This feature is exclusive of
next export
. Please refer to Static HTML export if you want to learn more about it.
Let's start with an example, to create a custom exportPathMap
for an app with the following pages:
pages/index.js
pages/about.js
pages/post.js
Open next.config.js
and add the following exportPathMap
config:
module.exports = {
exportPathMap: async function (
defaultPathMap,
{ dev, dir, outDir, distDir, buildId }
) {
return {
'/': { page: '/' },
'/about': { page: '/about' },
'/p/hello-nextjs': { page: '/post', query: { title: 'hello-nextjs' } },
'/p/learn-nextjs': { page: '/post', query: { title: 'learn-nextjs' } },
'/p/deploy-nextjs': { page: '/post', query: { title: 'deploy-nextjs' } },
}
},
}
The pages will then be exported as HTML files, for example, /about
will become /about.html
.
exportPathMap
is an async
function that receives 2 arguments: the first one is defaultPathMap
, which is the default map used by Next.js. The second argument is an object with:
dev
- true
when exportPathMap
is being called in development. false
when running next export
. In development exportPathMap
is used to define routes.dir
- Absolute path to the project directoryoutDir
- Absolute path to the out/
directory (configurable with -o
). When dev
is true
the value of outDir
will be null
.distDir
- Absolute path to the .next/
directory (configurable with the distDir
config)buildId
- The generated build idThe returned object is a map of pages where the key
is the pathname
and the value
is an object that accepts the following fields:
page
: String
- the page inside the pages
directory to renderquery
: Object
- the query
object passed to getInitialProps
when prerendering. Defaults to {}
The exported
pathname
can also be a filename (for example,/readme.md
), but you may need to set theContent-Type
header totext/html
when serving its content if it is different than.html
.
It is possible to configure Next.js to export pages as index.html
files and require trailing slashes, /about
becomes /about/index.html
and is routable via /about/
. This was the default behavior prior to Next.js 9.
To switch back and add a trailing slash, open next.config.js
and enable the exportTrailingSlash
config:
module.exports = {
exportTrailingSlash: true,
}
next export
will use out
as the default output directory, you can customize this using the -o
argument, like so:
next export -o outdir