Runtime Configuration

Generally you'll want to use build-time environment variables to provide your configuration. The reason for this is that runtime configuration adds rendering / initialization overhead and is incompatible with Automatic Static Optimization.

To add runtime configuration to your app open next.config.js and add the publicRuntimeConfig and serverRuntimeConfig configs:

module.exports = { serverRuntimeConfig: { // Will only be available on the server side mySecret: 'secret', secondSecret: process.env.SECOND_SECRET, // Pass through env variables }, publicRuntimeConfig: { // Will be available on both server and client staticFolder: '/static', }, }

Place any server-only runtime config under serverRuntimeConfig.

Anything accessible to both client and server-side code should be under publicRuntimeConfig.

A page that relies on publicRuntimeConfig must use getInitialProps or getServerSideProps or your application must have a Custom App with getInitialProps to opt-out of Automatic Static Optimization. Runtime configuration won't be available to any page (or component in a page) without being server-side rendered.

To get access to the runtime configs in your app use next/config, like so:

import getConfig from 'next/config' import Image from 'next/image' // Only holds serverRuntimeConfig and publicRuntimeConfig const { serverRuntimeConfig, publicRuntimeConfig } = getConfig() // Will only be available on the server-side console.log(serverRuntimeConfig.mySecret) // Will be available on both server-side and client-side console.log(publicRuntimeConfig.staticFolder) function MyImage() { return ( <div> <Image src={`${publicRuntimeConfig.staticFolder}/logo.png`} alt="logo" layout="fill" /> </div> ) } export default MyImage

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