The angular.json
file at the root level of an Angular workspace provides workspace-wide and project-specific configuration defaults. These are used for build and development tools provided by the Angular CLI.
Path values given in the configuration are relative to the root workspace directory.
General JSON structure
At the top-level of angular.json
, a few properties configure the workspace and a projects
section contains the remaining per-project configuration options.
You can override Angular CLI defaults set at the workspace level through defaults set at the project level.
You can also override defaults set at the project level using the command line.
The following properties, at the top-level of the file, configure the workspace.
Properties | Details |
---|---|
version |
The configuration-file version. |
newProjectRoot |
Path where new projects are created through tools like ng generate application or ng generate library . Path can be absolute or relative to the workspace directory. Defaults to projects |
cli |
A set of options that customize the Angular CLI. See Angular CLI configuration options below. |
schematics |
A set of schematics that customize the ng generate sub-command option defaults for this workspace. See schematics below. |
projects |
Contains a subsection for each application or library in the workspace, with project-specific configuration options. |
The initial application that you create with ng new app-name
is listed under "projects":
When you create a library project with ng generate library
, the library project is also added to the projects
section.
HELPFUL: The projects
section of the configuration file does not correspond exactly to the workspace file structure.
- The initial application created by
ng new
is at the top level of the workspace file structure. - Other applications and libraries are under the
projects
directory by default.
For more information, see Workspace and project file structure.
Angular CLI configuration options
The following properties are a set of options that customize the Angular CLI.
Property | Details | Value type | Default value |
---|---|---|---|
analytics |
Share anonymous usage data with the Angular Team. A boolean value indicates whether or not to share data, while a UUID string shares data using a pseudonymous identifier. | boolean |
string |
cache |
Control persistent disk cache used by Angular CLI Builders. | Cache options | {} |
schematicCollections |
List schematics collections to use in ng generate . |
string[] |
[] |
packageManager |
The preferred package manager tool to use. | npm |
cnpm |
warnings |
Control Angular CLI specific console warnings. | Warnings options | {} |
Cache options
Property | Details | Value type | Default value |
---|---|---|---|
enabled |
Configure whether disk caching is enabled for builds. | boolean |
true |
environment |
Configure in which environment disk cache is enabled. * ci enables caching only in continuous integration (CI) environments.* local enables caching only outside of CI environments.* all enables caching everywhere. |
local |
ci |
path |
The directory used to stored cache results. | string |
.angular/cache |
Warnings options
Property | Details | Value type | Default value |
---|---|---|---|
versionMismatch |
Show a warning when the global Angular CLI version is newer than the local one. | boolean |
true |
Project configuration options
The following top-level configuration properties are available for each project, under projects['project-name']
.
Property | Details | Value type | Default value |
---|---|---|---|
root |
The root directory for this project's files, relative to the workspace directory. Empty for the initial application, which resides at the top level of the workspace. | string |
None (required) |
projectType |
One of "application" or "library" An application can run independently in a browser, while a library cannot. | application |
library |
sourceRoot |
The root directory for this project's source files. | string |
'' |
prefix |
A string that Angular prepends to selectors when generating new components, directives, and pipes using ng generate . Can be customized to identify an application or feature area. |
string |
'app' |
schematics |
A set of schematics that customize the ng generate sub-command option defaults for this project. See the Generation schematics section. |
See schematics | {} |
architect |
Configuration defaults for Architect builder targets for this project. | See Configuring builder targets | {} |
Schematics
Angular schematics are instructions for modifying a project by adding new files or modifying existing files. These can be configured by mapping the schematic name to a set of default options.
The "name" of a schematic is in the format: <schematic-package>:<schematic-name>
.
Schematics for the default Angular CLI ng generate
sub-commands are collected in the package @schematics/angular
.
For example, the schematic for generating a component with ng generate component
is @schematics/angular:component
.
The fields given in the schematic's schema correspond to the allowed command-line argument values and defaults for the Angular CLI sub-command options.
