| --- |
| title: How to set up a custom server in Next.js |
| nav_title: Custom Server |
| description: Start a Next.js app programmatically using a custom server. |
| --- |
|
|
| {} |
|
|
| Next.js includes its own server with `next start` by default. If you have an existing backend, you can still use it with Next.js (this is not a custom server). A custom Next.js server allows you to programmatically start a server for custom patterns. The majority of the time, you will not need this approach. However, it's available if you need to eject. |
|
|
| > **Good to know**: |
| > |
| > - Before deciding to use a custom server, keep in mind that it should only be used when the integrated router of Next.js can't meet your app requirements. A custom server will remove important performance optimizations, like **[Automatic Static Optimization](/docs/pages/building-your-application/rendering/automatic-static-optimization).** |
| > - When using standalone output mode, it does not trace custom server files. This mode outputs a separate minimal `server.js` file, instead. These cannot be used together. |
|
|
| Take a look at the [following example](https: |
|
|
| ```ts filename="server.ts" switcher |
| import { createServer } from 'http' |
| import { parse } from 'url' |
| import next from 'next' |
|
|
| const port = parseInt(process.env.PORT || '3000', 10) |
| const dev = process.env.NODE_ENV !== 'production' |
| const app = next({ dev }) |
| const handle = app.getRequestHandler() |
|
|
| app.prepare().then(() => { |
| createServer((req, res) => { |
| const parsedUrl = parse(req.url!, true) |
| handle(req, res, parsedUrl) |
| }).listen(port) |
|
|
| console.log( |
| `> Server listening at http: |
| dev ? 'development' : process.env.NODE_ENV |
| }` |
| ) |
| }) |
| ``` |
|
|
| ```js filename="server.js" switcher |
| import { createServer } from 'http' |
| import { parse } from 'url' |
| import next from 'next' |
|
|
| const port = parseInt(process.env.PORT || '3000', 10) |
| const dev = process.env.NODE_ENV !== 'production' |
| const app = next({ dev }) |
| const handle = app.getRequestHandler() |
|
|
| app.prepare().then(() => { |
| createServer((req, res) => { |
| const parsedUrl = parse(req.url, true) |
| handle(req, res, parsedUrl) |
| }).listen(port) |
|
|
| console.log( |
| `> Server listening at http: |
| dev ? 'development' : process.env.NODE_ENV |
| }` |
| ) |
| }) |
| ``` |
|
|
| > `server.js` does not run through the Next.js Compiler or bundling process. Make sure the syntax and source code this file requires are compatible with the current Node.js version you are using. [View an example](https: |
|
|
| To run the custom server, you'll need to update the `scripts` in `package.json` like so: |
|
|
| ```json filename="package.json" |
| { |
| "scripts": { |
| "dev": "node server.js", |
| "build": "next build", |
| "start": "NODE_ENV=production node server.js" |
| } |
| } |
| ``` |
|
|
| Alternatively, you can set up `nodemon` ([example](https: |
|
|
| ```js |
| import next from 'next' |
|
|
| const app = next({}) |
| ``` |
|
|
| The above `next` import is a function that receives an object with the following options: |
|
|
| | Option | Type | Description | |
| | ------------ | ------------------ | ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------- | |
| | `conf` | `Object` | The same object you would use in `next.config.js`. Defaults to `{}` | |
| | `dev` | `Boolean` | (_Optional_) Whether or not to launch Next.js in dev mode. Defaults to `false` | |
| | `dir` | `String` | (_Optional_) Location of the Next.js project. Defaults to `'.'` | |
| | `quiet` | `Boolean` | (_Optional_) Hide error messages containing server information. Defaults to `false` | |
| | `hostname` | `String` | (_Optional_) The hostname the server is running behind | |
| | `port` | `Number` | (_Optional_) The port the server is running behind | |
| | `httpServer` | `node:http#Server` | (_Optional_) The HTTP Server that Next.js is running behind | |
| | `turbo` | `Boolean` | (_Optional_) Enable Turbopack | |
| |
| The returned `app` can then be used to let Next.js handle requests as required. |
| |
| <PagesOnly> |
| |
| ## Disabling file-system routing |
| |
| By default, `Next` will serve each file in the `pages` folder under a pathname matching the filename. If your project uses a custom server, this behavior may result in the same content being served from multiple paths, which can present problems with SEO and UX. |
| |
| To disable this behavior and prevent routing based on files in `pages`, open `next.config.js` and disable the `useFileSystemPublicRoutes` config: |
| |
| ```js filename="next.config.js" |
| module.exports = { |
| useFileSystemPublicRoutes: false, |
| } |
| ``` |
| |
| > Note that `useFileSystemPublicRoutes` disables filename routes from SSR; client-side routing may still access those paths. When using this option, you should guard against navigation to routes you do not want programmatically. |
| |
| > You may also wish to configure the client-side router to disallow client-side redirects to filename routes; for that refer to [`router.beforePopState`](/docs/pages/api-reference/functions/use-router#routerbeforepopstate). |
| |
| </PagesOnly> |
| |