## History
When we added `priority` prop to `next/image`, there was no
`fetchPriority` so we instead used this to preload the image in the
head.
Then when browsers added support `fetchPriority`, we automatically added
`fetchPriority=high` when `priority={true}` to signal to the browser
that this was a high priority image. This priority is added to the img
and the preload.
However, we saw cases where images are blocking critical css. Per
@gnoff:
> React currently prioritizes font preloads then high priority images,
then css in the initial page load
Due to these changes in React (aka Float), we should no longer set
`fetchPriority=high`, although the user can still manually add that prop
if needed.
### Why?
It could be confusing between `...` and `…`, which the later is actually
a single character.
### How?
We throw if we detect `…` instead of `...`.
### What?
This modifies the static generation store to instead store a `url`
object with the `pathname` and `search` properties. This corrects the
previous behaviour which used the variable `urlPathname` which had
ambiguous meanings as it technically contained the search string as
well, not just the pathname.
In cases during the app render, this still grabs the contents of
`url.pathname + url.search` (where `url.search` always has a leading `?`
if it has any query parameters, [see the
docs](https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/API/URL/search)) so
that it emulates the current behaviour. This allows more specific access
though, where now additional parsing can be eliminated which had to
strip the query string off of the `urlPathname` in a few places, and
more worrisome, still accidentally contained the search string causing
errors.
### How?
This requires an upstream fix (#64088) which corrected a bug with the
store access which had caused some previous test failures (accessing
`store.url.pathname` was throwing as `store.url` was undefined on the
wrong return, check the upstream PR for more details on that).
This also changes out usage of `pagePath` with `route`, and lets it be
the fallback (for debugging and error messaging). During static
generation, we will provide a value for the page being rendered that's
correlated to the particular file on the filesystem that the route is
based on:
```
// rendering app/users/[userID]/page.tsx
page: /users/[userID]
pathname: /users/1, /users/2, etc
```
The `route` is used only for debugging, such as when
`generateStaticParams` incorrectly calls `headers()`.
This also moves the pathname from the `staticGenerationStore` into the
`requestStore`, as it's tied to a given request.
Closes NEXT-2965
This adds details for every ISR cache request if the page being
requested supports PPR. If it does, it'll attempt to load the
`.prefetch.rsc` payload instead of the `.rsc` payload. This corrects a
bug that was present in deployed environments.
This additionally refactors the `isAppPPREnabled` out of most of the
application, as it's only used to determine if we should add to the
`prefetchDataRoute` fields in the `prerender-manifest.json`. To support
loading the prefetch file or not, we pass the `isRoutePPREnabled`
through with the cache get/set operations instead.
x-slack-ref:
https://vercel.slack.com/archives/C075MSFK9ML/p1717094328986429
Previously we only display the warning when it's a new key format
`<object>.<property>`, we should display all cases to help users
understand where the new key is moved to
x-ref: https://x.com/huozhi/status/1789335665252921381
The tests added in https://github.com/vercel/next.js/pull/46219 were
never correctly testing the headers because `detectContentType()` is
called first and only when we can't detect the type from the response
body do we fallback to the `Content-Type` header.
I also refactored some of the tests because the `ctx: any` type was
causing some tests to not run when testing different configuration
options.
Closes NEXT-3321
Enabling Partial Prerendering (PPR) for an entire application is
ideally, the goal for teams wanting to test out the feature or adopt it
in their applications to get ready for when it becomes the default
rendering pattern. For large applications, with many routes the new
behaviours of old API's may prove a difficult pill to swallow all at
once.
This aims to enable incremental adoption of PPR for pages and routes
that want to support it in a similar way to how existing segment-level
configurations. Segments can now add:
```ts
export const experimental_ppr = true
```
To enable PPR for that segment and those descending segments. Any subset
of those routes that have it enabled can add:
```ts
export const experimental_ppr = false
```
<details>
<summary>An aside on the choice of <code>experimental_ppr</code>
name</summary>
<blockquote>
<p>It is against common JS semantics to use snake-case, and preference
is given to camel-case instead. The choice to make this snake-case was
to re-enforce that this is an experimental feature, an ugly incremental
path, and ideally, developers should aim to remove all references of it
from their codebase.</p>
<p>Additionally, this mirrors what we've done for unstable API's like
`unstable_cache`.</p>
</blockquote>
</details>
To disable PPR for that segment and those descending segments. To use
this new option, the `experimental.ppr` configuration in
`next.config.js` must be set to `"incremental"`:
```js
// next.config.js
module.exports = {
experimental: {
ppr: "incremental",
},
}
```
If a segment does not export a `experimental_ppr` boolean, it is
inferred from it's parent. If no parent has it defined, it's default
value is `false` and therefore disabled.
