This plugin is powered by workbox and other good stuff.
Share your awesome PWA project here
Features
next-i18next
exampleblitz.config.js
).module.js
when next.config.js
has experimental.modern
set to true
NOTE 1 -
next-pwa
version 2.0.0+ should only work withnext.js
9.1+, and static files should only be served throughpublic
directory. This will make things simpler.NOTE 2 - If you encounter error
TypeError: Cannot read property **'javascript' of undefined**
during build, please consider upgrade to webpack5 innext.config.js
.
If you are new to
next.js
orreact.js
at all, you may want to first checkout learn next.js or next.js document. Then start from a simple example or progressive-web-app example in next.js repository.
yarn add next-pwa
Update or create next.config.js
with
const withPWA = require('next-pwa')({
dest: 'public'
})
module.exports = withPWA({
// next.js config
})
After running next build
, this will generate two files in your public
: workbox-*.js
and sw.js
, which will automatically be served statically.
If you are using Next.js version 9 or newer, then skip the options below and move on to Step 2.
If you are using Next.js older than version 9, you'll need to pick an option below before continuing to Step 2.
Copy files to your static file hosting server, so that they are accessible from the following paths: https://yourdomain.com/sw.js
and https://yourdomain.com/workbox-*.js
.
One example is using Firebase hosting service to host those files statically. You can automate the copy step using scripts in your deployment workflow.
For security reasons, you must host these files directly from your domain. If the content is delivered using a redirect, the browser will refuse to run the service worker.
When an HTTP request is received, test if those files are requested, then return those static files.
Example server.js
const { createServer } = require('http')
const { join } = require('path')
const { parse } = require('url')
const next = require('next')
const app = next({ dev: process.env.NODE_ENV !== 'production' })
const handle = app.getRequestHandler()
app.prepare().then(() => {
createServer((req, res) => {
const parsedUrl = parse(req.url, true)
const { pathname } = parsedUrl
if (pathname === '/sw.js' || /^/(workbox|worker|fallback)-w+.js$/.test(pathname)) {
const filePath = join(__dirname, '.next', pathname)
app.serveStatic(req, res, filePath)
} else {
handle(req, res, parsedUrl)
}
}).listen(3000, () => {
console.log(`> Ready on http://localhost:${3000}`)
})
})
The following setup has nothing to do with
next-pwa
plugin, and you probably have already set them up. If not, go ahead and set them up.
Create a manifest.json
file in your public
folder:
{
"name": "PWA App",
"short_name": "App",
"icons": [
{
"src": "/icons/android-chrome-192x192.png",
"sizes": "192x192",
"type": "image/png",
"purpose": "any maskable"
},
{
"src": "/icons/android-chrome-384x384.png",
"sizes": "384x384",
"type": "image/png"
},
{
"src": "/icons/icon-512x512.png",
"sizes": "512x512",
"type": "image/png"
}
],
"theme_color": "#FFFFFF",
"background_color": "#FFFFFF",
"start_url": "/",
"display": "standalone",
"orientation": "portrait"
}
Add the following into _document.jsx
or _app.tsx
, in :
<meta name="application-name" content="PWA App" />
<meta name="apple-mobile-web-app-capable" content="yes" />
<meta name="apple-mobile-web-app-status-bar-style" content="default" />
<meta name="apple-mobile-web-app-title" content="PWA App" />
<meta name="description" content="Best PWA App in the world" />
<meta name="format-detection" content="telephone=no" />
<meta name="mobile-web-app-capable" content="yes" />
<meta name="msapplication-config" content="/icons/browserconfig.xml" />
<meta name="msapplication-TileColor" content="#2B5797" />
<meta name="msapplication-tap-highlight" content="no" />
<meta name="theme-color" content="#000000" />
<link rel="apple-touch-icon" href="/icons/touch-icon-iphone.png" />
<link rel="apple-touch-icon" sizes="152x152" href="/icons/touch-icon-ipad.png" />
<link rel="apple-touch-icon" sizes="180x180" href="/icons/touch-icon-iphone-retina.png" />
<link rel="apple-touch-icon" sizes="167x167" href="/icons/touch-icon-ipad-retina.png" />
<link rel="icon" type="image/png" sizes="32x32" href="/icons/favicon-32x32.png" />
<link rel="icon" type="image/png" sizes="16x16" href="/icons/favicon-16x16.png" />
<link rel="manifest" href="/manifest.json" />
<link rel="mask-icon" href="/icons/safari-pinned-tab.svg" color="#5bbad5" />
<link rel="shortcut icon" href="/favicon.ico" />
<link rel="stylesheet" href="https://fonts.googleapis.com/css?family=Roboto:300,400,500" />
<meta name="twitter:card" content="summary" />
<meta name="twitter:url" content="https://yourdomain.com" />
<meta name="twitter:title" content="PWA App" />
<meta name="twitter:description" content="Best PWA App in the world" />
<meta name="twitter:image" content="https://yourdomain.com/icons/android-chrome-192x192.png" />
<meta name="twitter:creator" content="@DavidWShadow" />
<meta property="og:type" content="website" />
<meta property="og:title" content="PWA App" />
<meta property="og:description" content="Best PWA App in the world" />
<meta property="og:site_name" content="PWA App" />
<meta property="og:url" content="https://yourdomain.com" />
<meta property="og:image" content="https://yourdomain.com/icons/apple-touch-icon.png" />
Tip: Put the
viewport
head meta tag into_app.js
rather than in_document.js
if you need it.
