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Nx Blog

Sharing Tailwind CSS Styles Across Apps in a Monorepo | Nx Blog How SiriusXM Stays Competitive by Iterating and Getting to Market Fast | Nx Blog Agentic Experience Is the New Developer Experience | Nx Blog Nx Joins the Linux Foundation and the Agentic AI Foundation | Nx Blog A Monorepo Is NOT a Monolith | Nx Blog Why we deleted (most of) our MCP tools | Nx Blog Teach Your AI Agent How to Work in a Monorepo | Nx Blog How Broadcom stays efficient and nimble with monorepos | Nx Blog Why Monorepos are King in the Age of AI | Nx Blog Nx 2026 Roadmap: Expanding Agent Autonomy, Improving Performance, Better Polyglot and More | Nx Blog End to End Autonomous AI Agent Workflows with Nx | Nx Blog Autonomous Agents at Scale | Nx Blog Scaling 700+ Projects: How Nx Became a 'No-Brainer' for Caseware | Nx Blog Configure Tailwind v4 with Angular in an Nx Monorepo | Nx Blog The Missing Multiplier for AI Agent Productivity | Nx Blog A Year of Nx Webinars | Nx Blog Wrapping Up 2025 | Nx Blog Nx 22.3 Release: Angular 21 Support, tsgo Compiler, and Prettier v3 | Nx Blog Nx Cloud Release: Agent Resource Usage | Nx Blog Nx Platform Outperforms DIY Cache by 5x | Nx Blog An Nx Carol: Past, Present, and Future of Your Monorepo | Nx Blog Nx 22.1 Release: Terminal UI on Windows, Storybook 10, Vitest 4, and more! | Nx Blog The Compounding Effect: How Nx Features Multiply Performance Gains | Nx Blog 10 Monorepo Myths Debunked: Separating Fact from Fiction | Nx Blog Nx Cloud Release: Enterprise Task Analytics | Nx Blog Watch and Rebuild Storybook Dependencies with Nx | Nx Blog Book - React for Enterprise: Timeless Architecture for Enterprise Apps | Nx Blog Beyond Remote Cache: Unlock 70% More CI Performance | Nx Blog Nx 22 Release: Expanding the build platform | Nx Blog What's the Point of Generating All This Code If You Can't Merge It? | Nx Blog What's New in Nx Self-Healing CI | Nx Blog Nx Highlights: Smarter AI integration, all-new graph UI, and big new versions of your favorite tools | Nx Blog Making the Case for Smarter Monorepos, and How to Not Get Fooled by Myths | Nx Blog Integrating Biome in 20 Minutes | Nx Blog S1ngularity - What Happened, How We Responded, What We Learned | Nx Blog Stop Babysitting Your PRs: Self-Healing CI Cuts Time to Green by 50% | Nx Blog UKG Unifies Their Codebase and Eliminates CI Overhead to Focus on Customer Value | Nx Blog How Git Worktrees Changed My AI Agent Workflow | Nx Blog Nx Cloud Workspace Graph: See Your Organization's Code Structure Like Never Before | Nx Blog Seamless Java Deployment in Nx Using Docker | Nx Blog Getting Mobile Into Your Monorepo: Android + Nx | Nx Blog Polyglot Projects Made Easy: Integrating Spring Boot into an Nx Workspace | Nx Blog The Journey of the Nx Plugin for Gradle: From Prototype to Production | Nx Blog Combining Predictability and Intelligence With Nx Generators and AI | Nx Blog A New UI For The Humble Terminal | Nx Blog Continuous tasks are a huge DX improvement | Nx Blog New and Improved Module Federation Experience with Nx | Nx Blog A New UI for Nx Migration | Nx Blog Enterprise Angular Monorepo Patterns | Nx Blog Using Rspack with Angular | Nx Blog Angular Architecture Guide To Building Maintainable Applications at Scale | Nx Blog Modern Angular Testing with Nx | Nx Blog Nx Update: 20.5 | Nx Blog Are Monorepos the Answer to Better AI-Assisted Development? | Nx Blog Making Cursor Smarter with an MCP Server For Nx Monorepos | Nx Blog React Development for 2025 | Nx Blog Using Apollo GraphQL in an Nx Workspace | Nx Blog Angular State Management for 2025 | Nx Blog Tailoring Nx for Your Organization | Nx Blog Nx Cloud Pipelines Come To Nx Console | Nx Blog Define the relationship with monorepos | Nx Blog See your affected project graph in Nx Cloud | Nx Blog Handling CORS In Your Workspace | Nx Blog Improve your architecture and CI pipeline times with Nx projects | Nx Blog Announcing Nx 20 | Nx Blog Introducing Nx Powerpack | Nx Blog Nx 19.5 is here! 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Custom Task Runners and Self-Hosted Caching Changes | Nx Blog
Victor Savkin · 2025-04-01 · via Nx Blog

