Fullstack Blog with Next.js, Typescript and Prisma
With Railway Integration
Without the Railway integration
This is a starter that shows how to implement a fullstack app in TypeScript with Next.js with the following stack:
Before you deploy the application to Vercel, ensure you
Note that the app uses a mix of server-side rendering with getServerSideProps
(SSR) and static site generation with getStaticProps
(SSG). When possible, SSG is used to make database queries already at build-time (e.g. when fetching the public feed). Sometimes, the user requesting data needs to be authenticated, so SSR is being used to render data dynamically on the server-side (e.g. when viewing a user's drafts).
Clone this repository:
git clone git@github.com:prisma/prisma-nextjs-blog.git
Install npm dependencies:
cd prisma-nextjs-blognpm install
If you're using Docker on your computer, the following script to set up PostgreSQL database using the docker-compose.yml
file at the root of your project:
npm run db:up
Run the following command to create your PostgreSQL database. This also creates the User
, Post
, Account
, Session
and VerificationToken
tables that are defined in prisma/schema.prisma
:
npx prisma migrate dev --name init
When npx prisma migrate dev
is executed against a newly created database, seeding is also triggered. The seed file in prisma/seed.ts
will be executed and your database will be populated with the sample data.
In order to get this example to work, you need to configure the GitHub authentication provider from NextAuth.js.
Configuring the GitHub authentication providerFirst, log into your GitHub account.
Then, navigate to Settings, then open to Developer Settings, then switch to OAuth Apps.
Clicking on the Register a new application button will redirect you to a registration form to fill out some information for your app. The Authorization callback URL should be the Next.js /api/auth
route.
An important thing to note here is that the Authorization callback URL field only supports a single URL, unlike e.g. Auth0, which allows you to add additional callback URLs separated with a comma. This means if you want to deploy your app later with a production URL, you will need to set up a new GitHub OAuth app.
Click on the Register application button, and then you will be able to find your newly generated Client ID and Client Secret. Copy and paste this info into the .env
file in the root directory.
The resulting section in the .env
file might look like this:
# GitHub oAuthGITHUB_ID=6bafeb321963449bdf51GITHUB_SECRET=509298c32faa283f28679ad6de6f86b2472e1bff
npm run dev
The app is now running, navigate to http://localhost:3000/
in your browser to explore its UI.
Evolving the application typically requires three steps:
For the following example scenario, assume you want to add a "profile" feature to the app where users can create a profile and write a short bio about themselves.
The first step is to add a new table, e.g. called Profile
, to the database. You can do this by adding a new model to your Prisma schema file file and then running a migration afterwards:
// schema.prismamodel Post {id Int @default(autoincrement()) @idtitle Stringcontent String?published Boolean @default(false)author User? @relation(fields: [authorId], references: [id])authorId Int}model User {id Int @default(autoincrement()) @idname String?email String @uniqueposts Post[]+ profile Profile?}+model Profile {+ id Int @default(autoincrement()) @id+ bio String?+ userId Int @unique+ user User @relation(fields: [userId], references: [id])+}
Once you've updated your data model, you can execute the changes against your database with the following command:
npx prisma migrate dev
You can now use your PrismaClient
instance to perform operations against the new Profile
table. Here are some examples:
Create a new user with a new profile
const profile = await prisma.profile.create({data: {bio: "Hello World",user: {},},});
Update the profile of an existing user
const user = await prisma.user.create({data: {name: "John",profile: {create: {bio: "Hello World",},},},});
const userWithUpdatedProfile = await prisma.user.update({data: {profile: {update: {bio: "Hello Friends",},},},});
Once you have added a new endpoint to the API (e.g. /api/profile
with /POST
, /PUT
and GET
operations), you can start building a new UI component in React. It could e.g. be called profile.tsx
and would be located in the pages
directory.
In the application code, you can access the new endpoint via fetch
operations and populate the UI with the data you receive from the API calls.
If you want to try this example with another database than SQLite, you can adjust the the database connection in prisma/schema.prisma
by reconfiguring the datasource
block.
Learn more about the different connection configurations in the docs.
For PostgreSQL, the connection URL has the following structure:
datasource db {provider = "postgresql"url = "postgresql://USER:PASSWORD@HOST:PORT/DATABASE?schema=SCHEMA"}
Here is an example connection string with a local PostgreSQL database:
datasource db {provider = "postgresql"url = "postgresql://janedoe:mypassword@localhost:5432/notesapi?schema=public"}
For MySQL, the connection URL has the following structure:
datasource db {provider = "mysql"url = "mysql://USER:PASSWORD@HOST:PORT/DATABASE"}
Here is an example connection string with a local MySQL database:
datasource db {provider = "mysql"url = "mysql://janedoe:mypassword@localhost:3306/notesapi"}
Here is an example connection string with a local Microsoft SQL Server database:
datasource db {provider = "sqlserver"url = "sqlserver://localhost:1433;initial catalog=sample;user=sa;password=mypassword;"}
Here is an example connection string with a local MongoDB database:
datasource db {provider = "mongodb"url = "mongodb://USERNAME:PASSWORD@HOST/DATABASE?authSource=admin&retryWrites=true&w=majority"}
Because MongoDB is currently in Preview, you need to specify the previewFeatures
on your generator
block:
generator client {provider = "prisma-client-js"previewFeatures = ["mongodb"]}
Fullstack Blog with Next.js, Typescript and Prisma
With Railway Integration
Without the Railway integration
This is a starter that shows how to implement a fullstack app in TypeScript with Next.js with the following stack:
Before you deploy the application to Vercel, ensure you
Note that the app uses a mix of server-side rendering with getServerSideProps
(SSR) and static site generation with getStaticProps
(SSG). When possible, SSG is used to make database queries already at build-time (e.g. when fetching the public feed). Sometimes, the user requesting data needs to be authenticated, so SSR is being used to render data dynamically on the server-side (e.g. when viewing a user's drafts).
