Nx Agents will run before running tasks. A custom launch template isn't required to use Nx Agents. Nx Cloud provides several pre-built launch templates for common use-cases. You can view available templates in the nx-cloud-workflows
repository.
Pre-Built Launch Templates/nrwl/nx-cloud-workflows/tree/main/launch-templates
Getting Started with Custom Launch Templates
The easiest way to create a new custom launch template is to modify one of the pre-built ones. To do that, create a file in the .nx/workflows
folder and copy one of the pre-built templates. You can name the file any way you want (e.g., agents.yaml
) and customize the steps as needed.
Launch Template Structure
launch-templates
A map
of launch template configurations. This value is required.
1launch-templates:
2
launch-templates.<template-name>
The name of your custom launch template. This name is used via --distribute-on="<# of agents> <template-name>"
when starting the ci run. Supports one to many uniquely named launch templates. Multiple launch templates can be useful for setting up different toolchains (rust, java, node versions) or resources classes for your workspace needs.
1launch-templates:
2 template-one:
3 template-two:
4
1nx-cloud start-ci-run --distribute-on="3 template-one"
2
launch-templates.<template-name>.resource-class
A launch template's resource-class
defines the memory and vCPUs available to each agent machine.
1launch-templates:
2 template-one:
3 resource-class: 'docker_linux_amd64/medium'
4
The following resource classes are available:
docker_linux_amd64/small
docker_linux_amd64/medium
docker_linux_amd64/medium+
docker_linux_amd64/large
docker_linux_amd64/large+
docker_linux_amd64/extra_large
docker_linux_amd64/extra_large+
docker_linux_arm64/medium
docker_linux_arm64/large
docker_linux_arm64/extra_large
windows/medium
See their detailed description and pricing at nx.dev/pricing.
launch-templates.<template-name>.image
A launch template's image
defines the available base software for the agent machine.
1launch-templates:
2 template-one:
3 image: 'ubuntu22.04-node20.11-v9'
4
Nx Cloud provides the following images:
Changes added in previous images are included in newer images unless otherwise denoted Images also have go 1.22 installed
ubuntu22.04-node20.11-v5
- added elevated permission access via
sudo
- added elevated permission access via
ubuntu22.04-node20.11-v6
corepack
is enabled by default- default global package manager versions:
npm
v10yarn
v1pnpm
v8- See how to install a specific package manger version
ubuntu22.04-node20.11-v7
- added java version 17
ubuntu22.04-node20.11-v9
- added nvm
windows-2022
Note: Windows-based images can only run on Windows-based resource classes.
Enterprise accounts can use custom images.
launch-templates.<template-name>.env
A launch template's env
defines a map
of environment variable names and values to be available within all steps of the specific launch template.
1launch-templates:
2 template-one:
3 env:
4 MY_ENV_VAR: 'my-var-value'
5
launch-templates.<template-name>.init-steps
A launch template's init-steps
defines the series of steps to perform before an Nx Agent runs. Without a defined init-steps
the Nx Agent is unable to process any tasks.
Typical init-steps
perform actions such as checking out your workspace source code and installing any necessary dependencies. Any extra setup your workspace needs to run should be defined as an init-step
. Once all steps run successfully, the agent machine will inform Nx Cloud that it is ready to accept tasks.
1launch-templates:
2 template-one:
3 init-steps:
4
launch-templates.<template-name>.init-steps[*].name
An init-step's name
is the label that will be reflected in the Nx Cloud UI. name
can be used in conjunction with uses
and script
1launch-templates:
2 template-one:
3 init-steps:
4 - name: 'My Helpful Step Name'
5
launch-templates.<template-name>.init-steps[*].uses
When defined, specifies an existing step file to be used. Cannot be used when script
is also defined
You can find the list of Nx Cloud reusable steps here. If you cannot find a reusable step that suits your needs, you can create your own custom steps.
