Next.js CLI
The Next.js CLI allows you to start, build, and export your application.
To get a list of the available CLI commands, run the following command inside your project directory:
npx next -h
(npx comes with npm 5.2+ and higher)
The output should look like this:
Usage
$ next <command>
Available commands
build, start, export, dev, lint, telemetry, info
Options
--version, -v Version number
--help, -h Displays this message
For more information run a command with the --help flag
$ next build --help
You can pass any node arguments to next
commands:
NODE_OPTIONS='--throw-deprecation' next
NODE_OPTIONS='-r esm' next
NODE_OPTIONS='--inspect' next
Note: Running
next
without a command is the same as runningnext dev
Build
next build
creates an optimized production build of your application. The output displays information about each route.
- Size – The number of assets downloaded when navigating to the page client-side. The size for each route only includes its dependencies.
- First Load JS – The number of assets downloaded when visiting the page from the server. The amount of JS shared by all is shown as a separate metric.
Both of these values are compressed with gzip. The first load is indicated by green, yellow, or red. Aim for green for performant applications.
You can enable production profiling for React with the --profile
flag in next build
. This requires Next.js 9.5:
next build --profile
After that, you can use the profiler in the same way as you would in development.
You can enable more verbose build output with the --debug
flag in next build
. This requires Next.js 9.5.3:
next build --debug
With this flag enabled additional build output like rewrites, redirects, and headers will be shown.
Development
next dev
starts the application in development mode with hot-code reloading, error reporting, and more:
The application will start at http://localhost:3000
by default. The default port can be changed with -p
, like so:
npx next dev -p 4000
Or using the PORT
environment variable:
PORT=4000 npx next dev
Note:
PORT
can not be set in.env
as booting up the HTTP server happens before any other code is initialized.
You can also set the hostname to be different from the default of 0.0.0.0
, this can be useful for making the application available for other devices on the network. The default hostname can be changed with -H
, like so:
npx next dev -H 192.168.1.2
Production
next start
starts the application in production mode. The application should be compiled with next build first.
The application will start at http://localhost:3000
by default. The default port can be changed with -p
, like so:
npx next start -p 4000
Or using the PORT
environment variable:
PORT=4000 npx next start
Note:
PORT
can not be set in.env
as booting up the HTTP server happens before any other code is initialized.
Keep Alive Timeout
When deploying Next.js behind a downstream proxy (e.g. a load-balancer like AWS ELB/ALB) it’s important to configure Next’s underlying HTTP server with keep-alive timeouts that are larger than the downstream proxy’s timeouts. Otherwise, once a keep-alive timeout is reached for a given TCP connection, Node.js will immediately terminate that connection without notifying the downstream proxy. This results in a proxy error whenever it attempts to reuse a connection that Node.js has already terminated.
To configure the timeout values for the production Next.js server, pass --keepAliveTimeout
(in milliseconds) to next start
, like so:
npx next start --keepAliveTimeout 70000
Lint
next lint
runs ESLint for all files in the pages
, components
, and lib
directories. It also provides a guided setup to install any required dependencies if ESLint is not already configured in your application.
If you have other directories that you would like to lint, you can specify them using the --dir
flag:
next lint --dir utils
Telemetry
Next.js collects completely anonymous telemetry data about general usage. Participation in this anonymous program is optional, and you may opt-out if you’d not like to share any information.
To learn more about Telemetry, please read this document.
Info
next info
prints relevant details about the current system which can be used to report Next.js bugs. This information includes Operating System platform/arch/version, Binaries (Node.js, npm, Yarn, pnpm) and npm package versions (next
, react
, react-dom
).
Running the following in your project’s root directory:
next info
will give you information like this example:
Operating System:
Platform: linux
Arch: x64
Version: #22-Ubuntu SMP Fri Nov 5 13:21:36 UTC 2021
Binaries:
Node: 16.13.0
npm: 8.1.0
Yarn: 1.22.17
pnpm: 6.24.2
Relevant packages:
next: 12.0.8
react: 17.0.2
react-dom: 17.0.2
This information should then be pasted into GitHub Issues.