Clone this repository:
git clone git@github.com:prisma/prisma-nextjs-blog.git
Install npm dependencies:
cd prisma-nextjs-blognpm install
If you're using Docker on your computer, the following script to set up PostgreSQL database using the docker-compose.yml
file at the root of your project:
npm run db:up
Run the following command to create your PostgreSQL database. This also creates the User
, Post
, Account
, Session
and VerificationToken
tables that are defined in prisma/schema.prisma
:
npx prisma migrate dev --name init
When npx prisma migrate dev
is executed against a newly created database, seeding is also triggered. The seed file in prisma/seed.ts
will be executed and your database will be populated with the sample data.
In order to get this example to work, you need to configure the GitHub authentication provider from NextAuth.js.
Configuring the GitHub authentication providerFirst, log into your GitHub account.
Then, navigate to Settings, then open to Developer Settings, then switch to OAuth Apps.
Clicking on the Register a new application button will redirect you to a registration form to fill out some information for your app. The Authorization callback URL should be the Next.js /api/auth
route.
An important thing to note here is that the Authorization callback URL field only supports a single URL, unlike e.g. Auth0, which allows you to add additional callback URLs separated with a comma. This means if you want to deploy your app later with a production URL, you will need to set up a new GitHub OAuth app.
Click on the Register application button, and then you will be able to find your newly generated Client ID and Client Secret. Copy and paste this info into the .env
file in the root directory.
The resulting section in the .env
file might look like this:
# GitHub oAuthGITHUB_ID=6bafeb321963449bdf51GITHUB_SECRET=509298c32faa283f28679ad6de6f86b2472e1bff
npm run dev
The app is now running, navigate to http://localhost:3000/
in your browser to explore its UI.
Evolving the application typically requires three steps:
For the following example scenario, assume you want to add a "profile" feature to the app where users can create a profile and write a short bio about themselves.
The first step is to add a new table, e.g. called Profile
, to the database. You can do this by adding a new model to your Prisma schema file file and then running a migration afterwards:
// schema.prismamodel Post {id Int @default(autoincrement()) @idtitle Stringcontent String?published Boolean @default(false)author User? @relation(fields: [authorId], references: [id])authorId Int}model User {id Int @default(autoincrement()) @idname String?email String @uniqueposts Post[]+ profile Profile?}+model Profile {+ id Int @default(autoincrement()) @id+ bio String?+ userId Int @unique+ user User @relation(fields: [userId], references: [id])+}
Once you've updated your data model, you can execute the changes against your database with the following command:
npx prisma migrate dev
You can now use your PrismaClient
instance to perform operations against the new Profile
table. Here are some examples:
Create a new user with a new profile
const profile = await prisma.profile.create({data: {bio: "Hello World",user: {},},});
Update the profile of an existing user
const user = await prisma.user.create({data: {name: "John",profile: {create: {bio: "Hello World",},},},});
const userWithUpdatedProfile = await prisma.user.update({data: {profile: {update: {bio: "Hello Friends",},},},});
Once you have added a new endpoint to the API (e.g. /api/profile
with /POST
, /PUT
and GET
operations), you can start building a new UI component in React. It could e.g. be called profile.tsx
and would be located in the pages
directory.
In the application code, you can access the new endpoint via fetch
operations and populate the UI with the data you receive from the API calls.
If you want to try this example with another database than SQLite, you can adjust the the database connection in prisma/schema.prisma
by reconfiguring the datasource
block.
Learn more about the different connection configurations in the docs.
For PostgreSQL, the connection URL has the following structure:
datasource db {provider = "postgresql"url = "postgresql://USER:PASSWORD@HOST:PORT/DATABASE?schema=SCHEMA"}
Here is an example connection string with a local PostgreSQL database:
datasource db {provider = "postgresql"url = "postgresql://janedoe:mypassword@localhost:5432/notesapi?schema=public"}
For MySQL, the connection URL has the following structure:
datasource db {provider = "mysql"url = "mysql://USER:PASSWORD@HOST:PORT/DATABASE"}
Here is an example connection string with a local MySQL database:
datasource db {provider = "mysql"url = "mysql://janedoe:mypassword@localhost:3306/notesapi"}
Here is an example connection string with a local Microsoft SQL Server database:
datasource db {provider = "sqlserver"url = "sqlserver://localhost:1433;initial catalog=sample;user=sa;password=mypassword;"}
Here is an example connection string with a local MongoDB database:
datasource db {provider = "mongodb"url = "mongodb://USERNAME:PASSWORD@HOST/DATABASE?authSource=admin&retryWrites=true&w=majority"}
Because MongoDB is currently in Preview, you need to specify the previewFeatures
on your generator
block:
generator client {provider = "prisma-client-js"previewFeatures = ["mongodb"]}