2.4 KiB
With Firebase Hosting example
How to use
Using create-next-app
Download create-next-app
to bootstrap the example:
npm i -g create-next-app
create-next-app --example with-firebase-hosting with-firebase-hosting-app
Download manually
Download the example or clone the repo:
curl https://codeload.github.com/zeit/next.js/tar.gz/canary | tar -xz --strip=2 next.js-canary/examples/with-firebase-hosting
cd with-firebase-hosting
It is recommended to use a package manager that uses a lockfile and caching for faster dev/test cycles:
Set up firebase:
- install Firebase Tools:
npm i -g firebase-tools
- create a project through the firebase web console
- grab the projects ID from the web consoles URL: https://console.firebase.google.com/project/
- update the
.firebaserc
default project ID to the newly created project
Install project:
npm install
Run Next.js development:
npm run next
Run Firebase locally for testing:
npm run serve
Deploy it to the cloud with Firebase:
npm run deploy
The idea behind the example
The goal is to host the Next.js app on Firebase Cloud Functions with Firebase Hosting rewrite rules so our app is served from our Firebase Hosting URL. Each individual page
bundle is served in a new call to the Cloud Function which performs the initial server render.
This is based off of the work at https://github.com/geovanisouza92/serverless-firebase & https://github.com/jthegedus/firebase-functions-next-example as described here.
Important / Caveats
- The empty
placeholder.html
file is so Firebase Hosting does not error on an emptypublic/
folder and still hosts at the Firebase project URL. firebase.json
outlines the catchall rewrite rule for our Cloud Function.- Testing on Firebase locally requires a complete build of the Next.js app.
npm run serve
handles everything required. - Any npm modules dependencies used in the Next.js app (
app/
folder) must also be installed as dependencies for the Cloud Functions project (functions
folder).