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Next.js

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This document was generated from README.md in the Next.js GitHub repository.

tip

To connect to Unleash from a client-side context, you'll need to use the Unleash front-end API (how do I create an API token?) or the Unleash proxy (how do I create client keys?).

Unleash Next.js SDK

This package allows easy integration of Unleash feature flags in a Next.js application.

Setup

Installation

To install, simply run:

npm install @unleash/nextjs
# or
yarn add @unleash/nextjs
# or
pnpm add @unleash/nextjs

Environment variables

This package will attempt to load configuration from Next.js Environment variables.

When using Unleash client-side, with <FlagProvider /> or getFrontendFlags() configure:

  • NEXT_PUBLIC_UNLEASH_FRONTEND_API_URL. URL should end with /api/frontend or /proxy
  • NEXT_PUBLIC_UNLEASH_FRONTEND_API_TOKEN client-side API token if you're using the front-end API, or a proxy client key if you're using a proxy
  • Using Edge is the same as using the frontend API, so you'll need a FRONTEND_API_TOKEN, and your URL should end with /api/frontend.

If using server-side (SSR, SSG, API), using getDefinitions() and evaluateFlags(), set:

Detailed explanation

PrefixableVariableDefault
NEXT_PUBLIC_UNLEASH_SERVER_API_URLhttp://localhost:4242/api
NEXT_PUBLIC_UNLEASH_FRONTEND_API_URL<(NEXT_PUBLIC_)UNLEASH_SERVER_API_URL>/frontend
NoUNLEASH_SERVER_API_TOKENdefault:development.unleash-insecure-api-token
NoUNLEASH_SERVER_INSTANCE_IDundefined
NEXT_PUBLIC_UNLEASH_FRONTEND_API_TOKENdefault:development.unleash-insecure-frontend-api-token
NEXT_PUBLIC_UNLEASH_APP_NAMEnextjs

If you plan to use configuration in the browser, add NEXT_PUBLIC_ prefix. If both are defined and available, private variable takes priority. You can use both to have different values on client-side and server-side.


💡 Usage with GitLab's feature flags: To use this SDK with GitLab Feature Flags, use UNLEASH_SERVER_INSTANCE_ID instead of UNLEASH_SERVER_API_TOKEN to authorize with GitLab's service.


Usage

A). 🌟 App directory (new)

This package is ready for server-side use with App Router.

Refer to ./example/README.md#App-router for an implementation example.

import { cookies } from "next/headers";
import { evaluateFlags, flagsClient, getDefinitions } from "@unleash/nextjs";

const getFlag = async () => {
const cookieStore = cookies();
const sessionId =
cookieStore.get("unleash-session-id")?.value ||
`${Math.floor(Math.random() * 1_000_000_000)}`;

const definitions = await getDefinitions({
fetchOptions: {
next: { revalidate: 15 }, // Cache layer like Unleash Proxy!
},
});

const { toggles } = evaluateFlags(definitions, {
sessionId,
});
const flags = flagsClient(toggles);

return flags.isEnabled("nextjs-example");
};

export default async function Page() {
const isEnabled = await getFlag();

return (
<p>
Feature flag is{" "}
<strong>
<code>{isEnabled ? "ENABLED" : "DISABLED"}</code>
</strong>
.
</p>
);
}

B). Middleware

It's possible to run this SDK in Next.js Edge Middleware. This is a great use case for A/B testing, where you can transparently redirect users to different pages based on a feature flag. Target pages can be statically generated, improving performance.

Refer to ./example/README.md#Middleware for an implementation example.

C). Client-side only - simple use case and for development purposes (CSR)

Fastest way to get started is to connect frontend directly to Unleash. You can find out more about direct Front-end API access in our documentation, including a guide on how to setup a client-side SDK key.

Important: Hooks and provider are only available in @unleash/nextjs/client.

import type { AppProps } from "next/app";
import { FlagProvider } from "@unleash/nextjs/client";

export default function App({ Component, pageProps }: AppProps) {
return (
<FlagProvider>
<Component {...pageProps} />
</FlagProvider>
);
}

With <FlagProvider /> in place you can now use hooks like: useFlag, useVariant, or useFlagsStatus to block rendering until flags are ready.

import { useFlag } from "@unleash/nextjs/client";

const YourComponent = () => {
const isEnabled = useFlag("nextjs-example");

return <>{isEnabled ? "ENABLED" : "DISABLED"}</>;
};

Optionally, you can configure FlagProvider with the config prop. It will take priority over environment variables.

<FlagProvider
config={{
url: "http://localhost:4242/api/frontend", // replaces NEXT_PUBLIC_UNLEASH_FRONTEND_API_URL
clientKey: "<Frontend_API_token>", // replaces NEXT_PUBLIC_UNLEASH_FRONTEND_API_TOKEN
appName: "nextjs", // replaces NEXT_PUBLIC_UNLEASH_APP_NAME

refreshInterval: 15, // additional client configuration
// see https://github.com/Unleash/unleash-proxy-client-js#available-options
}}
>

If you only plan to use Unleash client-side React SDK now also works with Next.js. Check documentation there for more examples.