You can update your workspace schema file to set a different default for a sub-command option. For example, to disable standalone
in ng generate component
by default:
{ "projects": { "my-app": { "schematics": { "@schematics/angular:component": { "standalone": false } } } }}
Configuring CLI builders
Architect is the tool that the Angular CLI uses to perform complex tasks, such as compilation and test running. Architect is a shell that runs a specified builder to perform a given task, according to a target configuration. You can define and configure new builders and targets to extend the Angular CLI. See Angular CLI Builders.
Default Architect builders and targets
Angular defines default builders for use with specific commands, or with the general ng run
command.
The JSON schemas that define the options and defaults for each of these builders are collected in the @angular-devkit/build-angular
package.
The schemas configure options for the following builders.
Configuring builder targets
The architect
section of angular.json
contains a set of Architect targets.
Many of the targets correspond to the Angular CLI commands that run them.
Other targets can be executed using the ng run
command, and you can define your own targets.
Each target object specifies the builder
for that target, which is the npm package for the tool that Architect runs.
Each target also has an options
section that configures default options for the target, and a configurations
section that names and specifies alternative configurations for the target.
See the example in Build target below.
Property | Details |
---|---|
build |
Configures defaults for options of the ng build command. See the Build target section for more information. |
serve |
Overrides build defaults and supplies extra serve defaults for the ng serve command. Besides the options available for the ng build command, it adds options related to serving the application. |
e2e |
Overrides build defaults for building end-to-end testing applications using the ng e2e command. |
test |
Overrides build defaults for test builds and supplies extra test-running defaults for the ng test command. |
lint |
Configures defaults for options of the ng lint command, which performs static code analysis on project source files. |
extract-i18n |
Configures defaults for options of the ng extract-i18n command, which extracts localized message strings from source code and outputs translation files for internationalization. |
HELPFUL: All options in the configuration file must use camelCase
, rather than dash-case
as used on the command line.
Build target
Each target under architect
has the following properties:
Property | Details |
---|---|
builder |
The CLI builder used to create this target in the form of <package-name>:<builder-name> . |
options |
Build target default options. |
configurations |
Alternative configurations for executing the target. Each configuration sets the default options for that intended environment, overriding the associated value under options . See Alternate build configurations below. |
For example, to configure a build with optimizations disabled:
{ "projects": { "my-app": { "architect": { "build": { "builder": "@angular-devkit/build-angular:application", "options": { "optimization": false } } } } }}
Alternate build configurations
Angular CLI comes with two build configurations: production
and development
.
By default, the ng build
command uses the production
configuration, which applies several build optimizations, including:
- Bundling files
- Minimizing excess whitespace
- Removing comments and dead code
- Minifying code to use short, mangled names
You can define and name extra alternate configurations (such as staging
, for instance) appropriate to your development process.
You can select an alternate configuration by passing its name to the --configuration
command line flag.
For example, to configure a build where optimization is enabled only for production builds (ng build --configuration production
):
{ "projects": { "my-app": { "architect": { "build": { "builder": "@angular-devkit/build-angular:application", "options": { "optimization": false }, "configurations": { "production": { "optimization": true } } } } } }}
You can also pass in more than one configuration name as a comma-separated list.
For example, to apply both staging
and french
build configurations, use the command ng build --configuration staging,french
.
In this case, the command parses the named configurations from left to right.
If multiple configurations change the same setting, the last-set value is the final one.
In this example, if both staging
and french
configurations set the output path, the value in french
would get used.
Extra build and test options
The configurable options for a default or targeted build generally correspond to the options available for the ng build
, ng serve
, and ng test
commands.
For details of those options and their possible values, see the Angular CLI Reference.