1launch-templates:
2 template-one:
3 init-steps:
4 - uses: 'nrwl/nx-cloud-workflows/v4/workflow-steps/checkout/main.yaml'
5 - name: 'Install Node Modules'
6 uses: 'nrwl/nx-cloud-workflows/v4/workflow-steps/install-node-modules/main.yaml'
7
launch-templates.<template-name>.init-steps[*].script
When defined, allows an inline script to be run. Cannot be used when uses
is also defined
1launch-templates:
2 template-one:
3 init-steps:
4 - name: 'Print Node Version and PATH'
5 script: |
6 node -v
7 echo $PATH
8
launch-templates.<template-name>.init-steps[*].env
An init-step's env
is similar to the launch-template.<template-name>.env
, except the environment variable map
is scoped for the current step only.
1launch-templates:
2 template-one:
3 init-steps:
4 - name: 'Print Env'
5 env:
6 MY_STEP_ENV: 'step-env-var'
7 script: |
8 echo $MY_STEP_ENV # prints "step-env-var"
9
launch-templates.<template-name>.init-steps[*].inputs
An init-step's inputs
is defined by the step file in the launch-template.<template-name>.init-steps[*].uses
property. Refer to the step file's documentation for specific inputs.
Validation can also be done to validate the step against the step file's defined inputs
1launch-templates:
2 template-one:
3 init-steps:
4 - name: Restore Node Modules Cache
5 uses: 'nrwl/nx-cloud-workflows/v4/workflow-steps/cache/main.yaml'
6 inputs:
7 key: 'package-lock.json|yarn.lock|pnpm-lock.yaml'
8 paths: 'node_modules'
9 base-branch: 'main'
10
Full Example
This is an example of a launch template using all pre-built features:
1launch-templates:
2 # Custom template name, the name is referenced via --distribute-on="3 my-linux-medium-js"
3 # You can define as many templates as you need, commonly used to make different sizes or toolchains depending on your workspace needs
4 my-linux-medium-js:
5 # see the available resource list below
6 resource-class: 'docker_linux_amd64/medium'
7 # see the available image list below
8 image: 'ubuntu22.04-node20.11-v9'
9 # Define environment variables shared among all steps
10 env:
11 MY_ENV_VAR: shared
12 # list out steps to run on the agent before accepting tasks
13 # the agent will need a copy of the source code and dependencies installed
14 init-steps:
15 - name: Checkout
16 # using a reusable step in an external GitHub repo,
17 # this step is provided by Nx Cloud: https://github.com/nrwl/nx-cloud-workflows/tree/main/workflow-steps
18 uses: 'nrwl/nx-cloud-workflows/v4/workflow-steps/checkout/main.yaml'
19 - name: Restore Node Modules Cache
20 uses: 'nrwl/nx-cloud-workflows/v4/workflow-steps/cache/main.yaml'
21 # the cache step requires configuration via env vars
22 # https://github.com/nrwl/nx-cloud-workflows/tree/main/workflow-steps/cache#options
23 inputs:
24 key: 'package-lock.json|yarn.lock|pnpm-lock.yaml'
25 paths: 'node_modules'
26 base-branch: 'main'
27 - name: Restore Browser Binary Cache
28 uses: 'nrwl/nx-cloud-workflows/v4/workflow-steps/cache/main.yaml'
29 inputs:
30 key: 'package-lock.json|yarn.lock|pnpm-lock.yaml|"browsers"'
31 paths: |
32 '~/.cache/Cypress'
33 '~/.cache/ms-playwright'
34 base-branch: 'main'
35 - name: Install Node Modules
36 uses: 'nrwl/nx-cloud-workflows/v4/workflow-steps/install-node-modules/main.yaml'
37 - name: Install Browsers (if needed)
38 uses: 'nrwl/nx-cloud-workflows/v4/workflow-steps/install-browsers/main.yaml'
39 # You can also run a custom script to configure various things on the agent machine
40 - name: Run a custom script
41 script: |
42 git config --global user.email test@test.com
43 git config --global user.name "Test Test"
44 # You can also set any other env vars to be passed to the following steps
45 # by setting their value in the `$NX_CLOUD_ENV` file.
