It's headless WordPress! π - https://nextjswp.com
This is a bare-bones Next.js app, which fetches data from WordPress via WPGraphQL and styles it with TailwindCSS.
Please consider it a starting point for your next headless WordPress project.
- Category and Tag Archives
- Comments
- Custom Fields
- Custom Post Types
- On-demand Revalidation
- Post/Page Previews
- RSS Feed
- Search
- Sitemap
- WordPress Menus
- Static Site Generation (SSG)
- TypeScript, ESLint, Stylelint, and Prettier
- Yoast SEO
Plus it's really, really fast! π
Yes! You can view a website running this code at https://gregrickaby.com (github repo).
I've decided to simplify things based on the Next.js App Router. You can still view the old repo.
Yes! I'm always interested in taking on headless WordPress projects. Send an email with your budget and requirements to greg@gregrickaby.com
git clone git@github.com:gregrickaby/nextjs-wordpress.git
npm i
cp .env.example .env.local
Customize the URLs in .env.local
to match your WordPress setup:
# WordPress GraphQL API URL. No trailing slash.
NEXT_PUBLIC_WORDPRESS_GRAPHQL_URL="https://blog.nextjswp.com/graphql"
# WordPress REST API URL. No trailing slash.
NEXT_PUBLIC_WORDPRESS_REST_API_URL="https://blog.nextjswp.com/wp-json/wp/v2"
# Optional. JWT auth refresh token.
#NEXTJS_AUTH_REFRESH_TOKEN=""
# Preview Secret. Must match the constant in wp-config.php.
NEXTJS_PREVIEW_SECRET="preview"
# Revalidation Secret. Must match the constant in wp-config.php.
NEXTJS_REVALIDATION_SECRET="revalidate"
Update the URL in next.config.js
to match your WordPress site:
/** @type {import('next').NextConfig} */
const nextConfig = {
images: {
remotePatterns: [
{
protocol: 'https',
hostname: '*.nextjswp.**' // <-- Change to your WordPress site
}
]
}
}
module.exports = nextConfig
Update the content to match your WordPress site:
const config = {
siteName: 'Next.js WordPress',
siteDescription: "It's headless WordPress!",
siteUrl: 'https://nextjswp.com'
}
You'll need either a local or public WordPress site with the following plugins:
- Advanced Custom Fields (free version is fine)
- Next.js WordPress Plugin
- Next.js WordPress Theme
- WPGraphQL Yoast SEO
- WPGraphQL for Advanced Custom Fields
- WPGraphQL JWT Authentication (optional)
- WPGraphQL
- Yoast SEO
After installing all the plugins mentioned above, you'll need to add some constants to your wp-config.php
file:
// The URL of your Next.js frontend. Include the trailing slash.
define( 'NEXTJS_FRONTEND_URL', 'https://nextjswp.com/' );
// Optional. JWT auth refresh token.
//define( 'GRAPHQL_JWT_AUTH_SECRET_KEY', '' );
// Any random string. This must match the .env variable in the Next.js frontend.
define( 'NEXTJS_PREVIEW_SECRET', 'preview' );
// Any random string. This must match the .env variable in the Next.js frontend.
define( 'NEXTJS_REVALIDATION_SECRET', 'revalidate' );
In order to query draft posts for Previews, you'll need to authenticate with WordPress. The following is a one-time step:
- Install and activate the WPGraphQL JWT Authentication plugin
- Generate a random string. I recommend using the WordPress salt generator
- Copy the string
- Open your
wp-config.php
file, and paste the string into theGRAPHQL_JWT_AUTH_SECRET_KEY
constant. (Be sure to uncomment the constant by removing the//
symbols.)
// Optional. JWT auth refresh token.
define( 'GRAPHQL_JWT_AUTH_SECRET_KEY', 'some-random-string-generated-by-wp-salt' );
- Go to GraphQL -> GraphiQL IDE in your WordPress admin
- Copy the following and paste into GraphiQL IDE (replace
your_username
andyour_password
with your WordPress credentials)
mutation Login {
login(
input: {
clientMutationId: "uniqueId"
password: "your_password"
username: "your_username"
}
) {
refreshToken
}
}
- Click the Play button in GraphiQL to run the mutation
- Copy the
refreshToken
returned by the mutation - Open the Next.js
.env.local
file, and paste therefreshToken
into theNEXTJS_AUTH_REFRESH_TOKEN
variable. (Be sure to uncomment the variable by removing the#
symbol.)
# Optional. JWT auth refresh token.
NEXTJS_AUTH_REFRESH_TOKEN="refresh-token-generated-by-grapqh-query"
You should now be able to preview draft posts in your Next.js app by clicking the Preview button in your WordPress admin.
npm run dev
Once the dev server has started, you can view the front-end: http://localhost:3000
GraphQL is efficient because we can query multiple endpoints in a single request. If we were to use the WordPress REST-API, we would need to make multiple round trips to each respective endpoint.
We can build our queries in GraphiQL (or your favorite REST client) and let JSON.stringify()
format it. Because this is all standard JavaScript, we can even pass variables to our queries-- no need for a 3rd party package!
Here is a query to fetch a single post (based on the slug), the featured image, author meta, categories, tags, SEO, and post comments:
import {Post} from '@/lib/types'
/**
* Fetch a single post by slug.
*/
export async function getPostBySlug(slug: string) {
// Define our query.
const query = `
query GetPost($slug: ID!) {
post(id: $slug, idType: SLUG) {
databaseId
content(format: RENDERED)
title(format: RENDERED)
featuredImage {
node {
altText
mediaDetails {
sizes(include: MEDIUM) {
height
width
sourceUrl
}
}
}
}
author {
node {
avatar {
url
}
name
}
}
date
tags {
nodes {
databaseId
name
}
}
categories {
nodes {
databaseId
name
}
}
seo {
metaDesc
title
}
comments(first: 30, where: {order: ASC}) {
nodes {
content(format: RENDERED)
databaseId
date
status
author {
node {
avatar {
url
}
email
name
url
}
}
}
}
}
}
`
// Define our variables.
const variables = {
slug: slug
}
// Fetch the data using a reusable fetch function. Next.js
// automatically memoizes and caches these requests.
const response = await fetchGraphQL(query, variables)
// Return the post.
return response.data.post as Post
}
This repo does not use a 3rd party GraphQL package, because Next.js automatically memoizes the fetch()
requests in our custom fetch function. This means that if we fetch the same data twice, Next.js will only make one request to WordPress.
If you prefer use a 3rd party GraphQL package, simply swap out the custom
fetchGraphQL()
function.
Remember to add all the environment variables from .env.local
to your production environment on Vercel or Netlify.
RSS feed and the Sitemap are available at:
Previews are available at:
Contributions are welcome! Please see the contributing guidelines for more information.