Once all your segments have PPR enabled via this config, it would be
considered safe for teams to set their `experimental.ppr` value in the
`next.config.js` to `true`, enabling it for the entire app and for all
future routes.
### Aside
I also took the liberty to rename `isPPR` and `supportsPPR` to be the
clearer `isAppPPREnabled` and `isRoutePPREnabled`.
---------
Co-authored-by: Hendrik Liebau <mail@hendrik-liebau.de>
### What
This PR's goal is to improve the throughput performance of the Next.js
server when handling Pages Router routes.
Note that the results from this are very synthetic and do not represent
the real-life performance of an application. If we only wanted to handle
hello worlds, we could probably make this even faster but on production,
a slow fetch call to your DB is probably what's slowing you down.
I'll look into App Router next.
### Why?
I guess I got nerd-sniped into it 😃
### How?
A few optimizations:
- I looked deeply at the pipeline for rendering a Pages Router page. I
noticed a lot of intermediary streams being created here and there to
eventually be concatenated to a simple string. I think this is probably
left over code from when we wanted to support streaming there and so
there's some code that was shared with the App Router, which we
absolutely don't need I think. I refactored it to be slightly simpler
with just a few string concats here and there.
- misc: I removed some redundant Promises being created here and there
and added a small inline optimisation to eliminate `if (renderOpts.dev)`
code in production.
### Nummies
Test setup: hello world pages router app, next start + autocannon
- requests handled in 10s: 18k -> 33K, **~80% improvement**
- avg latency: 4.89ms -> 2.8ms, **~42% improvement**
- avg req/res: 1846.5 -> 2983.5, **~61% improvement**
Before
<img width="742" alt="image"
src="https://github.com/vercel/next.js/assets/11064311/658e7ade-eba7-4604-a7c9-619bd51a5ec8">
vs
after
<img width="880" alt="image"
src="https://github.com/vercel/next.js/assets/11064311/2f46cf69-b788-4db2-bf90-6f65dc7abd82">
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Closes NEXT-3103
app dir is always "enabled", but not always exists. Rename to the proper
word to describe. Found this confusion while developing other fetaures
Closes NEXT-2691
## Description
Refactor the [Next.js
CLI](https://nextjs.org/docs/app/api-reference/next-cli) to use
[commander](https://github.com/tj/commander.js) instead of
[arg](https://github.com/vercel/arg).
## Why?
- Auto-generated, properly formatted help command + output. With `arg`,
much of the help commands were manually added via a single
`console.log`, causing deviations over time.
- Ergonomic, ease of adding new subcommands and rules
## Breaking Changes
- Update the experimental `next experimental-compile` and `next
experimental-generate` build commands in favor of `next build
--experimental-build-mode=compile/generate`
---------
Co-authored-by: JJ Kasper <jj@jjsweb.site>
### Fixing a bug
### What?
Fix remotePatterns when all paths and/or domains are allowed.
### Why?
micromatch creates a very strange regex for all paths -
`/^(?:(?!\.)(?:(?:(?!(?:^|[\\/])\.).)*?)[\\/]?)$/`. That is, paths
cannot start with a dot or contain a slash followed by a dot.
Interestingly, here are some valid paths:
- /a/a.a/6a00d8341c4fbe53ef02c8d3a82122200d-600wi
- ////a/a.a/6a00d8341c4fbe53ef02c8d3a82122200d-600wi
- ///:?%;№%/a/a.a/6a00d8341c4fbe53ef02c8d3a82122200d-600wi.\/
- /:./6a00d8341c4fbe53ef02c8d3a82122200d-600wi.\/
And here are some invalid ones:
- /.a/6a00d8341c4fbe53ef02c8d3a82122200d-600wi
- /a/.a/6a00d8341c4fbe53ef02c8d3a82122200d-600wi
- ./a/6a00d8341c4fbe53ef02c8d3a82122200d-600wi
I don't think this check makes any sense.
### How?
If the user allows all (`**`) - it means any path or domain will be
considered valid.
- Fixes#60483
- Fixes#58139
- Fixes#46903
---------
Co-authored-by: Steven <steven@ceriously.com>
This updates our default error rate to be much more precise and reduce
false positives by increasing the default size of the client filter we
generate. We can afford to increase the default size as it compresses
extremely well and gives us more accurate navigations. This carries over
the failing test case from https://github.com/vercel/next.js/pull/59293
which showed one case of false positive in a smaller filter.