46 # Most commonly for redefining PATH for further steps
47 - name: Setting env
48 script: |
49 # Update PATH with custom value
50 echo "PATH=$HOME/my-folder:$PATH" >> $NX_CLOUD_ENV
51 - name: Print path from previous step
52 # will include my-folder
53 script: echo $PATH
54 - name: Define env var for a step
55 env:
56 MY_ENV_VAR: 'env-var-for-step'
57 # will print env-var-for-step
58 script: echo $MY_ENV_VAR
59 # after you're last step Nx Agents will start accepting tasks to process
60 # no need to manually start up the agent yourself
61
62 # another template which does the same as above, but with a large resource class
63 # You're not required to define a template for every resource class, only define what you need!
64 my-linux-large-js:
65 resource-class: 'docker_linux_amd64/large'
66 image: 'ubuntu22.04-node20.11-v9'
67 env:
68 MY_ENV_VAR: shared
69 init-steps:
70 - name: Checkout
71 uses: 'nrwl/nx-cloud-workflows/v4/workflow-steps/checkout/main.yaml'
72 - name: Restore Node Modules Cache
73 uses: 'nrwl/nx-cloud-workflows/v4/workflow-steps/cache/main.yaml'
74 inputs:
75 key: 'package-lock.json|yarn.lock|pnpm-lock.yaml'
76 paths: 'node_modules'
77 base-branch: 'main'
78 - name: Restore Browser Binary Cache
79 uses: 'nrwl/nx-cloud-workflows/v4/workflow-steps/cache/main.yaml'
80 inputs:
81 key: 'package-lock.json|yarn.lock|pnpm-lock.yaml|"browsers"'
82 paths: |
83 '~/.cache/Cypress'
84 '~/.cache/ms-playwright'
85 base-branch: 'main'
86 - name: Install Node Modules
87 uses: 'nrwl/nx-cloud-workflows/v4/workflow-steps/install-node-modules/main.yaml'
88 - name: Install Browsers (if needed)
89 uses: 'nrwl/nx-cloud-workflows/v4/workflow-steps/install-browsers/main.yaml'
90 - name: Run a custom script
91 script: |
92 git config --global user.email test@test.com
93 git config --global user.name "Test Test"
94 - name: Setting env
95 script: |
96 echo "PATH=$HOME/my-folder:$PATH" >> $NX_CLOUD_ENV
97 - name: Print path from previous step
98 script: echo $PATH
99 - name: Define env var for a step
100 env:
101 MY_ENV_VAR: 'env-var-for-step'
102 script: echo $MY_ENV_VAR
103 # template that installs rust
104 my-linux-rust-large:
105 resource-class: 'docker_linux_amd64/large'
106 image: 'ubuntu22.04-node20.11-v9'
107 init-steps:
108 - name: Checkout
109 uses: 'nrwl/nx-cloud-workflows/v4/workflow-steps/checkout/main.yaml'
110 - name: Restore Node Modules Cache
111 uses: 'nrwl/nx-cloud-workflows/v4/workflow-steps/cache/main.yaml'
112 inputs:
113 key: 'package-lock.json|yarn.lock|pnpm-lock.yaml'
114 paths: 'node_modules'
115 base-branch: 'main'
116 - name: Install Node Modules
117 uses: 'nrwl/nx-cloud-workflows/v4/workflow-steps/install-node-modules/main.yaml'
118 - name: Install Rust
119 script: |
120 curl --proto '=https' --tlsv1.3 https://sh.rustup.rs -sSf | sh -s -- -y
121 source "$HOME/.cargo/env"
122 rustup toolchain install 1.70.0
123 # persist cargo bin into PATH
124 echo "PATH=$HOME/.cargo/bin:$PATH" >> $NX_CLOUD_ENV
125
These templates can be used by passing the number of agents desired, and the template name via --distribute-on
when starting your CI run.
