ppr
This feature is currently experimental and subject to change, it's not recommended for production. Try it out and share your feedback on GitHub.
Partial Prerendering (PPR) enables you to combine static and dynamic components together in the same route. Learn more about PPR.
Using Partial Prerendering
Incremental Adoption (Version 15)
In Next.js 15, you can incrementally adopt Partial Prerendering in layouts and pages by setting the ppr
option in next.config.js
to incremental
, and exporting the experimental_ppr
route config option at the top of the file:
next.config.ts
import type { NextConfig } from 'next'
const nextConfig: NextConfig = {
experimental: {
ppr: 'incremental',
},
}
export default nextConfig
app/page.tsx
import { Suspense } from "react"
import { StaticComponent, DynamicComponent, Fallback } from "@/app/ui"
export const experimental_ppr = true
export default function Page() {
return {
<>
<StaticComponent />
<Suspense fallback={<Fallback />}>
<DynamicComponent />
</Suspense>
</>
};
}
Good to know:
- Routes that don't have
experimental_ppr
will default tofalse
and will not be prerendered using PPR. You need to explicitly opt-in to PPR for each route.experimental_ppr
will apply to all children of the route segment, including nested layouts and pages. You don't have to add it to every file, only the top segment of a route.- To disable PPR for children segments, you can set
experimental_ppr
tofalse
in the child segment.
Version | Changes |
---|---|
v15.0.0 | experimental incremental value introduced |
v14.0.0 | experimental ppr introduced |
Learn more about Partial Prerendering
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