Options properties | Details |
---|---|
assets |
An object containing paths to static assets to serve with the application. The default paths point to the project's icon file and its assets directory. See more in the Assets configuration section. |
styles |
An array of CSS files to add to the global context of the project. Angular CLI supports CSS imports and all major CSS preprocessors. See more in the Styles and scripts configuration section. |
stylePreprocessorOptions |
An object containing option-value pairs to pass to style preprocessors. See more in the Styles and scripts configuration section. |
scripts |
An object containing JavaScript files to add to the application. The scripts are loaded exactly as if you had added them in a <script> tag inside index.html . See more in the Styles and scripts configuration section. |
budgets |
Default size-budget type and thresholds for all or parts of your application. You can configure the builder to report a warning or an error when the output reaches or exceeds a threshold size. See Configure size budgets. |
fileReplacements |
An object containing files and their compile-time replacements. See more in Configure target-specific file replacements. |
index |
A base HTML document which loads the application. See more in Index configuration. |
Complex configuration values
The assets
, index
, outputPath
, styles
, and scripts
options can have either simple path string values, or object values with specific fields.
The sourceMap
and optimization
options can be set to a simple boolean value. They can also be given a complex value using the configuration file.
The following sections provide more details of how these complex values are used in each case.
Assets configuration
Each build
target configuration can include an assets
array that lists files or folders you want to copy as-is when building your project.
By default, the src/assets/
directory and src/favicon.ico
are copied over.
To exclude an asset, you can remove it from the assets configuration.
You can further configure assets to be copied by specifying assets as objects, rather than as simple paths relative to the workspace root. An asset specification object can have the following fields.
Fields | Details |
---|---|
glob |
A node-glob using input as base directory. |
input |
A path relative to the workspace root. |
output |
A path relative to outDir . Because of the security implications, the Angular CLI never writes files outside of the project output path. |
ignore |
A list of globs to exclude. |
followSymlinks |
Allow glob patterns to follow symlink directories. This allows subdirectories of the symlink to be searched. Defaults to false . |
For example, the default asset paths can be represented in more detail using the following objects.
{ "projects": { "my-app": { "architect": { "build": { "builder": "@angular-devkit/build-angular:application", "options": { "assets": [ { "glob": "**/*", "input": "src/assets/", "output": "/assets/" }, { "glob": "favicon.ico", "input": "src/", "output": "/" } ] } } } } }}
The following example uses the ignore
field to exclude certain files in the assets directory from being copied into the build:
{ "projects": { "my-app": { "architect": { "build": { "builder": "@angular-devkit/build-angular:application", "options": { "assets": [ { "glob": "**/*", "input": "src/assets/", "ignore": ["**/*.svg"], "output": "/assets/" } ] } } } } }}
Styles and scripts configuration
An array entry for the styles
and scripts
options can be a simple path string, or an object that points to an extra entry-point file.
The associated builder loads that file and its dependencies as a separate bundle during the build.
With a configuration object, you have the option of naming the bundle for the entry point, using a bundleName
field.
The bundle is injected by default, but you can set inject
to false
to exclude the bundle from injection.
For example, the following object values create and name a bundle that contains styles and scripts, and excludes it from injection:
{ "projects": { "my-app": { "architect": { "build": { "builder": "@angular-devkit/build-angular:application", "options": { "styles": [ { "input": "src/external-module/styles.scss", "inject": false, "bundleName": "external-module" } ], "scripts": [ { "input": "src/external-module/main.js", "inject": false, "bundleName": "external-module" } ] } } } } }}
Style preprocessor options
In Sass, you can make use of the includePaths
feature for both component and global styles. This allows you to add extra base paths that are checked for imports.
To add paths, use the stylePreprocessorOptions
option:
{ "projects": { "my-app": { "architect": { "build": { "builder": "@angular-devkit/build-angular:application", "options": { "stylePreprocessorOptions": { "includePaths": [ "src/style-paths" ] } } } } } }}
Files in that directory, such as src/style-paths/_variables.scss
, can be imported from anywhere in your project without the need for a relative path:
// src/app/app.component.scss// A relative path works@import '../style-paths/variables';// But now this works as well@import 'variables';
HELPFUL: You also need to add any styles or scripts to the test
builder if you need them for unit tests.
