next-pages-preimport
v1.0.2
Published
Speed up first render of pages in your Next.js application.
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next-pages-preimport
Speed up first render of pages in your Next.js application.
Motivation
With Next.js a first render of each page has a large TTFB.
The overhead is due to the fact that dependencies are imported on demand when the user requests a page. In real complex applications this overhead can increase TTFB to tens of seconds.
The second time the page loads faster, since the modules are cached (in ssr-module-cache.js
).
You can find details here: https://github.com/vercel/next.js/issues/23187.
This issue can be fixed with pages pre-import. Right now only _app
and _document
can be pre-imported (implemented here: https://github.com/vercel/next.js/pull/23261).
With next-page-preimport
you can speed up your Next.js application and make it more stable.
Installation
yarn add next-pages-preimport
or
npm install next-pages-preimport
Usage
It works only with Custom Server.
// server.js
const express = require('express');
const next = require('next')
const nextPagesPreimport = require('next-pages-preimport');
const dev = process.env.NODE_ENV !== 'production'
const hostname = 'localhost'
const port = 3000
const app = next({ dev, hostname, port })
const handle = app.getRequestHandler()
app.prepare().then(() => {
if (!dev) {
nextPagesPreimport();
}
const server = express();
server.all('*', (req, res) => handle(req, res));
server.listen(port, (err) => {
if (err) {
throw err;
}
console.log(`Ready on http://${hostname}:${port}`);
});
})
Options
options.nextPath
Default: .next
nextPagesPreimport({ nextPath: 'build' });
This option may be useful when you set custom distDir
in your next.config.js
.
options.verbose
Default: false
nextPagesPreimport({ verbose: true });
When verbose
is true
all preimported modules are printed. Useful for debugging.