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Hi everyone, this is my first PR to such a large project so please be
gentle. 😄 I'm also new to publishing packages so I'm not sure if I'm
missing any steps.
ESLint 9.0.0 came out a few days ago and unfortunately,
`eslint-plugin-next` is not compatible as it uses deprecated (and with
ESLint 9.0.0 removed) functions.
In this PR, I replaced the deprecated functions with the suggested
replacements ([check this
out](https://eslint.org/blog/2023/09/preparing-custom-rules-eslint-v9/)).
Regarding backwards compatibility, everything I used is available since
ESLint 8.40 (released May 2023). I'm not sure how far back Next.js
support goes but it feels fine to me.
I successfully tested some rules locally with ESLint 9.0.0 and this
`eslint.config.js` (flat config format):
```js
import js from '@eslint/js';
import nextPlugin from '@next/eslint-plugin-next';
import prettierRecommended from 'eslint-plugin-prettier/recommended';
import importSortPlugin from 'eslint-plugin-simple-import-sort';
import globals from 'globals';
import tseslint from 'typescript-eslint';
/**
* TypeScript config with strict type checking and no type checking for JS files.
*/
const typeScriptConfig = [
...tseslint.configs.strictTypeChecked,
{
plugins: {
'@typescript-eslint': tseslint.plugin,
},
languageOptions: {
parser: tseslint.parser,
parserOptions: {
project: true,
},
},
},
{
// disable type-aware linting on JS files
files: ['**/*.js', '**/*.mjs', '**/*.cjs'],
...tseslint.configs.disableTypeChecked,
},
];
/**
* Next.js config with recommended and core web vitals rules.
*/
const nextConfig = {
plugins: {
'@next/next': nextPlugin,
},
rules: {
...nextPlugin.configs.recommended.rules,
...nextPlugin.configs['core-web-vitals'].rules,
},
};
/**
* Import sort config with simple-import-sort plugin.
*/
const importSortConfig = {
plugins: {
'simple-import-sort': importSortPlugin,
},
rules: {
'simple-import-sort/imports': 'error',
'simple-import-sort/exports': 'error',
},
};
/**
* The final ESLint config wrapped with the tseslint.config helper for type hinting.
*/
export default tseslint.config(
{
ignores: ['.next', '.yarn', '**/*.d.ts', 'node_modules'],
},
{
languageOptions: {
globals: {
...globals.browser,
...globals.node,
},
},
},
js.configs.recommended,
...typeScriptConfig,
nextConfig,
prettierRecommended,
importSortConfig,
);
```
It has a few more configs but I'm sure you can remove most of them. The
important one is the `nextConfig`. Also important: Run `eslint` and not
`next lint`, it's currently not compatible with the new flat config
format.
Related discussion: https://github.com/vercel/next.js/discussions/54238
---------
Co-authored-by: JJ Kasper <jj@jjsweb.site>
## What?
Implements support for running the Turbopack trace server, which is the
websocket server that powers https://turbo-trace-viewer.vercel.app/ when
using `NEXT_TURBOPACK_TRACING=1 NEXT_TURBOPACK_TRACE_SERVER=1`.
Currently you have to manually run the server through the Turbo
repository which in practice means that only people working on Turbopack
are able to run it.
With the bindings implemented anyone should be able to run the trace
server.
Note that the traces that come out of Turbopack are very low level,
they're meant for optimizing Turbopack like finding slowdowns / large
memory usage / optimizing performance.
However, it's useful for people that want to peek into why their
application is slow to compile. I.e. we've used
https://turbo-trace-viewer.vercel.app to investigate reports in #48748.
This PR adds support for `trace.log` by default, so if you add
`NEXT_TURBOPACK_TRACING=1 NEXT_TURBOPACK_TRACE_SERVER=1` it will
automatically select the `trace.log` for the current instance of
Next.js. You can only have one trace server running at the same time.
### `next internal`
In order to support running the trace server standalone, which is useful
for investigating trace files other people have shared, I've added a new
subcommand `internal` that is not covered by semver / use at your own
risk. It's meant for internal tools that are useful to be bound to the
version of Next.js, the turbo-trace-server is a great example of that as
it has an internal binary format for storing data that needs to match
the trace.log file.
If you want to take a look at `.next/trace` instead the new `next
internal` subcommand can be used for that:
```sh
# Replace [path] with a path to a file.
next internal turbo-trace-server [path]
```
For example:
```sh
next internal turbo-trace-server ~/Downloads/trace
```
Currently the trace server does not support loading multiple files, just
hasn't been implemented yet. Once we can load two or more files we can
load both `.next/trace` and `trace.log` when
`NEXT_TURBOPACK_TRACE_SERVER=1` and support multiple paths passed to
`next internal turbo-trace-server`.
