I would like to encourage everyone to switch to successor - OpenNext. This package is EOL and won't be actively maitained. Newer versions of NextJS might not work.
This is a project allowing to deploy Next applications (standalone options turned on) to AWS Lambda without hassle.
This is an alternative to existing Lambda@Edge implementation (see) as it has too many limitations (primarily inability to use env vars) and deployments take too long.
This library uses Cloudfront, S3, ApiGateway and Lambdas to deploy easily in seconds (hotswap supported).
Multiple domains can be specified within CLI and Routing as well as Certificates are handled automatically.
- In your NextJS project, set output to standalone.
- Run
next build
(will generate standalone next folder). - Run
npx --package @sladg/nextjs-lambda cli pack
(will create ZIPs). - Run
npx --package @sladg/nextjs-lambda cli deploy
(will deploy to AWS). - Profit 🎉
next.config.js
const path = require('path')
module.exports = {
compress: false,
output: 'standalone',
experimental: {
esmExternals: false, // optional
externalDir: true, // optional
outputFileTracingRoot: path.join(__dirname, '../../'), // monorepo option
}
}
- Render frontfacing pages in Lambda,
- Render API routes in Lambda,
- Image optimization,
- NextJS headers (next.config.js),
- GetStaticPaths,
- next-intl (i18n),
- Middleware,
- GetServerSideProps,
- GetStaticProps,
- NextJS rewrites (next.config.js),
- Monorepo support,
-
Bundle Sharp together with image optimizer so Next uses it.Custom python optimizer used, -
Custom babel configurationNot possible with Next standalone output, - ISR and fallbacks
- Streaming
We need to create 2 lambdas in order to use NextJS. First one is handling pages/api rendering, second is solving image optimization.
This division makes it easier to control resources and specify sizes and timeouts as those operations are completely different.
Loading of assets and static content is handled via Cloudfront and S3 origin, so there is no need for specifying this behaviour in Lambda or handling it anyhow.
This is a Lambda entrypoint to handle non-asset requests. We need a way to start Next in lambda-friendly way and translate ApiGateway event into typical HTTP event. This is handled by server-handler, which sits alongside of next's server.js
in standalone output.
Lambda consumes ApiGateway requests, so we need to create ApiGw proxy (v2) that will trigger Lambda.
Lambda is designed to serve _next/image*
route in NextJS stack and replaces the default handler so we can optimize caching and memory limits for page renders and image optimization.
Optimizer used: imaginex
If using CDK, you can easily pass environment variables to Lambda. If .env
file is present during build time, this will get picked up and passed to Lambda as file.
If env variables with prefix NEXT_
are present during deployment time, those will get picked up and passed as environment variables to Lambda.
The priority for resolving env variables is as follows (stopping when found):
process.env
.env.$(NODE_ENV).local
.env.local (Not checked when NODE_ENV is test.)
.env.$(NODE_ENV)
.env
Frontend environment variables are automatically resolved during build time! You will not be able to set NEXT_PUBLIC_
variables during deployment / runtime.
See NextStandaloneStack
construct in lib/cdk/app.ts
.
Or just use cli deploy
command so you don't have to manage CDK yourself. See CLI help command for all congiruation, notably, it's possible to set Timeout and Memory for lambda from CLI. It is advised to always use custom --stackName
in deploy
command as it will affect names of all resources and will help you distinguish between different environments/applications.
If you want to use it programatically, see this guide.
In order to succefully deploy, you firstly need to include output: 'standalone'
in your next.config.js
setup. Secondly, any compression should be turned off as AWS is taking care of that. See compress: false
in your config.
Make sure to use NextJS in version 12 or above so this is properly supported.
Once output is set, you can go on and use your next build
command as you normally would.
To package everything, make sure to be in your project root folder and next folder .next
and public
exist. Packaging is done via NPM CLI command of @slack/nextjs-lambda pack
.
It will create next.out/
folder with 3 zip packages. One zip Lambda's code, one is dependencies layer and one is assets layer.
- code zip: include all files generated by next that are required to run on Lambda behind ApiGateway. Original handler as well as new server handler are included. Use
handler.handler
for custom one orserver.handler
for original one. - dependencies layer: all transpilied
node_modules
. Next includes only used files, dramatically reducing overall size. - assets layer: your public folder together with generated assets. Keep in mind that to public refer file, you need to include it in
public/assets/
folder, not just in public. This limitation dramatically simplifies whole setup. This zip file is uploaded to S3, it's not included in Lambda code.
Custom wrapper around NextServer to allow for passing ApiGateway events into Next server.
Cloudfront paths used:
default
_next/data/*
Next uses multiple directories to determine which file should be served. By default next provides us with list of routes for API/images/assets/pages. To simplify the process as much as possible, we are tapping into resulting paths.
We are packaging those assets to simulate output structure and we are using S3 behind CloudFront to serve those files. Also, Image Handler is tapping into S3 to provide images, so correct folder structure is crucial.
Cloudfront paths used:
_next/*
assets/*
Keep in minda, Cloudfront does not allow for multiple regex patterns in single origin, so using extensions to distinguish image/server handlers is not doable.