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A statically generated blog example using Next.js and Prismic

This example showcases Next.js's Static Generation feature using Prismic as the data source.

Demo

Deploy your own

Once you have access to the environment variables you'll need, deploy the example using Vercel:

Deploy with Vercel

Related examples

How to use

Using create-next-app

Execute create-next-app with npm or Yarn to bootstrap the example:

npx create-next-app --example cms-prismic cms-prismic-app
# or
yarn create next-app --example cms-prismic cms-prismic-app

Download manually

Download the example:

curl https://codeload.github.com/vercel/next.js/tar.gz/canary | tar -xz --strip=2 next.js-canary/examples/cms-prismic
cd cms-prismic

Configuration

Step 1. Create an account and a repository on Prismic

First, create an account on Prismic.

After creating an account, create a repository from the dashboard and assign to it any name of your liking.

Step 2. Create an author type

From the repository page, create a new custom type:

  • The name should be author.

Next, add these fields (you don't have to modify the settings):

  • name - Key Text field
  • picture - Image field

Alternatively, you can copy the JSON in types/author.json, then click on JSON editor and paste it there.

Save the type and continue.

Step 3. Create a post type

From the repository page, create a new custom type:

  • The name should be post.

Next, add these fields (you don't have to modify the settings unless specified):

  • title - Title field
  • content - Rich Text field
  • excerpt - Key Text field
  • coverimage - Image field
  • date - Date field
  • author - Content relationship field, you may also add author to the Constraint to custom type option to only accept documents from the author type.
  • slug - UID field.

Alternatively, you can copy the JSON in types/post.json, then click on JSON editor and paste it there.

Save the type and continue.

Step 4. Populate Content

Go to the Content page, it's in the menu at the top left, then click on Create new and select the author type:

  • You just need 1 author document.
  • Use dummy data for the text.
  • For the image, you can download one from Unsplash.

Next, select Post and create a new document.

  • We recommend creating at least 2 Post documents.
  • Use dummy data for the text.
  • You can write markdown for the content field.
  • For images, you can download them from Unsplash.
  • Pick the author you created earlier.

Important: For each document, you need to click Publish after saving. If not, the document will be in the draft state.

Step 5. Set up environment variables

Follow the instructions in this post to generate a new access token.

Next, copy the .env.local.example file in this directory to .env.local (which will be ignored by Git):

cp .env.local.example .env.local

Then set each variable on .env.local:

  • PRISMIC_API_TOKEN should be the Permanent access token you just created
  • PRISMIC_REPOSITORY_NAME is the name of your repository (the one in the URL)
  • PRISMIC_REPOSITORY_LOCALE is the locale of your repository. Defaults to en-us

Your .env.local file should look like this:

PRISMIC_API_TOKEN=...
PRISMIC_REPOSITORY_NAME=...
PRISMIC_REPOSITORY_LOCALE=...

Make sure the locale matches your settings in the Prismic dashboard.

Step 6. Run Next.js in development mode

npm install
npm run dev

# or

yarn install
yarn dev

Your blog should be up and running on http://localhost:3000! If it doesn't work, post on GitHub discussions.

Step 7. Try preview mode

On your repository page, go to Settings, click on Previews and then Create a New Preview for development, fill the form like so:

  • Site Name: may be anything, like development
  • Domain of Your Application: http://localhost:3000
  • Link Resolver: /api/preview

Once saved, go to one of the posts you've created and:

  • Update the title. For example, you can add [Draft] in front of the title.
  • Click Save, but DO NOT click Publish. By doing this, the post will be in draft state.
  • Right next to the Publish button you should see the Preview button, displayed with an eye icon. Click on it!

You should now be able to see the updated title. To exit preview mode, you can click on Click here to exit preview mode at the top of the page.

Step 8. Deploy on Vercel

You can deploy this app to the cloud with Vercel (Documentation).

Deploy Your Local Project

To deploy your local project to Vercel, push it to GitHub/GitLab/Bitbucket and import to Vercel.

Important: When you import your project on Vercel, make sure to click on Environment Variables and set them to match your .env.local file.

Deploy from Our Template

Alternatively, you can deploy using our template by clicking on the Deploy button below.

Deploy with Vercel

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