Enforce Module Boundaries

If you partition your code into well-defined cohesive units, even a small organization will end up with a dozen apps and dozens or hundreds of libs. If all of them can depend on each other freely, chaos will ensue, and the workspace will become unmanageable.

To help with that Nx uses code analysis to make sure projects can only depend on each other's well-defined public API. It also allows you to declaratively impose constraints on how projects can depend on each other.

Project APIs

Nx provides an enforce-module-boundaries eslint rule that enforces the public API of projects in the repo. Each project defines its public API in an index.ts (or index.js) file. If another project tries to import a variable from a file deep within a different project, an error will be thrown during linting.

To set up the lint rule, install these dependencies:

npm i @nx/eslint-plugin @nx/devkit

Nx 15 and lower use @nrwl/ instead of @nx/

And configure the rule in your root .eslintrc.json file:

.eslintrc.json
1{ 2 "plugins": ["@nx"], 3 // ... 4 "rules": { 5 "@nx/enforce-module-boundaries": [ 6 "error", 7 { 8 /* options */ 9 } 10 ] 11 } 12} 13
Nx 15 and lower use @nrwl/ instead of @nx/

Tags

Nx comes with a generic mechanism for expressing constraints on project dependencies: tags.

First, use your project configuration (in project.json or package.json) to annotate your projects with tags. In this example, we will use three tags: scope:client. scope:admin, scope:shared.

client/package.json
1{ 2 // ... more project configuration here 3 "nx": { 4 "tags": ["scope:client"] 5 } 6} 7
admin/package.json
1{ 2 // ... more project configuration here 3 "nx": { 4 "tags": ["scope:admin"] 5 } 6} 7
utils/package.json
1{ 2 // ... more project configuration here 3 "nx": { 4 "tags": ["scope:shared"] 5 } 6} 7

Next, you should update your root lint configuration:

  • If you are using ESLint you should look for an existing rule entry in your root .eslintrc.json called "@nx/enforce-module-boundaries" and you should update the "depConstraints":
.eslintrc.json
1{ 2 // ... more ESLint config here 3 4 // @nx/enforce-module-boundaries should already exist within an "overrides" block using `"files": ["*.ts", "*.tsx", "*.js", "*.jsx",]` 5 "@nx/enforce-module-boundaries": [ 6 "error", 7 { 8 "allow": [], 9 // update depConstraints based on your tags 10 "depConstraints": [ 11 { 12 "sourceTag": "scope:shared", 13 "onlyDependOnLibsWithTags": ["scope:shared"] 14 }, 15 { 16 "sourceTag": "scope:admin", 17 "onlyDependOnLibsWithTags": ["scope:shared", "scope:admin"] 18 }, 19 { 20 "sourceTag": "scope:client", 21 "onlyDependOnLibsWithTags": ["scope:shared", "scope:client"] 22 } 23 ] 24 } 25 ] 26 27 // ... more ESLint config here 28} 29
Nx 15 and lower use @nrwl/ instead of @nx/

With these constraints in place, scope:client projects can only depend on projects with scope:client or scope:shared. And scope:admin projects can only depend on projects with scope:admin or scope:shared. So scope:client and scope:admin cannot depend on each other.

Projects without any tags cannot depend on any other projects. If you try to violate the constraints, you will get an error when linting:

1A project tagged with "scope:admin" can only depend on projects 2tagged with "scoped:shared" or "scope:admin". 3

The exception to this rule is by explicitly allowing all tags (see below).

Tag formats

  • *: allow all tags

Example: projects with any tags (including untagged) can depend on any other project.

1{ 2 "sourceTag": "*", 3 "onlyDependOnLibsWithTags": ["*"] 4} 5
  • string: allow exact tags

Example: projects tagged with scope:client can only depend on projects tagged with scope:util.

1{ 2 "sourceTag": "scope:client", 3 "onlyDependOnLibsWithTags": ["scope:util"] 4} 5
  • regex: allow tags matching the regular expression

Example: projects tagged with scope:client can depend on projects with a tag matching the regular expression /^scope.*/. In this case, the scope:util, scope:client, etc. are all allowed tags for dependencies.

1{ 2 "sourceTag": "scope:client", 3 "onlyDependOnLibsWithTags": ["/^scope.*/"] 4} 5
  • glob: allow tags matching the glob

Example: projects with a tag starting with scope: can depend on projects with a tag that starts with scope:*. In this case scope:a, scope:b, etc are all allowed tags for dependencies.

1{ 2 "sourceTag": "scope:*", 3 "onlyDependOnLibsWithTags": ["scope:*"] 4} 5

Globbing supports only the basic use of *. For more complex scenarios use the regex above.