D). Static Site Generation, optimized performance (SSG)

With same access as in the client-side example above you can resolve Unleash feature flags when building static pages.

import {
flagsClient,
getDefinitions,
evaluateFlags,
getFrontendFlags,
type IVariant,
} from "@unleash/nextjs";
import type { GetStaticProps, NextPage } from "next";

type Data = {
isEnabled: boolean;
variant: IVariant;
};

const ExamplePage: NextPage<Data> = ({ isEnabled, variant }) => (
<>
Flag status: {isEnabled ? "ENABLED" : "DISABLED"}
<br />
Variant: {variant.name}
</>
);

export const getStaticProps: GetStaticProps<Data> = async (_ctx) => {
/* Using server-side SDK: */
const definitions = await getDefinitions();
const context = {}; // optional, see https://docs.getunleash.io/reference/unleash-context
const { toggles } = evaluateFlags(definitions, context);

/* Or with the proxy/front-end API */
// const { toggles } = await getFrontendFlags({ context });

const flags = flagsClient(toggles);

return {
props: {
isEnabled: flags.isEnabled("nextjs-example"),
variant: flags.getVariant("nextjs-example"),
},
};
};

export default ExamplePage;

The same approach will work for ISR (Incremental Static Regeneration).

Both getDefinitions() and getFrontendFlags() can take arguments overriding URL, token and other request parameters.

E). Server Side Rendering (SSR)

import {
flagsClient,
evaluateFlags,
getDefinitions,
type IVariant,
} from "@unleash/nextjs";
import type { GetServerSideProps, NextPage } from "next";

type Data = {
isEnabled: boolean;
};

const ExamplePage: NextPage<Data> = ({ isEnabled }) => (
<>Flag status: {isEnabled ? "ENABLED" : "DISABLED"}</>
);

export const getServerSideProps: GetServerSideProps<Data> = async (ctx) => {
const sessionId =
ctx.req.cookies["unleash-session-id"] ||
`${Math.floor(Math.random() * 1_000_000_000)}`;
ctx.res.setHeader("set-cookie", `unleash-session-id=${sessionId}; path=/;`);

const context = {
sessionId, // needed for stickiness
// userId: "123" // etc
};

const definitions = await getDefinitions(); // Uses UNLEASH_SERVER_API_URL
const { toggles } = evaluateFlags(definitions, context);

const flags = flagsClient(toggles); // instantiates a static (non-syncing) unleash-proxy-client

return {
props: {
isEnabled: flags.isEnabled("nextjs-example")
},
};
};

export default ExamplePage;

F). Bootstrapping / rehydration

You can bootstrap Unleash React SDK to have values loaded from the start. Initial value can be customized server-side.

import App, { AppContext, type AppProps } from "next/app";
import {
FlagProvider,
getFrontendFlags,
type IMutableContext,
type IToggle,
} from "@unleash/nextjs";

type Data = {
toggles: IToggle[];
context: IMutableContext;
};

export default function CustomApp({
Component,
pageProps,
toggles,
context,
}: AppProps & Data) {
return (
<FlagProvider
config={{
bootstrap: toggles,
context,
}}
>
<Component {...pageProps} />
</FlagProvider>
);
}

CustomApp.getInitialProps = async (ctx: AppContext) => {
const context = {
userId: "123",
};

const { toggles } = await getFrontendFlags(); // use Unleash Proxy

return {
...(await App.getInitialProps(ctx)),
bootstrap: toggles,
context, // pass context along so client can refetch correct values
};
};

⚗️ CLI (experimental)

You can use unleash [action] [options] in your package.json scripts section, or with:

npx @unleash/nextjs

For the CLI to work, the following environment variables must be configured with appropriate values:

  • UNLEASH_SERVER_API_URL
  • UNLEASH_SERVER_API_TOKEN

The CLI will attempt to read environment values from any .env files if they're present. You can also set the variables directly when invoking the interface, as in the CLI usage example.

Usage

  • get-definitions <outputFile.json> Download feature flags definitions for bootstrapping (offline use) of server-side SDK.
  • generate-types [options] <outputFile.ts> Generate types and typed functions from feature flags defined in an Unleash instance. It will also generate strictly typed versions of useFlag, useVariant, useFlags and flagsClient (unless --typesOnly is used).
    • -t, --typesOnly don't include typed versions of functions exported from @unleash/nextjs (default: false)
    • -b, --bootstrap <sourceFile.json> load definitions from a file instead of fetching definitions - work offline
  • -V Output the version number

Example

Try it now

UNLEASH_SERVER_API_URL=https://app.unleash-hosted.com/demo/api \
UNLEASH_SERVER_API_TOKEN=test-server:default.8a090f30679be7254af997864d66b86e44dcfc5291916adff72a0fb5 \
npx @unleash/nextjs generate-types ./unleash.ts

Known limitation

  • In current interation server-side SDK does not support metrics.
  • When used server-side, this SDK does not support the "Hostname" and "IP" strategies. Use custom context fields and constraints instead.

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