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Blog with Agility CMS and Next.js

Start a blog with Next.js, AgilityCMS and TailwindCSS.

Framework
Use Case
Website Blog with Agility CMS and Next.js

Agility CMS & Next.js Starter

This is sample Next.js starter site that uses Agility CMS and aims to be a foundation for building sites using Next.js and Agility CMS.

Live Website Demo

New to Agility CMS? Sign up for a FREE account

πŸ“’ UPDATED FOR NEXT.JS 15 πŸ“’

  • We have updated this starter for Next.js 15.0.3. It is built on top of the @agility/nextjs npm package specialized for app router.

Caching

There are 2 new env var settings that are used to control caching.

  • AGILITY_FETCH_CACHE_DURATION

    • this setting sets the number of seconds that content items retrieved using the Agility Fetch SDK will be cached as objects.
    • Works best to use this with on-demand invalidation. If your hosting environment doesn't support this, set it to 0 to disable caching, or set it to a low value, like 10 seconds.
  • AGILITY_PATH_REVALIDATE_DURATION

    • this value controls the revalidate export that will tell next.js how long to cache a particular path segment. Set this to a longer value if you are using on-demand revalidation, and a lower value if not, and if your users expect content changes to be reflected earlier.

Agility will NOT cache anything in preview mode :)

On Demand Revalidation
  • If you are hosting your site on an environment that supports Next.js on-demand revalidation, then you should be using the AGILITY_FETCH_CACHE_DURATION value and actively caching items returned from the SDK.
  • the revalidation endpoint example is located at app/api/revalidate/route.ts and will revalidate the items based on the tags that are used to cache those object.
  • The lib/cms-content has examples of how to retrieve content while specifying the cache tags for it.

Changes

This starter now relies on component based data-fetching.

About This Starter

  • Uses our @agility/nextjs package to make getting started with Agility CMS and Next.js easy
  • Support for Next.js 15.0.3
  • Connected to a sample Agility CMS Instance for sample content & pages
  • Supports next/image for image optimization using the <Image /> component or the next.js <Image /> component for images that aren't stored in Agility.
  • Supports full Page Management
  • Supports Preview Mode
  • Supports the next/font package
  • Provides a functional structure that dynamically routes each page based on the request, loads Layout Models (Page Templates) dynamically, and also dynamically loads and renders appropriate Agility CMS Components (as React Server Components)
  • Supports component level data fetching.

Tailwind CSS

This starter uses Tailwind CSS, a simple and lightweight utility-first CSS framework packed with classes that can be composed to build any design, directly in your markup.

TypeScript

This starter is written in TypeScript, with ESLint.

Getting Started

To start using the Agility CMS & Next.js Starter, sign up for a FREE account and create a new Instance using the Blog Template.

  1. Clone this repository
  2. Run npm install or yarn install
  3. Rename the .env.local.example file to .env.local
  4. Retrieve your GUID, API Keys (Preview/Fetch), and Security Key from Agility CMS by going to Settings > API Keys.

How to Retrieve your GUID and API Keys from Agility

Running the Site Locally

Development Mode

When running your site in development mode, you will see the latest content in real-time from the CMS.

yarn
  1. yarn install
  2. yarn dev

This will launch the site in development mode, using your preview API key to pull in the latest content from Agility.

npm
  1. npm install
  2. npm run dev

Production Mode

When running your site in production mode, you will see the published content from Agility.

yarn
  1. yarn build
  2. yarn start
npm
  1. npm run build
  2. npm run start

Accessing Content

You can use the Agility Content Fetch SDK normally - either REST or GraphQL within server components.

Deploying Your Site

The easiest way to deploy a Next.js website to production is to use Vercel from the creators of Next.js, or Netlify. Vercel and Netlify are all-in-one platforms - perfect for Next.js.

Resources

Agility CMS

Next.js

Vercel

Netlify

Tailwind CSS

Community

Feedback and Questions

If you have feedback or questions about this starter, please use the Github Issues on this repo, or join our Community Slack Channel.

