cookies-next
Getting, setting and removing cookies with NEXT.JS
- can be used on the client side, anywhere
- can be used for server side rendering in getServerSideProps
- can be used in API handlers
- can be used in appDir middleware
- can be used in appDir route handlers
Installation
npm install --save cookies-next
If you are using next.js version greater than 12.2.0
you need to use cookies-next version 2.1.0
or later
Usage
Create a cookie:
import { setCookie } from 'cookies-next';
setCookie('key', 'value', options);
Read a cookie:
import { getCookie } from 'cookies-next';
getCookie('key', options);
getCookie('nothing', options);
Read all cookies:
import { getCookies } from 'cookies-next';
getCookies(options);
Check if a cookie exists:
import { hasCookie } from 'cookies-next';
hasCookie('name', options);
hasCookie('nothing', options);
Delete a cookie:
import { deleteCookie } from 'cookies-next';
deleteCookie(name, options);
IMPORTANT! When deleting a cookie and you're not relying on the default attributes,
you must pass the exact same path and domain attributes that were used to set the cookie:
import { deleteCookie } from 'cookies-next';
deleteCookie(name, { path: '/path', domain: '.yourdomain.com' });
Performance
The time complexity of all operations is linear with the number of cookies.
For example, under the hood, getCookie
calls getCookies
. When working reading multiple cookies,
it is fastest to use getCookies
and inspect the returned object.
Client and Server
If you pass ctx (Next.js context) in function, then this function will be done on both client and server
If the function should be done only on client or can't get ctx, pass null or {}
as the first argument to the function and when server side rendering, this function return undefined;
Client Example
import { getCookies, setCookie, deleteCookie, getCookie } from 'cookies-next';
getCookies();
getCookie('key');
setCookie('key', 'value');
deleteCookie('key');
SSR Example
/page/index.js
import React from 'react';
import { getCookies, getCookie, setCookie, deleteCookie } from 'cookies-next';
const Home = () => {
return <div>page content</div>;
};
export const getServerSideProps = ({ req, res }) => {
setCookie('test', 'value', { req, res, maxAge: 60 * 6 * 24 });
getCookie('test', { req, res });
getCookies({ req, res });
deleteCookie('test', { req, res });
return { props: {} };
};
export default Home;
API Example
/page/api/example.js
import type { NextApiRequest, NextApiResponse } from 'next';
import { getCookies, getCookie, setCookie, deleteCookie } from 'cookies-next';
export default async function handler(req, res) {
setCookie('server-key', 'value', { req, res, maxAge: 60 * 60 * 24 });
getCookie('key', { req, res });
getCookies({ req, res });
deleteCookie('key', { req, res });
return res.status(200).json({ message: 'ok' });
}
API
setCookie(key, value, options);
setCookie('key', 'value', options);
setCookie('key', 'value');
setCookie('key', 'value', { req, res });
getCookies(options);
getCookies();
getCookies({ req, res });
getCookie(key, options);
getCookie('key'); - client side
getCookie('key', { req, res }); - server side
hasCookie(key, options);
hasCookie('key');
hasCookie('key', { req, res });
deleteCookie(key, options);
deleteCookie('key');
deleteCookie('key', { req, res });
IMPORTANT! When deleting a cookie and you're not relying on the default attributes,
you must pass the exact same path and domain attributes that were used to set the cookie:
deleteCookie(ctx, name, { path: '/path', domain: '.yourdomain.com' }); - client side
deleteCookie(ctx, name, { req, res, path: '/path', domain: '.yourdomain.com' }); - server side
key
cookie's name
value
cookie's value
options:
req
required for server side cookies (API and getServerSideProps)
res
required for server side cookies (API and getServerSideProps)
domain
Specifies the value for the Domain
Set-Cookie
attribute. By default, no
domain is set, and most clients will consider the cookie to apply to only the current domain.
encode
Specifies a function that will be used to encode a cookie's value. Since value of a cookie
has a limited character set (and must be a simple string), this function can be used to encode
a value into a string suited for a cookie's value.
The default function is the global encodeURIComponent
, which will encode a JavaScript string
into UTF-8 byte sequences and then URL-encode any that fall outside of the cookie range.
expires
A Date
object indicating the cookie's expiration date
By default, no expiration is set, and most clients will consider this a "non-persistent cookie" and
will delete it on a condition like exiting a web browser application.
note the cookie storage model specification states that if both expires
and
maxAge
are set, then maxAge
takes precedence, but it is possible not all clients by obey this,
so if both are set, they should point to the same date and time.
httpOnly
Specifies the boolean
value for the HttpOnly
Set-Cookie
attribute. When truthy,
the HttpOnly
attribute is set, otherwise it is not. By default, the HttpOnly
attribute is not set.
note be careful when setting this to true
, as compliant clients will not allow client-side
JavaScript to see the cookie in document.cookie
.
maxAge
Specifies the number
(in seconds) to be the value for the Max-Age
Set-Cookie
attribute.
The given number will be converted to an integer by rounding down. By default, no maximum age is set.
note the cookie storage model specification states that if both expires
and
maxAge
are set, then maxAge
takes precedence, but it is possible not all clients by obey this,
so if both are set, they should point to the same date and time.
path
Specifies the value for the Path
Set-Cookie
attribute. By default, the path
is considered the "default path".
sameSite
Specifies the boolean
or string
to be the value for the SameSite
Set-Cookie
attribute.
true
will set the SameSite
attribute to Strict
for strict same site enforcement.false
will not set the SameSite
attribute.'lax'
will set the SameSite
attribute to Lax
for lax same site enforcement.'none'
will set the SameSite
attribute to None
for an explicit cross-site cookie.'strict'
will set the SameSite
attribute to Strict
for strict same site enforcement.
More information about the different enforcement levels can be found in
the specification.
note This is an attribute that has not yet been fully standardized, and may change in the future.
This also means many clients may ignore this attribute until they understand it.
secure
Specifies the boolean
value for the Secure
Set-Cookie
attribute. When truthy,
the Secure
attribute is set, otherwise it is not. By default, the Secure
attribute is not set.
note be careful when setting this to true
, as compliant clients will not send the cookie back to
the server in the future if the browser does not have an HTTPS connection.
License
MIT