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getStaticPaths

If a page has Dynamic Routes and uses getStaticProps, it needs to define a list of paths to be statically generated.

When you export a function called getStaticPaths (Static Site Generation) from a page that uses dynamic routes, Next.js will statically pre-render all the paths specified by getStaticPaths.

import type {
InferGetStaticPropsType,
GetStaticProps,
GetStaticPaths,
} from 'next'

type Repo = {
name: string
stargazers_count: number
}

export const getStaticPaths = (async () => {
return {
paths: [
{
params: {
name: 'next.js',
},
}, // See the "paths" section below
],
fallback: true, // false or "blocking"
}
}) satisfies GetStaticPaths

export const getStaticProps = (async (context) => {
const res = await fetch('https://api.github.com/repos/vercel/next.js')
const repo = await res.json()
return { props: { repo } }
}) satisfies GetStaticProps<{
repo: Repo
}>

export default function Page({
repo,
}: InferGetStaticPropsType<typeof getStaticProps>) {
return repo.stargazers_count
}
export async function getStaticPaths() {
return {
paths: [
{
params: {
name: 'next.js',
},
}, // See the "paths" section below
],
fallback: true, // false or "blocking"
}
}

export async function getStaticProps() {
const res = await fetch('https://api.github.com/repos/vercel/next.js')
const repo = await res.json()
return { props: { repo } }
}

export default function Page({ repo }) {
return repo.stargazers_count
}

The getStaticPaths API reference covers all parameters and props that can be used with getStaticPaths.

When should I use getStaticPaths?​

You should use getStaticPaths if you’re statically pre-rendering pages that use dynamic routes and:

  • The data comes from a headless CMS
  • The data comes from a database
  • The data comes from the filesystem
  • The data can be publicly cached (not user-specific)
  • The page must be pre-rendered (for SEO) and be very fast — getStaticProps generates HTML and JSON files, both of which can be cached by a CDN for performance

When does getStaticPaths run​

getStaticPaths will only run during build in production, it will not be called during runtime. You can validate code written inside getStaticPaths is removed from the client-side bundle with this tool.

How does getStaticProps run with regards to getStaticPaths​

  • getStaticProps runs during next build for any paths returned during build
  • getStaticProps runs in the background when using fallback: true
  • getStaticProps is called before initial render when using fallback: blocking

Where can I use getStaticPaths​

  • getStaticPaths must be used with getStaticProps
  • You cannot use getStaticPaths with getServerSideProps
  • You can export getStaticPaths from a Dynamic Route that also uses getStaticProps
  • You cannot export getStaticPaths from non-page file (e.g. your components folder)
  • You must export getStaticPaths as a standalone function, and not a property of the page component

Runs on every request in development​

In development (next dev), getStaticPaths will be called on every request.

Generating paths on-demand​

getStaticPaths allows you to control which pages are generated during the build instead of on-demand with fallback. Generating more pages during a build will cause slower builds.

You can defer generating all pages on-demand by returning an empty array for paths. This can be especially helpful when deploying your Next.js application to multiple environments. For example, you can have faster builds by generating all pages on-demand for previews (but not production builds). This is helpful for sites with hundreds/thousands of static pages.

export async function getStaticPaths() {
// When this is true (in preview environments) don't
// prerender any static pages
// (faster builds, but slower initial page load)
if (process.env.SKIP_BUILD_STATIC_GENERATION) {
return {
paths: [],
fallback: 'blocking',
}
}

// Call an external API endpoint to get posts
const res = await fetch('https://.../posts')
const posts = await res.json()

// Get the paths we want to prerender based on posts
// In production environments, prerender all pages
// (slower builds, but faster initial page load)
const paths = posts.map((post) => ({
params: { id: post.id },
}))

// { fallback: false } means other routes should 404
return { paths, fallback: false }
}