Commit graph

5 commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
JJ Kasper
ba8cb31a40 Added WebSocket arg to allow manually setting port (#5963)
Saw a reply on the original pull request that the WebSocket using a random port broke their set up so I added a `--websocket` or `-w` argument similar to the `-p` argument to allow manually setting this port also.
2019-01-01 01:07:10 +01:00
Tim Neutkens
0f23faf81f
Serverless Next.js (#5927)
**This does not change existing behavior.**

building to serverless is completely opt-in.

- Implements `target: 'serverless'` in `next.config.js`
- Removes `next build --lambdas` (was only available on next@canary so far)

This implements the concept of build targets. Currently there will be 2 build targets:

- server (This is the target that already existed / the default, no changes here)
- serverless (New target aimed at compiling pages to serverless handlers)

The serverless target will output a single file per `page` in the `pages` directory:

- `pages/index.js` => `.next/serverless/index.js`
- `pages/about.js` => `.next/serverless/about.js`

So what is inside `.next/serverless/about.js`? All the code needed to render that specific page. It has the Node.js `http.Server` request handler function signature:

```ts
(req: http.IncomingMessage, res: http.ServerResponse) => void
```

So how do you use it? Generally you **don't** want to use the below example, but for illustration purposes it's shown how the handler is called using a plain `http.Server`:

```js
const http = require('http')
// Note that `.default` is needed because the exported module is an esmodule
const handler = require('./.next/serverless/about.js').default
const server = new http.Server((req, res) => handler(req, res))
server.listen(3000, () => console.log('Listening on http://localhost:3000'))
```

Generally you'll upload this handler function to an external service like [Now v2](https://zeit.co/now-2), the `@now/next` builder will be updated to reflect these changes. This means that it'll be no longer neccesary for `@now/next` to do some of the guesswork in creating smaller handler functions. As Next.js will output the smallest possible serverless handler function automatically.

The function has 0 dependencies so no node_modules are required to run it, and is generally very small. 45Kb zipped is the baseline, but I'm sure we can make it even smaller in the future.

One important thing to note is that the function won't try to load `next.config.js`, so `publicRuntimeConfig` / `serverRuntimeConfig` are not supported. Reasons are outlined here: #5846

So to summarize:

- every page becomes a serverless function
- the serverless function has 0 dependencies (they're all inlined)
- "just" uses the `req` and `res` coming from Node.js
- opt-in using `target: 'serverless'` in `next.config.js`
- Does not load next.config.js when executing the function

TODO:

- [x] Compile next/dynamic / `import()` into the function file, so that no extra files have to be uploaded.
- [x] Setting `assetPrefix` at build time for serverless target
- [x] Support custom /_app
- [x] Support custom /_document
- [x] Support custom /_error
- [x] Add `next.config.js` property for `target`

Need discussion:
- [ ] Since the serverless target won't support `publicRuntimeConfig` / `serverRuntimeConfig` as they're runtime values. I think we should support build-time env var replacement with webpack.DefinePlugin or similar.
- [ ] Serving static files with the correct cache-control, as there is no static file serving in the serverless target
2018-12-28 11:39:12 +01:00
JJ Kasper
af07611a63 Implement websockets based on-demand-entries ping (#4508)
Fixes #4495

Here's my approach for replacing the XHR on-demand-entries pinger #1364 #4495. I'm not sure if this is the way everyone wants to accomplish this since I saw mention of using a separate server and port for the dynamic entries websocket, but thought this would be a fairly clean solution since it doesn't need that.

With this method the only change when using a custom server is you have to listen for the upgrade event and pass it to next.getRequestHandler(). Example: 
```
const server = app.listen(port)
const handleRequest = next.getRequestHandler()

if(dev) {
  server.on('upgrade', handleRequest)
}
```
2018-12-14 12:25:59 +01:00
Tim Neutkens
82d56e063a
next-server (#5357) 2018-10-02 00:55:31 +02:00
Tim Neutkens
b1c4f3aec4
Monorepo (#5341)
- Implements Lerna
- Moves all source code into `packages/next`
- Keeps integration tests in the root directory
2018-10-01 01:02:10 +02:00
Renamed from server/on-demand-entry-handler.js (Browse further)