Closes: https://github.com/vercel/next.js/issues/47486
Closes NEXT-2070
---------
Co-authored-by: Cris Vergara <cris.vergara@bookofthemonth.com>
## What?
Always call `createPagesMapping` as it already handles the case when
there are no paths.
Also introduces `PAGE_TYPES` to have a single source of truth for these
types and where they're used. As you can see this replaces a ton of
hardcoded `'app'`, `'pages'`, and `'root'` references.
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Closes NEXT-1935
This resolves an issue introduced in #52361 where `shouldOmit` is
overwritten based on if it is a directory or not without considering
include conditions.
In an environment where the the application being built is orchestrated
and managed by bazel, all files are symbolic links and thus without this
the file includes predicate checks aren't considered - and the build
fails under certain conditions.
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---------
Co-authored-by: Shu Ding <g@shud.in>
There're some reports related to using incorrect Node.js version, sometimes users ended up in weird errors. As pkg manager like pnpm only gives a warning ` WARN Unsupported engine: wanted: {"node":">=18.17.0"} (current: {"node":"v16.18.0","pnpm":"8.9.0"})` which is not easy to investigate the issue.
We're adding a version check at the beginning of the Next.js process so if Node.js version is mis-match the version specified in package.json, bail with error.
Examples
node 16.x
```
You are using Node.js 16.18.0. Node.js >= v18.17.0 is required.
```
node.18.16
```
You are using Node.js 18.16.1. Node.js >= v18.17.0 is required.
```
### What?
When using the file system cache with `isrMemoryCacheSize: 0`, time-based revalidation is not working, and the file is constantly updated. I have also added some debug logging to mirror that in the `fetch-cache` handler
Detailed explanation in #58507
### Why?
The cached object's tags are incorrectly accessed, causing the cache to be rewritten every hit. This is catastrophic for a caching system that relies on file modification timestamps. The tags are one level up in the object from where [they are currently being accessed](9ab8828f72/packages/next/src/server/lib/incremental-cache/file-system-cache.ts (L178)).
Below shows a cached fetch representation on disk. When written, the tags reside at `obj.tags` instead of `obj.data.tags`
```json
{
"kind": "FETCH",
"data": {
"headers": {
"connection": "keep-alive",
"content-encoding": "br",
"content-type": "application/json; charset=utf-8",
"date": "Wed, 15 Nov 2023 21:17:42 GMT",
"server": "nginx/1.18.0 (Ubuntu)",
"transfer-encoding": "chunked",
"vary": "Accept-Encoding"
},
"body": "[SNIP]",
"status": 200,
"url": "https://timeapi.io/api/Time/current/zone?timeZone=UTC"
# this is where the current code is trying to pull the tags
# "tags": [ "time-with-fetch" ]
},
"revalidate": 20,
# tags actually live here
"tags": [
"time-with-fetch"
]
}
```
Fixes#58507
## Issue
The `context.getFilename()` gets the absolute path of the files, and the if statement to filter `/src` and `/app` was not working since #46609.
## Expected
Do not show a lint warning if use `beforeInteractive` inside `appDir`.
Fixes#46609#50261
This passes down the route kind information to the incrememntal cache so it no longer needs to test some files existing in order to validate if the file exists or not for a route.
### What?
Note: This is not a breaking change, just removing some unused code.
### Why?
Since #56896 we don't need this, as Node.js 18+ has `fetch` exposed by default.
### How?
Depends on #56896, #56909
We already didn't load `fetch` if `globalThis` had it (ie. Node.js 18+ environments), and since we are dropping support for Node.js 16, these code paths should have no effect on runtime behavior.
Skips additional production-only tests.
Follow-up to #56089.
In this PR I went through all of `test/integration` looking for `nextBuild(` and added the skipping logic.
We have dropped `experimental.appDir` option, to share the insights that can be removed, add a warning `"App router is enabled by default now, <experimental.appDir> option can be safely removed.'" `
There're few places calling `loadConfig` to access nextjs config for different purpose, and every of them will do validation of next config scheme and could log the warnings potentially to cause duplicated warnings. To address that issue this PR limit the places when should the warnings be logged in certain places, mainly the `next` command entry. Refactor the API here to make it more explicit
Previous logging redeisgn also might trigger duplicated compilation, for instance you compiled page A but then editing another component it might still displaying page A is recompiled. Now we always display `"Compiled .."` message when there's a recompilation but avoid the unnecessary ones such as initial edge compilor ready but there's no modules inside. Then when it recompiles or recovers from error nextjs server will tell "Compiled .." instead of the specific page which might be not related.
