description: Next.js has the preview mode for statically generated pages. You can learn how it works here.
---
# Preview Mode
> This document is for Next.js versions 9.3 and up. If you’re using older versions of Next.js, refer to our [previous documentation](https://nextjs.org/docs/tag/v9.2.2/basic-features/pages).
In the [Pages documentation](/docs/basic-features/pages.md) and the [Data Fetching documentation](/docs/basic-features/data-fetching.md), we talked about how to pre-render a page at build time (**Static Generation**) using `getStaticProps` and `getStaticPaths`.
Static Generation is useful when your pages fetch data from a headless CMS. However, it’s not ideal when you’re writing a draft on your headless CMS and want to **preview** the draft immediately on your page. You’d want Next.js to render these pages at **request time** instead of build time and fetch the draft content instead of the published content. You’d want Next.js to bypass Static Generation only for this specific case.
In this API route, you need to call `setPreviewData` on the response object. The argument for `setPreviewData` should be an object, and this can be used by `getStaticProps` (more on this later). For now, we’ll use `{}`.
`res.setPreviewData` sets some **cookies** on the browser which turns on the preview mode. Any requests to Next.js containing these cookies will be considered as the **preview mode**, and the behavior for statically generated pages will change (more on this later).
You can test this manually by creating an API route like below and accessing it from your browser manually:
```js
// A simple example for testing it manually from your browser.
// If this is located at pages/api/preview.js, then
// open /api/preview from your browser.
export default (req, res) => {
res.setPreviewData({})
res.end('Preview mode enabled')
}
```
If you use your browser’s developer tools, you’ll notice that the `__prerender_bypass` and `__next_preview_data` cookies will be set on this request.
### Securely accessing it from your Headless CMS
In practice, you’d want to call this API route _securely_ from your headless CMS. The specific steps will vary depending on which headless CMS you’re using, but here are some common steps you could take.
These steps assume that the headless CMS you’re using supports setting **custom preview URLs**. If it doesn’t, you can still use this method to secure your preview URLs, but you’ll need to construct and access the preview URL manually.
**First**, you should create a **secret token string** using a token generator of your choice. This secret will only be known by your Next.js app and your headless CMS. This secret prevents people who don’t have access to your CMS from accessing preview URLs.
**Second**, if your headless CMS supports setting custom preview URLs, specify the following as the preview URL. (This assumes that your preview API route is located at `pages/api/preview.js`.)
-`<token>` should be replaced with the secret token you generated.
-`<path>` should be the path for the page that you want to preview. If you want to preview `/posts/foo`, then you should use `&slug=/posts/foo`.
Your headless CMS might allow you to include a variable in the preview URL so that `<path>` can be set dynamically based on the CMS’s data like so: `&slug=/posts/{entry.fields.slug}`
**Finally**, in the preview API route:
- Check that the secret matches and that the `slug` parameter exists (if not, the request should fail).
-
- Call `res.setPreviewData`.
- Then redirect the browser to the path specified by `slug`. (The following example uses a [307 redirect](https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/HTTP/Status/307)).
// We don't redirect to req.query.slug as that might lead to open redirect vulnerabilities
res.writeHead(307, { Location: post.slug })
res.end()
}
```
If it succeeds, then the browser will be redirected to the path you want to preview with the preview mode cookies being set.
## Step 2. Update `getStaticProps`
The next step is to update `getStaticProps` to support the preview mode.
If you request a page which has `getStaticProps` with the preview mode cookies set (via `res.setPreviewData`), then `getStaticProps` will be called at **request time** (instead of at build time).
Furthermore, it will be called with a `context` object where:
-`context.preview` will be `true`.
-`context.previewData` will be the same as the argument used for `setPreviewData`.
```js
export async function getStaticProps(context) {
// If you request this page with the preview mode cookies set:
//
// - context.preview will be true
// - context.previewData will be the same as
// the argument used for `setPreviewData`.
}
```
We used `res.setPreviewData({})` in the preview API route, so `context.previewData` will be `{}`. You can use this to pass session information from the preview API route to `getStaticProps` if necessary.
If you’re also using `getStaticPaths`, then `context.params` will also be available.
### Fetch preview data
You can update `getStaticProps` to fetch different data based on `context.preview` and/or `context.previewData`.
For example, your headless CMS might have a different API endpoint for draft posts. If so, you can use `context.preview` to modify the API endpoint URL like below:
```js
export async function getStaticProps(context) {
// If context.preview is true, append "/preview" to the API endpoint
// to request draft data instead of published data. This will vary
// based on which headless CMS you're using.
const res = await fetch(`https://.../${context.preview ? 'preview' : ''}`)
// ...
}
```
That’s it! If you access the preview API route (with `secret` and `slug`) from your headless CMS or manually, you should now be able to see the preview content. And if you update your draft without publishing, you should be able to preview the draft.
```bash
# Set this as the preview URL on your headless CMS or access manually,
By default, no expiration date is set for the preview mode cookies, so the preview mode ends when the browser is closed.
To clear the preview cookies manually, you can create an API route which calls `clearPreviewData` and then access this API route.
```js
export default (req, res) => {
// Clears the preview mode cookies.
// This function accepts no arguments.
res.clearPreviewData()
// ...
}
```
### Specify the preview mode duration
`setPreviewData` takes an optional second parameter which should be an options object. It accepts the following keys:
-`maxAge`: Specifies the number (in seconds) for the preview session to last for.
```js
setPreviewData(data, {
maxAge: 60 * 60, // The preview mode cookies expire in 1 hour
})
```
### `previewData` size limits
You can pass an object to `setPreviewData` and have it be available in `getStaticProps`. However, because the data will be stored in a cookie, there’s a size limitation. Currently, preview data is limited to 2KB.
### Works with `getServerSideProps`
The preview mode works on `getServerSideProps` as well. It will also be available on the `context` object containing `preview` and `previewData`.