This bumps the babel cache key since we modified the `react-loadable` babel plugin and we don't want any cached versions used since the module names generated in previous cached version won't match the newly expected values.
x-ref: https://github.com/vercel/next.js/pull/24281
## Bug
- [ ] Related issues linked using `fixes #number`
- [ ] Integration tests added
## Feature
- [ ] Implements an existing feature request or RFC. Make sure the feature request has been accepted for implementation before opening a PR.
- [ ] Related issues linked using `fixes #number`
- [ ] Integration tests added
- [ ] Documentation added
- [ ] Telemetry added. In case of a feature if it's used or not.
## Documentation / Examples
- [ ] Make sure the linting passes
Solves an issue some users ran into where enabling webpack 5 highlighted a wrong JSON import where named exports were used for JSON data.
> Should not import the named export 'myValue' (imported as 'myValue') from default-exporting module (only default export is available soon)
* import next-server logic during the time the configuration is loaded
* load minimizer plugins only when used
* load ReactDevOverlay only when used
* load only meta information of tsconfig for validation
* make worker for configuration loading lighter
* only load runTypeCheck when used
* load postcss config only when used
This ensures we don't attempt prepending the `basePath` for external (http://) `getStaticProps`/`getServerSideProps` redirects. Additional tests to cover this case have been added in the `gssp-redirect` test suites to prevent regression.
## Bug
- [x] Related issues linked using `fixes #number`
- [x] Integration tests added
Fixes: https://github.com/vercel/next.js/issues/23623
This adds support for returning an object from `rewrites` in `next.config.js` with `beforeFiles`, `afterFiles`, and `fallback` to allow specifying rewrites at different stages of routing. The existing support for returning an array for rewrites is still supported and behaves the same way. The documentation has been updated to include information on these new stages that can be rewritten and removes the outdated note of rewrites not being able to override pages.
## Bug
- [ ] Related issues linked using `fixes #number`
- [ ] Integration tests added
## Feature
- [ ] Implements an existing feature request or RFC. Make sure the feature request has been accepted for implementation before opening a PR.
- [ ] Related issues linked using `fixes #number`
- [x] Integration tests added
- [x] Documentation added
- [ ] Telemetry added. In case of a feature if it's used or not.
## Documentation / Examples
- [ ] Make sure the linting passes
This adds support for a `has` field to `rewrites`, `redirects`, and `headers` to allow matching against `header`, `cookie`, and `query` values. Documentation and additional tests for the feature is also added in this PR.
Closes: https://github.com/vercel/next.js/issues/22345
This PR upgrades `jest-worker` and `jest-cli` to the latest pre-release version, also removed `jest-circus` which is included in Jest by default. `jest-worker@next` includes a fix for memory leak that we need (https://github.com/facebook/jest/pull/11187).
Fixes#22925. This will also improve the OOM issue for `next dev` #15855.
A number of changes here. I recommend viewing the diff with the <a href="?w=1">whitespace flag enabled</a>.
- OpenTelemetry is replaced with a custom and lightweight tracing solution.
- Three trace targets are currently supported: console, Zipkin, and NextJS.
- Tracing is now governed by environment variables rather than `--require instrument.js`.
+ `TRACE_TARGET`: one of `CONSOLE`, `ZIPKIN`, or `TELEMETRY`; defaults to `TELEMETRY` if unset or invalid.
+ `TRACE_ID`: an 8-byte hex-encoded value used as the Zipkin trace ID; if not provided, this value will be randomly generated and passed down to subprocesses.
Other sundry:
- I'm missing something, probably a setup step, with the Zipkin target. Traces are captured successfully, but you have to manually enter the Trace ID in order to view the trace - it doesn't show up in queries.
- I'm generally unhappy with [this commit](235cedcb3e). It is... untidy to provide a telemetry object via `setGlobal`, but I don't have a ready alternative. Is `distDir` strictly required when creating a new Telemetry object? I didn't dig too deep here.
As noted, there are a lot of changes, so it'd be great if a reviewer could:
- [ ] pull down the branch and try to break it
- [ ] check the Zipkin traces and identify possible regressions in the functionality
Closes#22570Fixes#22574
This ensures we load `_document` then `_app` and then the page's component in all cases which matches behavior between the serverless target and the default server target. Additional tests to ensure this order is followed has been added to prevent regression.
Fixes: https://github.com/vercel/next.js/issues/22732
This updates to output server chunks to a nested folder to prevent bundling the entire folder when tracing. This also fixes the webpack 5 tests not actually using webpack 5 since https://github.com/vercel/next.js/pull/22583 since the webpack 5 enabling check didn't account for the test environment variable used to enable webpack 5. This also clears up some deprecation warnings from webpack 5 in the mini-css-extract-plugin.
Fixes: https://github.com/vercel/next.js/issues/21297
Fixes https://github.com/vercel/next.js/issues/21943
i confirmed in a personal test repo that this solves the issue of infinite 307s on root level non-default locales :) let me know what else this needs if anything! thanks for the time/help @ijjk ❤️
This implements the compatibility require hook as per https://github.com/vercel/next.js/issues/21789.
The hook is applied at the point of webpack initialization. In addition the separate packages are exposed for the various webpack subrequires.
The test then ensures instance equality for the basic require hook from the next.js config file.
I suspect this might have bad interactions with Yarn Pnp support, but maybe we will be lucky.
@timneutkens I think this is ready for a review.
I've made some changes to the original design that _seem_ to have paid off. The parenting relationships for traces of normal builds are applied more uniformly, resulting in more intelligible traces:
<img width="900" alt="Screen Shot 2021-01-29 at 12 53 47 AM" src="https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/5016978/106253732-ba321880-61cc-11eb-98fd-d45af5078273.png">
Hot-reloading is surfaced now, too. I will note, however, that we will want to dig in deeper and find out where the large portion of time at the beginning of hot-reload is spent. Example:
<img width="894" alt="Screen Shot 2021-01-29 at 12 53 28 AM" src="https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/5016978/106253828-e057b880-61cc-11eb-967d-46eaff31ecef.png">
Where did those 180 ms go? At the least, we can now track how long a hot-reload takes, and have a place to start with further investigation.
This picks up on the inlining work in https://github.com/vercel/next.js/pull/20598 to also include webpack loader inlining optimizations.
This includes:
* The dependencies of sass-loader
* resolve-url-loader
And for added benefit:
* babel-plugin-transform-define
* babel-plugin-transform-react-remove-prop-types
style-loader and css-loader didn't inline easily. Perhaps we can come back to these ones.
This pull request adds `future.strictPostcssConfiguration`, allowing users to opt-into the more strict PostCSS configuration loading.
This stricter PostCSS configuration loading ensures that CSS can be cached across builds.
This ensures we detect domain specific locales and redirect them client-side. Tests have been added in the `i18n` suite to ensure the domain redirect is applied correctly during a client-side navigation
Fixes: https://github.com/vercel/next.js/issues/19174