This example shows the most basic example using Next.js' new custom routes feature to proxy requests to an upstream server. We have 3 pages: pages/index.js
, pages/about.js
, and pages/hello/[slug].js
. All of these pages will be matched against Next.js and any other path will be proxied to the upstream server.
This approach is very helpful when you are trying to incrementally migrate your application to Next.js but still need to fallback to an existing application. You can add pages to your Next.js application one-by-one and then for non-migrated pages Next.js can proxy to the existing application until they are able to be migrated.
Deploy the example using Vercel or preview live with StackBlitz
Execute create-next-app
with npm, Yarn, or pnpm to bootstrap the example:
npx create-next-app --example custom-routes-proxying custom-routes-proxying-app
# or
yarn create next-app --example custom-routes-proxying custom-routes-proxying-app
# or
pnpm create next-app --example custom-routes-proxying custom-routes-proxying-app
npm install
npm run dev
# or
yarn install
yarn dev
Test out visiting one of the Next.js pages https://localhost:3000/ and then a non-Next.js page like http://localhost:3000/legacy-first.html or http://localhost:3000/another-legacy.html which will be proxied to the upstream server since it doesn't match any pages/assets in Next.js.
Deploy it to the cloud with Vercel (Documentation). Note: to deploy this example you will need to configure an existing upstream server.