Also refactors a minor issue: When `silent` option is set to `true`, auto recorrect next config option from `loadConfig` API like `traillingSlash` is not working
Closes NEXT-1610
Co-authored-by: JJ Kasper <22380829+ijjk@users.noreply.github.com>
Optimizes how we handle cache tags for soft tags (auto-added by Next.js)
and normal tags (added manually) and adds differentiating between
`revalidatePath('/blog/first')` and page/layout.
Soft tags are not stored across cache entry and instead auto sent along
when checking cache entries. This allows us to prevent storing
exponential amounts of tags across cache entries while still having the
relationship between them so that single path revalidation can work
properly.
x-ref: [slack
thread](https://vercel.slack.com/archives/C042LHPJ1NX/p1690586837903309)
A continuation of #51864 with RedirectType used in an e2e test and some
ts-ignores removed from the codebase. Happy to split it into two PRs but
I left comments in the two consequential files
---------
This replaces the existing recursive directory reading beheviour with a more efficient implementation. Rather than previously doing actual recursion with the function calls to go deeper into each directory, this has been rewritten to instead use a while loop and a stack. This should improve memory usage for projects with very deep directory structures.
The updated design that performs directory scanning on all directories found at each layer, allowing more filesystem calls to be sent to the OS instead of waiting like the previous implementation did.
**Currently the new implementation is about 3x faster.**
### What?
When cloning a `Request` with `NextRequest` the second argument needs to take precedence over the `Headers` set on the original request.
### Why?
Follow-up of #53157
I checked the `Request` spec https://fetch.spec.whatwg.org/#request-class and following the order of execution, `init.headers` should indeed override the headers if the first param was `Request`.
I verified this in the browser too:
```js
const req1 = new Request("http://n", {headers: {"x-header": "foo"}})
const req2 = new Request(req1, {headers: {"x-header-2": "bar"}})
Object.fromEntries(req2.headers) // {x-header-2: "bar"}
```
So we should match `NextRequest` with this behavior.
### How?
Pass the `init` to `super` when cloning the request.
Closes NEXT-1521
Fixes#54094
Partial fix for #54012: do not generate a blur image in the image loader when the image is detected to be animated, rather than returning the *entire* animated image as the blur image.
### What?
This PR makes it easier to use Next.js with IPv6 hostnames such as `::1` and `::`.
### How?
It does so by removing rewrites from `localhost` to `127.0.0.1` introduced in #52492. It also fixes the issue where Next.js tries to fetch something like `http://::1:3000` when `--hostname` is `::1` as it is not a valid URL (browsers' `URL` class throws an error when constructed with such hosts). It also fixes `NextURL` so that it doesn't accept `http://::1:3000` but refuse `http://[::1]:3000`. It also changes `next/src/server/lib/setup-server-worker.ts` so that it uses the server's `address` method to retrieve the host instead of our provided `opts.hostname`, ensuring that no matter what `opts.hostname` is we will always get the correct one.
### Note
I've verified that `next dev`, `next start` and `node .next/standalone/server.js` work with IPv6 hostnames (such as `::` and `::1`), IPv4 hostnames (such as `127.0.0.1`, `0.0.0.0`) and `localhost` - and with any of these hostnames fetching to `localhost` also works. Server Actions and middleware have no problems as well.
This also removes `.next/standalone/server.js`'s logging as we now use `start-server`'s logging to avoid duplicates. `start-server`'s logging has also been updated to report the actual hostname.
![image](https://github.com/vercel/next.js/assets/75556609/cefa5f23-ff09-4cef-a055-13eea7c11d89)
![image](https://github.com/vercel/next.js/assets/75556609/619e82ce-45d9-47b7-8644-f4ad083429db)
The above pictures also demonstrate using Server Actions with Next.js after this PR.
![image](https://github.com/vercel/next.js/assets/75556609/3d4166e9-f950-4390-bde9-af2547658148)
Fixes#53171Fixes#49578
Closes NEXT-1510
Co-authored-by: Tim Neutkens <6324199+timneutkens@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: Zack Tanner <1939140+ztanner@users.noreply.github.com>
### What?
Allow the following:
```ts
new NextRequest(new Request(...))
```
### Why?
Cloning a request by passing it to the constructor of another `Request` is allowed by the spec: https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/API/Request/Request#parameters
### How?
If the passed argument is an instance of `Request`, we pass it as-is to `super()`
Fixes#52967
Closes NEXT-1468