1.0.0 • Published 12 months ago

@tm9657/next-on-pages v1.0.0

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⚡▲ @cloudflare/next-on-pages ▲⚡

@cloudflare/next-on-pages is a CLI tool that you can use to build and develop Next.js applications so that they can run on the Cloudflare Pages platform (and integrate with Cloudflare's various other product offerings such as KV, D1, R2 and Durable Objects).

This tool is a best-effort library implemented by the Cloudflare team and the community. As such, most, but not all, Next.js features are supported. See the Supported Versions and Features document for more details.

Quick Start

This section describes how to bundle and deploy a (new or existing) Next.js application and using @cloudflare/next-on-pages.

1. Create Next App

To start using @cloudflare/next-on-pages, you must first have a Next.js project you wish to deploy. If you don't already have a project, you can use the create-next-app command:

npx create-next-app@latest my-next-app

We have confirmed support for to the current version of Next.js, at the time of writing, 13.2.4. Although we'll endeavor to keep support for newer versions, we cannot guarantee that we'll always be up-to-date with the latest version. If you experience any problems with @cloudflare/next-on-pages, you may wish to try pinning to 13.2.4 while we work on supporting any recent breaking changes.

Change your current directory to the newly created one:

cd my-next-app

2. Configure the application to use the Edge Runtime

In order for your application to run on Cloudflare Pages, it needs to be set to use the Edge Runtime. Make sure that all the files in your application containing server-side code (e.g. any API Routes and any pages which use getServerSideProps) export a config object specifying the use of the Edge Runtime:

export const config = {
	runtime: 'edge',
};

Additionally, ensure that your application is not using any unsupported APIs and that its API routes are defined as Edge API Routes.

For example, if you've created a Next.js application with create-next-app and opted out of both the src and app directory options, the only file you need to modify is pages/api/hello.ts.

3. Deploy your application to Cloudflare Pages

You can easily deploy to Cloudflare Pages via the automatic Git integration. To do so, start by committing and pushing your application's code to a GitHub/GitLab repository.

Next, in the Cloudflare Dashboard, create a new Pages project:

  • Navigate to the project creation pages (Your account Home > Pages > Create a project > Connect to Git)
  • Select the GitHub/GitLab repository you pushed your code to
  • Choose a project name and your production branch
  • Select Next.js as the Framework preset
  • Provide the following options: | Option | Value | | ---------------------- | ----------------------------------------------------- | | Build command | npx @cloudflare/next-on-pages | | Build output directory | .vercel/output/static |
  • In the Environment variables (advanced) section add a new variable named NODE_VERSION set to 16 or greater
  • Click on Save and Deploy to start the deployment (this first deployment won't be fully functional as the next step is also necessary)
  • Go to the Pages project settings page (Settings > Functions > Compatibility Flags), add the nodejs_compat for both the production and preview and make sure that the Compatibility Date for both production and preview is set to at least 2022-11-30.

If you don't want to set up a Git repository, you can build your _worker.js file (as indicated in Local Development) and publish your application manually via the wrangler's pages publish command instead (but you'll still need to set the nodejs_compat flag for your project in the Cloudflare dashboard).

Local development

To locally run the CLI simply run:

npx @cloudflare/next-on-pages

This command will build your Next.js application and produce a .vercel/output/static directory which you can then use with Wrangler:

npx wrangler pages dev .vercel/output/static --compatibility-flag=nodejs_compat

Running npx @cloudflare/next-on-pages --help will display a useful help message which will detail the various additional options the CLI offers.

Local development in watch mode

If you want to work on your Next.js application while using @cloudflare/next-on-pages, run the CLI in watch mode with:

npx @cloudflare/next-on-pages --watch

Then in a separate terminal run:

npx wrangler pages dev .vercel/output/static --compatibility-flag=nodejs_compat

Install @cloudflare/next-on-pages and vercel (optional)

To speed up local development (especially the refresh speed when running in watch mode) you can optionally choose to install @cloudflare/next-on-pages and vercel as dev dependencies of your project:

npm install -D @cloudflare/next-on-pages vercel

Examples

To see some examples on how to use Next.js features with @cloudflare/next-on-pages see the Examples document.

Contributing

If you want to contribute to this project please refer to the Contributing document.

References

Extra references you might be interested in:

  • Blog post

    The original blog post introducing @cloudflare/next-on-pages (24/10/2022), it goes into details on the inspiration for this package and provides some details on how it works.

  • Cloudflare Next.js Guide

    Cloudflare guide on how to create and deploy a Next.js application. The application can be either static (and deployed as simple static assets) or dynamic using the edge runtime (using @cloudflare/next-on-pages).