6545783be3
### What? When handling route interception in two different segments but handled by the same interception route, the first interception will show the correct component but attempting the same interception on another segment will return elements from the first request, not the second. ### Why? Prefetch cache entries are created from the browser URL. However, route interception makes use of `nextUrl` to mask the underlying components that are being fetched from the server to handle the request Consider the following scenario: ``` app foo @modal (...)post [id] bar @modal (...post) [id] post [id] ``` If you trigger an interception on `/foo`, your URL is going to be masked to `/post/1` and keyed as such in the prefetch cache. However, the cache entry is actually associated with `app/foo/@modal/(...post)/[id]`. That means when you trigger the same interception on `/bar`, it will return the tree from `/foo`. ### How? This PR will prefix the prefetch cache key with `state.nextUrl` when necessary. Fixes #49878 Fixes #52748 Closes NEXT-1818 |
||
---|---|---|
.cargo | ||
.config | ||
.devcontainer | ||
.github | ||
.husky | ||
.vscode | ||
bench | ||
contributing | ||
docs | ||
errors | ||
examples | ||
packages | ||
scripts | ||
test | ||
turbo/generators | ||
.alexignore | ||
.alexrc | ||
.eslintignore | ||
.eslintrc.json | ||
.gitattributes | ||
.gitignore | ||
.node-version | ||
.npmrc | ||
.prettierignore | ||
.prettierignore_staged | ||
.prettierrc.json | ||
.rustfmt.toml | ||
azure-pipelines.yml | ||
Cargo.lock | ||
Cargo.toml | ||
CODE_OF_CONDUCT.md | ||
contributing.md | ||
jest.config.js | ||
jest.replay.config.js | ||
lerna.json | ||
license.md | ||
lint-staged.config.js | ||
package.json | ||
pnpm-lock.yaml | ||
pnpm-workspace.yaml | ||
readme.md | ||
release.js | ||
run-tests.js | ||
rust-toolchain | ||
socket.yaml | ||
test-file.txt | ||
tsconfig-tsec.json | ||
tsconfig.base.json | ||
tsconfig.json | ||
tsec-exemptions.json | ||
turbo.json | ||
UPGRADING.md | ||
vercel.json |
Next.js
Getting Started
Visit https://nextjs.org/learn to get started with Next.js.
Documentation
Visit https://nextjs.org/docs to view the full documentation.
Who is using Next.js?
Next.js is used by the world's leading companies. Check out the Next.js Showcase to learn more.
Community
The Next.js community can be found on GitHub Discussions, where you can ask questions, voice ideas, and share your projects.
To chat with other community members you can join the Next.js Discord.
Our Code of Conduct applies to all Next.js community channels.
Contributing
Please see our contributing.md.
Good First Issues
We have a list of good first issues that contain bugs that have a relatively limited scope. This is a great place to get started, gain experience, and get familiar with our contribution process.
Authors
- Tim Neutkens (@timneutkens)
- Naoyuki Kanezawa (@nkzawa)
- Guillermo Rauch (@rauchg)
- Arunoda Susiripala (@arunoda)
- Tony Kovanen (@tonykovanen)
- Dan Zajdband (@impronunciable)
Security
If you believe you have found a security vulnerability in Next.js, we encourage you to responsibly disclose this and not open a public issue. We will investigate all legitimate reports. Email security@vercel.com
to disclose any security vulnerabilities.