### Turbopack upgrade
PR includes a Turbopack upgrade:
* https://github.com/vercel/turbo/pull/8073 <!-- OJ Kwon -
feat(webpack-loaders): support dummy span interface -->
* https://github.com/vercel/turbo/pull/8083 <!-- OJ Kwon - fix(webpack):
print resource, project path when relative calc fails -->
* https://github.com/vercel/turbo/pull/8094 <!-- Tim Neutkens -
Implement bindings for Turbopack trace server -->
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Closes NEXT-3328
### What?
Add support to import attributes.
### Why?
The old import assertions syntax is deprecated and the proposal is
updated. See https://github.com/babel/babel/pull/15536
### How?
Add support to import attributes and keep old import assertions working
by using `@babel/plugin-syntax-import-attributes` with the
`deprecatedAssertSyntax` option.
Docs: https://babeljs.io/docs/babel-plugin-syntax-import-attributes
---------
Co-authored-by: Jiachi Liu <inbox@huozhi.im>
Co-authored-by: Steven <steven@ceriously.com>
## What?
Before: 25.71s
![CleanShot 2024-04-23 at 12 19
42@2x](https://github.com/vercel/next.js/assets/6324199/3a0ebb81-ac55-4b0c-8bfc-9a61ce138e6f)
After: 11.05s (-57%)
![CleanShot 2024-04-23 at 12 16
35@2x](https://github.com/vercel/next.js/assets/6324199/d7b6cd4c-d1e4-4dc2-a423-20b539186d25)
## How?
Currently the system for isolation looks like this:
- Copy `packages` folder to an isolated directory
- Run `pnpm pack` for all folders in `packages`
- Collect the pack files, add them as `dependencies` in package.json of
the isolated application
- Run `pnpm install`
Because the `next-swc` (Turbopack + SWC, yes we still need to rename the
package) binary file is quite large in development (900MB+) it means we
have to copy, then zip (pnpm pack), then unzip (pnpm install) that
binary, which takes about 3+ seconds in each step.
The change in this PR is to skip the copy/zip/unzip completely by
providing the folder path for the binary directly to Next.js, as it's a
binary we don't need the special isolation for this, it's already
standalone so running it directly allows us to skip 14,6 seconds of work
that is required for each isolated test in development.
This will likely have little effect on CI times as we already do some
tricks like only running the packing at the start of the CI process.
Only thing that could be better and is probably worth doing is adopting
this change for the time it saves for unzipping, that's almost 4 seconds
per test still.
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Closes NEXT-3200
---------
Co-authored-by: JJ Kasper <jj@jjsweb.site>
### What
Closes PACK-2978, requires https://github.com/vercel/turbo/pull/8005.
PR extends existing mdxRs config from accepting object as well in
addition to current boolean flag, mainly to allow to specify what kind
of markdown types will be used between gfm and commonmark.
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### What?
This ensures that the body limit option is enforced on all request
bodies sent to the Node.js runtime, not just the multipart field size
limits.
### Why?
The documentation states that this should limit the body size,
previously it only limited the field size.
### How?
This uses a `Transform` stream from Node.js. [Based on my
benchmarks](https://gist.github.com/wyattjoh/c470d98095da2f95f5920396aba2a206)
using the transform stream added next to no overhead, yet it did
simplify the implementation quite a bit. Assuming this is due to the
already performant stream support within Node.js.
Closes NEXT-3151
* https://github.com/vercel/turbo/pull/7995 <!-- Benjamin Woodruff - fix(turbopack-node) postcss.config.js path resolution on Windows -->
(plus unrelated turborepo + CI changes)
This PR should not be cherrypicked into the 14-2-1 branch. Instead https://github.com/vercel/next.js/pull/64677 should be merged into that branch, as that PR contains only the one above Windows commit.
> Note: Did not add additional tests or make many changes to the utils,
possible refactoring on the following PR.
This PR split the legacy tests into four sections to improve the
maintenance and concurrency of CNA tests:
- `prompts`: target prompt interactions. `Y/n`
- `examples`: target `--example` and `--example-path` flags.
- `templates`: target the flag values such as `--app`, `--eslint`, etc.
- `package-manager`: target package managers: npm, pnpm, yarn, bun
---------
Co-authored-by: JJ Kasper <jj@jjsweb.site>
### What?
Pass the names of side-effect-free packages specified in `experimental.optimizePackageImports`.
Turbopack counterpart: https://github.com/vercel/turbo/pull/7731
### Why?
Some packages like `@tremor/react` causes a problem without `optimizePackageImports`.
### How?
Closes PACK-2527
This PR upgrades `enhanced-resolve` to `5.16.0` so as to benefit from
https://github.com/webpack/enhanced-resolve/pull/301, recently merged.
Without this diff, importing dependencies from files from external PnP
projects would fail. It's a little niche, but I'm working on a
documentation website that leverages that to allow deploying multiple
websites from the same template.
Co-authored-by: Sam Ko <sam@vercel.com>
Co-authored-by: Steven <steven@ceriously.com>