mirror of
https://github.com/terribleplan/next.js.git
synced 2024-01-19 02:48:18 +00:00
7e12997af6
I wrote a [script](https://github.com/j0lv3r4/dependency-version-updater) to update dependencies recursively in `package.json` files, e.g.: ``` $ node index.js --path="./examples" --dependencies="react=^16.7.0,react-dom=^16.7.0" ``` This PR contains the result against the examples folder. |
||
---|---|---|
.. | ||
pages | ||
.env | ||
next.config.js | ||
package.json | ||
README.md |
With Dotenv example
How to use
Using create-next-app
Execute create-next-app
with Yarn or npx to bootstrap the example:
npx create-next-app --example with-dotenv with-dotenv-app
# or
yarn create next-app --example with-dotenv with-dotenv-app
Download manually
Download the example:
curl https://codeload.github.com/zeit/next.js/tar.gz/canary | tar -xz --strip=2 next.js-canary/examples/with-dotenv
cd with-dotenv
Install it and run:
npm install
npm run dev
# or
yarn
yarn dev
Deploy it to the cloud with now (download)
now
The idea behind the example
This example shows how to inline env vars.
Please note:
- It is a bad practice to commit env vars to a repository. Thats why you should normally gitignore your
.env
file. - As soon as you are using an env var in your code it will be publicly available and exposed to the client.
- If you want to have more control of what is exposed to the client check out tusbar/next-runtime-dotenv.
- Env vars are set (inlined) at build time. If you need to configure your app on rutime check out examples/with-universal-configuration-runtime