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You are currently viewing documentation for version 14 of Next.js.

Upgrading to Version 9

To upgrade to version 9, run the following command:

Terminal
npm i next@9
Terminal
yarn add next@9
Terminal
pnpm up next@9
Terminal
bun add next@9

Good to know: If you are using TypeScript, ensure you also upgrade @types/react and @types/react-dom to their corresponding versions.

Production Deployment on Vercel

If you previously configured routes in your vercel.json file for dynamic routes, these rules can be removed when leveraging Next.js 9's new Dynamic Routing feature.

Next.js 9's dynamic routes are automatically configured on Vercel and do not require any vercel.json customization.

You can read more about Dynamic Routing here.

Check your Custom App File (pages/_app.js)

If you previously copied the Custom <App> example, you may be able to remove your getInitialProps.

Removing getInitialProps from pages/_app.js (when possible) is important to leverage new Next.js features!

The following getInitialProps does nothing and may be removed:

class MyApp extends App {
  // Remove me, I do nothing!
  static async getInitialProps({ Component, ctx }) {
    let pageProps = {}
 
    if (Component.getInitialProps) {
      pageProps = await Component.getInitialProps(ctx)
    }
 
    return { pageProps }
  }
 
  render() {
    // ... etc
  }
}

Breaking Changes

@zeit/next-typescript is no longer necessary

Next.js will now ignore usage @zeit/next-typescript and warn you to remove it. Please remove this plugin from your next.config.js.

Remove references to @zeit/next-typescript/babel from your custom .babelrc (if present).

The usage of fork-ts-checker-webpack-plugin should also be removed from your next.config.js.

TypeScript Definitions are published with the next package, so you need to uninstall @types/next as they would conflict.

The following types are different:

This list was created by the community to help you upgrade, if you find other differences please send a pull-request to this list to help other users.

From:

import { NextContext } from 'next'
import { NextAppContext, DefaultAppIProps } from 'next/app'
import { NextDocumentContext, DefaultDocumentIProps } from 'next/document'

to

import { NextPageContext } from 'next'
import { AppContext, AppInitialProps } from 'next/app'
import { DocumentContext, DocumentInitialProps } from 'next/document'

The config key is now an export on a page

You may no longer export a custom variable named config from a page (i.e. export { config } / export const config ...). This exported variable is now used to specify page-level Next.js configuration like Opt-in AMP and API Route features.

You must rename a non-Next.js-purposed config export to something different.

next/dynamic no longer renders "loading..." by default while loading

Dynamic components will not render anything by default while loading. You can still customize this behavior by setting the loading property:

import dynamic from 'next/dynamic'
 
const DynamicComponentWithCustomLoading = dynamic(
  () => import('../components/hello2'),
  {
    loading: () => <p>Loading</p>,
  }
)

withAmp has been removed in favor of an exported configuration object

Next.js now has the concept of page-level configuration, so the withAmp higher-order component has been removed for consistency.

This change can be automatically migrated by running the following commands in the root of your Next.js project:

Terminal
curl -L https://github.com/vercel/next-codemod/archive/master.tar.gz | tar -xz --strip=2 next-codemod-master/transforms/withamp-to-config.js npx jscodeshift -t ./withamp-to-config.js pages/**/*.js

To perform this migration by hand, or view what the codemod will produce, see below:

Before

import { withAmp } from 'next/amp'
 
function Home() {
  return <h1>My AMP Page</h1>
}
 
export default withAmp(Home)
// or
export default withAmp(Home, { hybrid: true })

After

export default function Home() {
  return <h1>My AMP Page</h1>
}
 
export const config = {
  amp: true,
  // or
  amp: 'hybrid',
}

next export no longer exports pages as index.html

Previously, exporting pages/about.js would result in out/about/index.html. This behavior has been changed to result in out/about.html.

You can revert to the previous behavior by creating a next.config.js with the following content:

next.config.js
module.exports = {
  trailingSlash: true,
}

pages/api/ is treated differently

Pages in pages/api/ are now considered API Routes. Pages in this directory will no longer contain a client-side bundle.

Deprecated Features

next/dynamic has deprecated loading multiple modules at once

The ability to load multiple modules at once has been deprecated in next/dynamic to be closer to React's implementation (React.lazy and Suspense).

Updating code that relies on this behavior is relatively straightforward! We've provided an example of a before/after to help you migrate your application:

Before

import dynamic from 'next/dynamic'
 
const HelloBundle = dynamic({
  modules: () => {
    const components = {
      Hello1: () => import('../components/hello1').then((m) => m.default),
      Hello2: () => import('../components/hello2').then((m) => m.default),
    }
 
    return components
  },
  render: (props, { Hello1, Hello2 }) => (
    <div>
      <h1>{props.title}</h1>
      <Hello1 />
      <Hello2 />
    </div>
  ),
})
 
function DynamicBundle() {
  return <HelloBundle title="Dynamic Bundle" />
}
 
export default DynamicBundle

After

import dynamic from 'next/dynamic'
 
const Hello1 = dynamic(() => import('../components/hello1'))
const Hello2 = dynamic(() => import('../components/hello2'))
 
function HelloBundle({ title }) {
  return (
    <div>
      <h1>{title}</h1>
      <Hello1 />
      <Hello2 />
    </div>
  )
}
 
function DynamicBundle() {
  return <HelloBundle title="Dynamic Bundle" />
}
 
export default DynamicBundle