TL;DR: Nx remains free for everyone who chooses to self-host their own cache. There will be two ways to self-host:

  1. Maximum independence and control: An OpenAPI specification so you can run your own cache server implementation on your own terms.
  2. Maximum convenience: Free plugins for each major cloud storage provider (and arbitrary file system storage), all maintained by us.

These options will be released before Nx 21.


So, what happened?

In September 2024, we announced that custom task runners would be deprecated and would reach end-of-life in April 2025. This announcement is consistent with how we typically design and ship. We create a draft proposal (for example, a new API) that doesn't affect anyone immediately and give ourselves 6 to 12 months to gather feedback from the community, with real teams. After which, once it becomes stable, we finalize the design. I strongly believe in designing-while-doing and we've found that continuous-thinking-without-doing re-enforces ivory tower solutions.

In this instance, we did not spend enough time engaging with the community on a couple key concerns. Our communication around this situation also fell short and I sincerely apologize for the confusion and concern this caused. I will outline the feedback we heard below and explain what we're improving to ensure this does not happen again.

1. "We don't want open source capabilities to be taken away."

While we're still deprecating the older custom task runners API, our mistake was in not providing one-for-one replacement. To address this, we are introducing new APIs to replace the old one — fully supporting everything the previous implementation offered, including free self-hosted caching.

Self-Hosted Cache API RFC

We have published a new RFC detailing a custom self-hosted cache based on an OpenAPI specification. This will be available before Nx 21, ensuring a smooth migration path for those who are looking for full control.

New preTasksExecution and postTasksExecution API

Some teams used custom task runners for non-cache-related workflows, and removing them created gaps in functionality. We have released open-source preTasksExecution and postTasksExecution hooks to provide the same capabilities in a more composable way. More details in our docs. We also added detailed instructions to migrate to this new API if you've been using custom task runners for such use cases in the past.

We worked closely with large teams that have advanced use cases to ensure they can still accomplish everything they did before.

A Clear Commitment Moving Forward

Our commitment is that no major open-source feature or API will be replaced with a non-open-source alternative. Some features will inevitably become obsolete over time, but when that happens, we will provide clear deprecation notices and migration strategies. Nx will continue to evolve, but removing an old API will never be a means to move users toward a paid feature.

We will keep developing Nx Cloud and other premium offerings for teams that need enterprise-scale solutions, but we remain focused on a strong open-source foundation that allows teams to use and scale Nx without requiring paid features.

Nx open-source remains a primary focus for us as a company.

In addition to updating the API, we believe the first-party packages we offer are the best option for most organizations using self-hosted cache today – so we've made them free for everyone. The activation is simple and can be done in the CLI. Full refunds will be issued to anyone who paid for these packages during this transition.

Why is there an activation process? It simply helps us better understand our users as we continue to improve our tools. You can also use the OpenAPI specification to run your own cache – for complete independence.

2. "We want more input into the roadmap."

We recognize that some of these changes felt abrupt. To address that, we've put the following measures in place to improve how we involve the community in major decisions:

Moving Forward

The community's enthusiasm is what makes Nx successful, and we're very grateful for it. Good developer tools aren't built in isolation; they come from working together, listening, and refining as we go. The conversations we had over the past few months have helped us shape a better solution – one that works for more teams while keeping Nx fast and powerful.

A huge thank you to everyone who shared their thoughts and helped push Nx forward - we wouldn't be where we are without you!

  • Victor Savkin and the Nx Team