Website Blog with Agility CMS and Next.js
Avatar of agilityagility/agilitycms-nextjs-starter

Blog with Agility CMS and Next.js

Start a blog with Next.js, AgilityCMS and TailwindCSS.

Framework
Use Case

Agility CMS & Next.js Starter

This is sample Next.js starter site that uses Agility CMS and aims to be a foundation for building sites using Next.js and Agility CMS.

Live Website Demo

New to Agility CMS? Sign up for a FREE account

πŸ“’ UPDATED FOR NEXT.JS 15 πŸ“’

  • We have updated this starter for Next.js 15.0.3. It is built on top of the @agility/nextjs npm package specialized for app router.

Caching

There are 2 new env var settings that are used to control caching.

  • AGILITY_FETCH_CACHE_DURATION

    • this setting sets the number of seconds that content items retrieved using the Agility Fetch SDK will be cached as objects.
    • Works best to use this with on-demand invalidation. If your hosting environment doesn't support this, set it to 0 to disable caching, or set it to a low value, like 10 seconds.
  • AGILITY_PATH_REVALIDATE_DURATION

    • this value controls the revalidate export that will tell next.js how long to cache a particular path segment. Set this to a longer value if you are using on-demand revalidation, and a lower value if not, and if your users expect content changes to be reflected earlier.

Agility will NOT cache anything in preview mode :)

On Demand Revalidation
  • If you are hosting your site on an environment that supports Next.js on-demand revalidation, then you should be using the AGILITY_FETCH_CACHE_DURATION value and actively caching items returned from the SDK.
  • the revalidation endpoint example is located at app/api/revalidate/route.ts and will revalidate the items based on the tags that are used to cache those object.
  • The lib/cms-content has examples of how to retrieve content while specifying the cache tags for it.

Changes

This starter now relies on component based data-fetching.

About This Starter

  • Uses our @agility/nextjs package to make getting started with Agility CMS and Next.js easy
  • Support for Next.js 15.0.3
  • Connected to a sample Agility CMS Instance for sample content & pages
  • Supports next/image for image optimization using the <Image /> component or the next.js <Image /> component for images that aren't stored in Agility.
  • Supports full Page Management
  • Supports Preview Mode
  • Supports the next/font package
  • Provides a functional structure that dynamically routes each page based on the request, loads Layout Models (Page Templates) dynamically, and also dynamically loads and renders appropriate Agility CMS Components (as React Server Components)
  • Supports component level data fetching.

Tailwind CSS

This starter uses Tailwind CSS, a simple and lightweight utility-first CSS framework packed with classes that can be composed to build any design, directly in your markup.

TypeScript

This starter is written in TypeScript, with ESLint.

Getting Started

To start using the Agility CMS & Next.js Starter, sign up for a FREE account and create a new Instance using the Blog Template.

  1. Clone this repository
  2. Run npm install or yarn install
  3. Rename the .env.local.example file to .env.local
  4. Retrieve your GUID, API Keys (Preview/Fetch), and Security Key from Agility CMS by going to Settings > API Keys.

How to Retrieve your GUID and API Keys from Agility

Running the Site Locally

Development Mode

When running your site in development mode, you will see the latest content in real-time from the CMS.

yarn
  1. yarn install
  2. yarn dev

This will launch the site in development mode, using your preview API key to pull in the latest content from Agility.

npm
  1. npm install
  2. npm run dev

Production Mode

When running your site in production mode, you will see the published content from Agility.

yarn
  1. yarn build
  2. yarn start
npm
  1. npm run build
  2. npm run start

Accessing Content

You can use the Agility Content Fetch SDK normally - either REST or GraphQL within server components.

Deploying Your Site

The easiest way to deploy a Next.js website to production is to use Vercel from the creators of Next.js, or Netlify. Vercel and Netlify are all-in-one platforms - perfect for Next.js.

Resources

Agility CMS

Next.js

Vercel

Netlify

Tailwind CSS

Community

Feedback and Questions

If you have feedback or questions about this starter, please use the Github Issues on this repo, or join our Community Slack Channel.

Unleash New Possibilities

Deploy your app on Vercel and unlock its full potential