Next.js Adapter
tRPC's support for Next.js is far more expansive than just an adapter. This page covers a brief summary of how to set up the adapter, but complete documentation is available here
Example app
Description | Links |
---|---|
Next.js Minimal Starter |
Next.js example
Serving your tRPC router in a Next.js project is straight-forward. Just create an API handler in pages/api/trpc/[trpc].ts
as shown below:
pages/api/trpc/[trpc].tsts
import { createNextApiHandler } from '@trpc/server/adapters/next';import { createContext } from '../../../server/trpc/context';import { appRouter } from '../../../server/trpc/router/_app';// @see https://nextjs.org/docs/api-routes/introductionexport default createNextApiHandler({router: appRouter,createContext,});
pages/api/trpc/[trpc].tsts
import { createNextApiHandler } from '@trpc/server/adapters/next';import { createContext } from '../../../server/trpc/context';import { appRouter } from '../../../server/trpc/router/_app';// @see https://nextjs.org/docs/api-routes/introductionexport default createNextApiHandler({router: appRouter,createContext,});
Handling CORS, and other Advanced usage
While you can usually just "set and forget" the API Handler as shown above, sometimes you might want to modify it further.
The API handler created by createNextApiHandler
and equivalents in other frameworks is just a function that takes req
and res
objects. This means you can also modify those objects before passing them to the handler, for example to enable CORS.
pages/api/trpc/[trpc].tsts
import { createNextApiHandler } from '@trpc/server/adapters/next';import { createContext } from '../../../server/trpc/context';import { appRouter } from '../../../server/trpc/router/_app';// create the API handler, but don't return it yetconst nextApiHandler = createNextApiHandler({router: appRouter,createContext,});// @see https://nextjs.org/docs/api-routes/introductionexport default async function handler(req: NextApiRequest,res: NextApiResponse,) {// We can use the response object to enable CORSres.setHeader('Access-Control-Allow-Origin', '*');res.setHeader('Access-Control-Request-Method', '*');res.setHeader('Access-Control-Allow-Methods', 'OPTIONS, GET');res.setHeader('Access-Control-Allow-Headers', '*');// If you need to make authenticated CORS calls then// remove what is above and uncomment the below code// Allow-Origin has to be set to the requesting domain that you want to send the credentials back to// res.setHeader('Access-Control-Allow-Origin', 'http://example:6006');// res.setHeader('Access-Control-Request-Method', '*');// res.setHeader('Access-Control-Allow-Methods', 'OPTIONS, GET');// res.setHeader('Access-Control-Allow-Headers', 'content-type');// res.setHeader('Referrer-Policy', 'no-referrer');// res.setHeader('Access-Control-Allow-Credentials', 'true');if (req.method === 'OPTIONS') {res.writeHead(200);return res.end();}// finally pass the request on to the tRPC handlerreturn nextApiHandler(req, res);}
pages/api/trpc/[trpc].tsts
import { createNextApiHandler } from '@trpc/server/adapters/next';import { createContext } from '../../../server/trpc/context';import { appRouter } from '../../../server/trpc/router/_app';// create the API handler, but don't return it yetconst nextApiHandler = createNextApiHandler({router: appRouter,createContext,});// @see https://nextjs.org/docs/api-routes/introductionexport default async function handler(req: NextApiRequest,res: NextApiResponse,) {// We can use the response object to enable CORSres.setHeader('Access-Control-Allow-Origin', '*');res.setHeader('Access-Control-Request-Method', '*');res.setHeader('Access-Control-Allow-Methods', 'OPTIONS, GET');res.setHeader('Access-Control-Allow-Headers', '*');// If you need to make authenticated CORS calls then// remove what is above and uncomment the below code// Allow-Origin has to be set to the requesting domain that you want to send the credentials back to// res.setHeader('Access-Control-Allow-Origin', 'http://example:6006');// res.setHeader('Access-Control-Request-Method', '*');// res.setHeader('Access-Control-Allow-Methods', 'OPTIONS, GET');// res.setHeader('Access-Control-Allow-Headers', 'content-type');// res.setHeader('Referrer-Policy', 'no-referrer');// res.setHeader('Access-Control-Allow-Credentials', 'true');if (req.method === 'OPTIONS') {res.writeHead(200);return res.end();}// finally pass the request on to the tRPC handlerreturn nextApiHandler(req, res);}
Route Handlers
If you're trying out the Next.js App Router and want to use route handlers, you can do so by using the fetch adapter, as they build on web standard Request and Response objects:
app/api/trpc/[trpc]/route.tsts
import { fetchRequestHandler } from '@trpc/server/adapters/fetch';import { appRouter } from '~/server/api/router';const handler = (req: Request) =>fetchRequestHandler({endpoint: '/api/trpc',req,router: appRouter,createContext: () => ({ ... })});export { handler as GET, handler as POST };
app/api/trpc/[trpc]/route.tsts
import { fetchRequestHandler } from '@trpc/server/adapters/fetch';import { appRouter } from '~/server/api/router';const handler = (req: Request) =>fetchRequestHandler({endpoint: '/api/trpc',req,router: appRouter,createContext: () => ({ ... })});export { handler as GET, handler as POST };