description |
---|
Use codemods to update your codebase when upgrading Next.js to the latest version |
Next.js provides Codemod transformations to help upgrade your Next.js codebase when a feature is deprecated.
Codemods are transformations that run on your codebase programmatically. This allows for a large amount of changes to be applied without having to manually go through every file.
npx @next/codemod <transform> <path>
transform
- name of transform, see available transforms below.path
- files or directory to transform--dry
Do a dry-run, no code will be edited--print
Prints the changed output for comparison
Migrates a Create React App project to Next.js; creating a pages directory and necessary config to match behavior. Client-side only rendering is leveraged initially to prevent breaking compatibility due to window
usage during SSR and can be enabled seamlessly to allow gradual adoption of Next.js specific features.
Please share any feedback related to this transform in this discussion.
Transforms files that do not import React
to include the import in order for the new React JSX transform to work.
For example:
// my-component.js
export default class Home extends React.Component {
render() {
return <div>Hello World</div>
}
}
Transforms into:
// my-component.js
import React from 'react'
export default class Home extends React.Component {
render() {
return <div>Hello World</div>
}
}
Transforms anonymous components into named components to make sure they work with Fast Refresh.
For example:
// my-component.js
export default function () {
return <div>Hello World</div>
}
Transforms into:
// my-component.js
export default function MyComponent() {
return <div>Hello World</div>
}
The component will have a camel cased name based on the name of the file, and it also works with arrow functions.
Go to your project
cd path-to-your-project/
Run the codemod:
npx @next/codemod name-default-component
Transforms the withAmp
HOC into Next.js 9 page configuration.
For example:
// Before
import { withAmp } from 'next/amp'
function Home() {
return <h1>My AMP Page</h1>
}
export default withAmp(Home)
// After
export default function Home() {
return <h1>My AMP Page</h1>
}
export const config = {
amp: true,
}
Go to your project
cd path-to-your-project/
Run the codemod:
npx @next/codemod withamp-to-config
Transforms the deprecated automatically injected url
property on top level pages to using withRouter
and the router
property it injects. Read more here: https://nextjs.org/docs/messages/url-deprecated
For example:
// From
import React from 'react'
export default class extends React.Component {
render() {
const { pathname } = this.props.url
return <div>Current pathname: {pathname}</div>
}
}
// To
import React from 'react'
import { withRouter } from 'next/router'
export default withRouter(
class extends React.Component {
render() {
const { pathname } = this.props.router
return <div>Current pathname: {pathname}</div>
}
}
)
This is one case. All the cases that are transformed (and tested) can be found in the __testfixtures__
directory.
Go to your project
cd path-to-your-project/
Run the codemod:
npx @next/codemod url-to-withrouter