<meta
name='viewport'
content='minimum-scale=1, initial-scale=1, width=device-width, shrink-to-fit=no, user-scalable=no, viewport-fit=cover'
/>
Offline fallbacks are useful when the fetch failed from both cache and network, a precached resource is served instead of present an error from browser.
To get started simply add a /_offline
page such as pages/_offline.js
or pages/_offline.jsx
or pages/_offline.ts
or pages/_offline.tsx
. Then you are all set! When the user is offline, all pages which are not cached will fallback to '/_offline'.
Use this example to see it in action
next-pwa
helps you precache those resources on the first load, then inject a fallback handler to handlerDidError
plugin to all runtimeCaching
configs, so that precached resources are served when fetch failed.
You can also setup precacheFallback.fallbackURL
in your runtimeCaching config entry to implement similar functionality. The difference is that above method is based on the resource type, this method is based matched url pattern. If this config is set in the runtimeCaching config entry, resource type based fallback will be disabled automatically for this particular url pattern to avoid conflict.
There are options you can use to customize the behavior of this plugin by adding pwa
object in the next config in next.config.js
:
const withPWA = require('next-pwa')({
dest: 'public'
// disable: process.env.NODE_ENV === 'development',
// register: true,
// scope: '/app',
// sw: 'service-worker.js',
//...
})
module.exports = withPWA({
// next.js config
})
false
disable: false
, so that it will generate service worker in both dev
and prod
disable: true
to completely disable PWAdev
, you can set disable: process.env.NODE_ENV === 'development'
true
false
when you want to handle register service worker yourself, this could be done in componentDidMount
of your root app. you can consider the register.js as an example.basePath
in next.config.js
or /
/app
so that path under /app
will be PWA while others are not/sw.js
public
folder from being precached.
['!noprecache/**/*']
- this means that the default behavior will precache all the files inside your public
folder but files inside /public/noprecache
folder. You can simply put files inside that folder to not precache them without config this.['!img/super-large-image.jpg', '!fonts/not-used-fonts.otf']
.next/static
(or your custom build) folder
[]
[/chunks/images/.*$/]
- Don't precache files under .next/static/chunks/images
(Highly recommend this to work with next-optimized-images
plugin)true
true
cacheStartUrl
set to true
/login
, it's recommended to setup this redirected url for the best user experience.
undefined
dynamicStartUrlRedirect
set to true
/_offline
page such as pages/_offline.js
and you are all set, no configuration necessaryobject
fallbacks.document
- fallback route for document (page), default to /_offline
if you created that pagefallbacks.image
- fallback route for image, default to nonefallbacks.audio
- fallback route for audio, default to nonefallbacks.video
- fallback route for video, default to nonefallbacks.font
- fallback route for font, default to nonenext/link
on front end. Checkout this example for some context about why this is implemented.
false
""
- i.e. default with no prefix/subdomain
if the app is hosted on example.com/subdomain
location.reload()
to refresh the app.
true
next-pwa
looks for a custom worker implementation to add to the service worker generated by workbox. For more information, check out the custom worker example.
worker
next-pwa
uses workbox-webpack-plugin
, other options which could also be put in pwa
object can be found ON THE DOCUMENTATION for GenerateSW and InjectManifest. If you specify swSrc
, InjectManifest
plugin will be used, otherwise GenerateSW
will be used to generate service worker.
next-pwa
uses a default runtime cache.js
There is a great chance you may want to customize your own runtime caching rules. Please feel free to copy the default cache.js
file and customize the rules as you like. Don't forget to inject the configurations into your pwa
config in next.config.js
.
Here is the document on how to write runtime caching configurations, including background sync and broadcast update features and more!
{command: 'doSomething', message: ''}
object when postMessage
to service worker. So that on the listener, it could do multiple different tasks using if...else...
.clean application cache
to reduce some flaky errors.runtimeCaching
such as options.cacheableResponse.statuses=[200,302]
.sw.js
file to figure out what's really going on.next-pwa
to generate worker box production build by specify the option mode: 'production'
in your pwa
section of next.config.js
. Though next-pwa
automatically generate the worker box development build during development (by running next
) and worker box production build during production (by running next build
and next start
). You may still want to force it to production build even during development of your web app for following reason:
self.__WB_DISABLE_DEV_LOGS = true
in your worker/index.js
(create one if you don't have one).userAgent
string to determine if users are using Safari/iOS/MacOS or some other platform, ua-parser-js library is a good friend for that purpose.MIT