See also Using runtime-global libraries inside your application.
Optimization configuration
The optimization
option can be either a boolean or an object for more fine-tune configuration.
This option enables various optimizations of the build output, including:
- Minification of scripts and styles
- Tree-shaking
- Dead-code elimination
- Inlining of critical CSS
- Fonts inlining
Several options can be used to fine-tune the optimization of an application.
Options | Details | Value type | Default value |
---|---|---|---|
scripts |
Enables optimization of the scripts output. | boolean |
true |
styles |
Enables optimization of the styles output. | boolean |
Styles optimization options |
fonts |
Enables optimization for fonts. This requires internet access. | boolean |
Fonts optimization options |
Styles optimization options
Options | Details | Value type | Default value |
---|---|---|---|
minify |
Minify CSS definitions by removing extraneous whitespace and comments, merging identifiers, and minimizing values. | boolean |
true |
inlineCritical |
Extract and inline critical CSS definitions to improve First Contentful Paint. | boolean |
true |
removeSpecialComments |
Remove comments in global CSS that contains @license or @preserve or that starts with //! or /*! . |
boolean |
true |
Fonts optimization options
Options | Details | Value type | Default value |
---|---|---|---|
inline |
Reduce render blocking requests by inlining external Google Fonts and Adobe Fonts CSS definitions in the application's HTML index file. This requires internet access. | boolean |
true |
You can supply a value such as the following to apply optimization to one or the other:
{ "projects": { "my-app": { "architect": { "build": { "builder": "@angular-devkit/build-angular:application", "options": { "optimization": { "scripts": true, "styles": { "minify": true, "inlineCritical": true }, "fonts": true } } } } } }}
Source map configuration
The sourceMap
builder option can be either a boolean or an object for more fine-tune configuration to control the source maps of an application.
Options | Details | Value type | Default value |
---|---|---|---|
scripts |
Output source maps for all scripts. | boolean |
true |
styles |
Output source maps for all styles. | boolean |
true |
vendor |
Resolve vendor packages source maps. | boolean |
false |
hidden |
Omit link to sourcemaps from the output JavaScript. | boolean |
false |
The example below shows how to toggle one or more values to configure the source map outputs:
{ "projects": { "my-app": { "architect": { "build": { "builder": "@angular-devkit/build-angular:application", "options": { "sourceMap": { "scripts": true, "styles": false, "hidden": true, "vendor": true } } } } } }}
HELPFUL: When using hidden source maps, source maps are not referenced in the bundle.
These are useful if you only want source maps to map stack traces in error reporting tools without showing up in browser developer tools.
Note that even though hidden
prevents the source map from being linked in the output bundle, your deployment process must take care not to serve the generated sourcemaps in production, or else the information is still leaked.
Index configuration
Configures generation of the application's HTML index.
The index
option can be either a string or an object for more fine-tune configuration.
When supplying the value as a string the filename of the specified path will be used for the generated file and will be created in the root of the application's configured output path.
Index options
Options | Details | Value type | Default value |
---|---|---|---|
input |
The path of a file to use for the application's generated HTML index. | string |
None (required) |
output |
The output path of the application's generated HTML index file. The full provided path will be used and will be considered relative to the application's configured output path. | string |
index.html |
Output path configuration
The outputPath
option can be either a String which will be used as the base
value or an Object for more fine-tune configuration.
Several options can be used to fine-tune the output structure of an application.
Options | Details | Value type | Default value |
---|---|---|---|
base |
Specify the output path relative to workspace root. | string |
|
browser |
The output directory name for your browser build is within the base output path. This can be safely served to users. | string |
browser |
server |
The output directory name of your server build within the output path base. | string |
server |
media |
The output directory name for your media files located within the output browser directory. These media files are commonly referred to as resources in CSS files. | string |
media |