Example of a Turborepo running on Netlify. For more details, see PR#2 https://github.com/raisiqueira/turbo-netlify/pull/2
This is an official Yarn v1 starter turborepo.
This turborepo uses Yarn as a package manager. It includes the following packages/apps:
docs
: a Next.js appweb
: another Next.js appui
: a stub React component library shared by both web
and docs
applicationsconfig
: eslint
configurations (includes eslint-config-next
and eslint-config-prettier
)tsconfig
: tsconfig.json
s used throughout the monorepoEach package/app is 100% TypeScript.
This turborepo has some additional tools already setup for you:
This repository is used in the npx create-turbo
command, and selected when choosing which package manager you wish to use with your monorepo (Yarn).
Setup each app using Netlify CLI (netlify init
into app folder) or Netlify UI pointing to the same repository.
In this example, I configured two apps (using NextJS).
After configuring each app, you can enable multiple commit notifications in Netlify UI.
Team settings > Sites > Notifications > Commit status notifications
.
So, when you open a pull request, you'll get a notification in your app.
Use the same cache for all apps.
To build all apps and packages, run the following command:
yarn run build
To develop all apps and packages, run the following command:
yarn run dev
Turborepo can use a technique known as Remote Caching (Beta) to share cache artifacts across machines, enabling you to share build caches with your team and CI/CD pipelines.
By default, Turborepo will cache locally. To enable Remote Caching (Beta) you will need an account with Vercel. If you don't have an account you can create one, then enter the following commands:
npx turbo login
This will authenticate the Turborepo CLI with your Vercel account.
Next, you can link your Turborepo to your Remote Cache by running the following command from the root of your turborepo:
npx turbo link
Learn more about the power of Turborepo: