This project is now archived and is no longer maintained.
I'm happy so many people found this project useful, but it's now out of date and many of the features of this starter project are now redundant as Next.js has evolved considerably over the last few years and now has native support for features such as CSS and SASS and for API routes without requiring a custom server.
For that reason I'm retiring this project and putting it into archive mode.
Thank you to everyone who contributed to this project over the last 3 years!
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You can find up to date examples of how to use Next.js at https://github.com/vercel/next.js
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For an example of how to add authentication to Next.js project, check out NextAuth.js at https://next-auth.js.org
There is a NextAuth.js example project with live demo at http://next-auth-example.now.sh
This is a starter project for React that uses Next.js.
- Authentication via Email, Facebook, Twitter and Google+
- Uses Express combined with Passport JS for authentication and route handling
- Account management - Update details, link/unlink accounts, delete account
- Session support with secure HTTP Only cookies and CSRF Tokens
- SASS/SCSS wth Bootstrap 4 and Reactstrap with Bootstrap components for React
- Comes with Ionicons icon font and shows how to bundle other CSS and font files
You can see a live demo at https://nextjs-starter.now.sh
Next.js is a framework that makes it easy to create 'universal' React apps - React apps that do both client and server side rendering.
With Next.js, React pages are automatically rendered on both client and server side, without the hassle of setting up dependancies like webpack or babel and with automatic routing and without the constraints of projects like Create React App.
This is a starter project that provides an example of how to use Next.js with Express, SASS/SCSS, Bootstrap, Reactstrap (Boostrap 4 for React), the Ionicons icon set, examples of how to include data from remote REST APIs and incorporate an authentication system that supports both oAuth and Email using Passport (a popular authentication framework for Node.js).
This project exists to make it easier to get started a creating production app in React. You are invited to use it as a reference or to copy it and use it as a base for your own projects. Contributions to improve this project are welcome.
To get started, just clone the repository and run npm install && npm run dev
:
git clone https://github.com/iaincollins/nextjs-starter.git
npm install
npm run dev
Note: If you are running on Windows run install --noptional flag (i.e. npm install --no-optional
) which will skip installing fsevents.
If you wanted to run this site in production, you should install modules then build the site with npm run build
and run it with npm start
:
npm install
npm run build
npm start
You should run npm run build
again any time you make changes to the site.
Note: If you are already running a webserver on port 80 (e.g. Macs usually have the Apache webserver running on port 80) you can still start the example in production mode by passing a different port as an Environment Variable when starting (e.g. PORT=3000 npm start
).
If you configure a .env file (just copy .env.example over to '.env' and fill in the options) you can configure a range of options.
See the AUTHENTICATION.md for how to set up oAuth if you want to do that. It suggested you start with Twitter as it's the easiest to get working.
To deploy to production on Zeit's now.sh cloud platform you will need to install the Now
desktop app on your computer. If you don't want to install the Now
desktop app, you can use the following command to install it (either approach is fine):
sudo npm i -g --unsafe-perm now
Once installed, open now.json
and set a name
and alias
for your site.
To deploy, just run now
in the working directory:
npm install -g now
now
If you configure a .env file now
will include it when deploying if you use the -E option to deploy:
now -E
If you want to have your local .env
file have variables for local development and have a different sent of variables you use in production, you can create additional .env files and tell now
to use a specific file when deploying:
now -E production.env
Once you have deployed, now
will return a URL where the site when it has been deployed to, you can use this to preview everything works correctly in the browser.
If you have set an alias for the site, you can then make the site live on the alias you have defined using now alias
:
now alias
By default, this will point any aliases you have set in now.json
to your site.
You can configure now
to use aliases with custom domains using the now domain
and now dns
commands.
If you need an instance of MongoDB in the cloud https://mlab.com/ have free and inexpensive options.
Once you are comfortable using .env
files for configuration and running and deploying your app, take a look at now secrets
to set options in the cloud so you don't have to set them each time you deploy.
You can integrate now
with a GitHub account to trigger automated deployments anytime you push to GitHub. This works great if you have secrets set up!
When you deploy this project you will see this message as of November 2018:
WARN! You are using an old version of the Now Platform. More: https://zeit.co/docs/v1-upgrade
Now 2.0 was released in November 2018 and works differently from Now 1.0. This project has not been updated for Now 2.0. You may ignore this message for now.
You can host your Next.js site with any hosting provider. Although it works great on Now, it also works great with other providers like Heroku, Amazon Web Service, Google Cloud Platform, Microsoft Azure, DigitalOcean and others.