Output File Tracing
During a build, Next.js will automatically trace each page and its dependencies to determine all of the files that are needed for deploying a production version of your application.
This feature helps reduce the size of deployments drastically. Previously, when deploying with Docker you would need to have all files from your package’s dependencies
installed to run next start
. Starting with Next.js 12, you can leverage Output File Tracing in the .next/
directory to only include the necessary files.
Furthermore, this removes the need for the deprecated serverless
target which can cause various issues and also creates unnecessary duplication.
How It Works
During next build
, Next.js will use @vercel/nft to statically analyze import
, require
, and fs
usage to determine all files that a page might load.
Next.js’ production server is also traced for its needed files and output at .next/next-server.js.nft.json
which can be leveraged in production.
To leverage the .nft.json
files emitted to the .next
output directory, you can read the list of files in each trace which are relative to the .nft.json
file and then copy them to your deployment location.
Automatically Copying Traced Files
Next.js can automatically create a standalone
folder which copies only the necessary files for a production deployment including select files in node_modules
.
To leverage this automatic copying you can enable it in your next.config.js
:
module.exports = {
output: 'standalone',
}
This will create a folder at .next/standalone
which can then be deployed on it’s own without installing node_modules
.
Additionally, a minimal server.js
file is also output which can be used instead of next start
. This minimal server does not copy the public
or .next/static
folders by default as these should ideally be handled by a CDN instead, although these folders can be copied to the standalone/public
and standalone/.next/static
folders manually, after which server.js
file will serve these automatically.
Note: next.config.js
is read during next build
and serialized into the server.js
output file. If the legacy serverRuntimeConfig or publicRuntimeConfig options are being used, the values will be specific to values at build time.
Caveats
- While tracing in monorepo setups, the project directory is used for tracing by default. For
next build packages/web-app
,packages/web-app
would be the tracing root and any files outside of that folder will not be included. To include files outside of this folder you can setexperimental.outputFileTracingRoot
in yournext.config.js
.
// packages/web-app/next.config.js
module.exports = {
experimental: {
// this includes files from the monorepo base two directories up
outputFileTracingRoot: path.join(__dirname, '../../'),
},
}
- There are some cases that Next.js might fail to include required files, or might incorrectly include unused files. In those cases, you can export page configs props
unstable_includeFiles
andunstable_excludeFiles
respectively. Each prop accepts an array of minimatch globs relative to the project’s root to either include or exclude in the trace. - Currently, Next.js does not do anything with the emitted
.nft.json
files. The files must be read by your deployment platform, for example Vercel, to create a minimal deployment. In a future release, a new command is planned to utilize these.nft.json
files.