1nx-cloud start-ci-run --distribute-on="4 my-linux-medium-js"
2
1nx-cloud start-ci-run --distribute-on="4 my-linux-large-js"
2
1nx-cloud start-ci-run --distribute-on="4 my-linux-large-rust"
2
Validating Launch Templates
Before Nx Cloud can validate your custom templates, you must first commit any changes to these templates to your source control repository. Running the validation command from a CI is the recommended approach.
After creating your custom launch template, it's recommended to validate it. This ensures that all necessary fields within the launch template and all respective inputs within each step are appropriately defined.
To do this, run the nx-cloud validate
command, with the path to the launch template:
❯
nx-cloud validate --workflow-file=./.nx/workflows/agents.yaml
Pass Environment Variables to Agents
If you need to send environment variables to agents, you can use the --with-env-vars flag on the nx-cloud start-ci-run
command. You can pass a specific list of environment variables like this:
1nx-cloud start-ci-run --distribute-on="8 linux-medium-js" --with-env-vars="VAR1,VAR2"
2
Pass Values Between Steps
If you need to pass a value from one step to another step, such as assigning the value to an existing or new environment variable. You can write to the NX_CLOUD_ENV
environment file.
Commonly used for redefining the PATH
or setting options for tooling.
1launch-templates:
2 my-template-name:
3 init-steps:
4 - name: Set PATH
5 script: echo "PATH=$HOME/.cargo/bin:$PATH" >> $NX_CLOUD_ENV
6 - name: Check PATH
7 script: |
8 # now contains $HOME/.cargo/bin
9 echo $PATH
10 # can invoke cargo directly because it's in the PATH now.
11 cargo --version
12
Private NPM Registry
If your project consumes packages from a private registry, you'll have to set up an authentication step in a custom launch template and authenticate like you normally would, usually this is via a .npmrc
or .yarnrc
file. You can pass the auth token from your main agent, so it's available to the agent machines.
1launch-templates:
2 my-linux-medium-js:
3 resource-class: 'docker_linux_amd64/medium'
4 image: 'ubuntu22.04-node20.11-v9'
5 init-steps:
6 - name: Checkout
7 uses: 'nrwl/nx-cloud-workflows/v4/workflow-steps/checkout/main.yaml'
8 - name: Auth to Registry
9 script: |
10 # create .npmrc with @myorg scoped packages pointing to GH npm registry
11 echo "@myorg:registry=https://npm.pkg.github.com" >> .npmrc
12 echo "//npm.pkg.github.com/:_authToken=${SOME_AUTH_TOKEN}" >> .npmrc
13 - name: Install Node Modules
14 uses: 'nrwl/nx-cloud-workflows/v4/workflow-steps/install-node-modules/main.yaml'
15
Pass SOME_AUTH_TOKEN
via --with-env-vars
1# this assumes SOME_AUTH_TOKEN is already defined on the main agent
2nx-cloud start-ci-run --distribute-on="5 my-linux-medium-js" --with-env-vars="SOME_AUTH_TOKEN"
3
Custom Node Version
Nx Agents come with node LTS installed. If you want to use a different version, you can add a step to install the desired node version.
Nx Cloud provides a pre-built step to install a custom node version within your workflow. This step is available as of v4
of the workflow steps and requires the minimum image version to be ubuntu22.04-node20.11-v9
.
1launch-templates:
2 node-21:
3 resource-class: 'docker_linux_amd64/medium'
4 # note the image version of v9,
5 # earlier versions of the base image will not work
6 image: 'ubuntu22.04-node20.11-v9'
7 init-steps:
8 - name: Checkout
9 uses: 'nrwl/nx-cloud-workflows/v4/workflow-steps/checkout/main.yaml'
10 - name: Install Node
11 # note the step is only released as of v4 of the workflow steps
12 uses: 'nrwl/nx-cloud-workflows/v4/workflow-steps/install-node/main.yaml'
13 inputs:
14 # can omit value if a '.nvmrc' file is within the root of the repo
15 node_version: '21'
16
Specific Package Manager Version
Nx Agents have corepack enabled by default, allowing you to define the yarn or pnpm version via the package.json
.
