How to upgrade to version 9
To upgrade to version 9, run the following command:
npm i next@9yarn add next@9pnpm up next@9bun add next@9Good to know: If you are using TypeScript, ensure you also upgrade
@types/reactand@types/react-domto their corresponding versions.
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:
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/**/*.jsTo 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:
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 DynamicBundleAfter
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 DynamicBundleWas this helpful?