1{
2 "packageManager": "yarn@4.1.1"
3}
4
Currently, corepack only supports yarn or pnpm as package managers. If you need to use a specific npm version, you will need to create a custom launch template and install the specific npm version, i.e. npm install -g npm@<version>
Installing Packages on Nx Agents
You can use apt
to install popular linux packages. This is helpful in streamlining setting up various toolchains needed for your workspace.
For example, you can install the GitHub CLI on the agents if needed.
1launch-templates:
2 my-linux-medium-js:
3 resource-class: 'docker_linux_amd64/medium'
4 image: 'ubuntu22.04-node20.11-v9'
5 init-steps:
6 - name: Install Extras
7 script: |
8 sudo apt install gh unzip zip -y
9
If you're trying to install a package that isn't available on apt
, check that packages install steps for Debian base linux. Usually there are a handful of installation scripts that can be used similar to nvm
Dynamic Changesets
NxCloud can calculate how big your pull request is based on how many projects in your workspace it affects. You can then configure Nx Agents to dynamically use a different number of agents based on your changeset size.
Here we define a small
, medium
and large
distribution strategy:
1distribute-on:
2 small-changeset: 3 linux-medium-js
3 medium-changeset: 8 linux-medium-js
4 large-changeset: 12 linux-medium-js
5
Then you can pass the path to the file to the --distribute-on
parameter.
1nx-cloud start-ci-run --distribute-on=".nx/workflows/dynamic-changesets.yaml"
2
Debugging
You can add steps to your template which print information about your workspace, toolchains, or any other needs. Below are some common steps people use for debugging such as running nx commands, printing file contents and/or listing directory contents.
Exercise caution when printing out environment variables, they will be shown in plain text.
1launch-templates:
2 my-linux-medium-js:
3 resource-class: 'docker_linux_amd64/medium'
4 image: 'ubuntu22.04-node20.11-v9'
5 env:
6 # enable verbose logging for all steps
7 NX_VERBOSE_LOGGING: true
8 init-steps:
9 - name: 'Debug: Print Nx Report'
10 script: |
11 nx report
12 - name: 'Debug: List Directory Contents'
13 script: |
14 echo $HOME
15 ls -la $HOME
16 output_dir=$HOME/dist
17 # if output directory exists list it's contents
18 if [ -d output_dir ]; then
19 ls -la $output_dir
20 else
21 echo "$output_dir does not exist"
22 fi
23 - name: 'Debug: Show File Contents'
24 script: |
25 cat $HOME/.profile
26 - name: 'Debug: Check For Checkout Files'
27 script: |
28 git diff
29 - name: 'Debug: Print Versions'
30 script: |
31 # note if you use yarn and try to run pnpm, corepack might throw an error at you
32 # saying you're using the wrong package manager, in that case just remove the usage of pnpm
33 echo "Versions:"
34 echo "Node: $(node -v)"
35 echo "NPM: $(npm -v)"
36 echo "Yarn: $(yarn -v)"
37 echo "PNPM: $(pnpm -v)"
38 echo "Golang: $(go version)"
39 echo "Java: $(javac --version)"
40 # add any other toolchain you want
41 - name: 'Debug: Print env'
42 script: |
43 # !!! DO NOT RUN THIS IF YOU HAVE PASSWORD/ACCESS TOKENS IN YOUR ENV VARS !!!
44 # this will print your env as plain text values to the terminal
45 env
46 # This is a safer approach to prevent leaking tokens/passwords
47 echo "SOME_VALUE: $SOME_VALUE"
48