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# Developing
- The development branch is `canary`.
- All pull requests should be opened against `canary`.
- The changes on the `canary` branch are published to the `@canary` tag on npm regularly.
## Dependencies
- Install Rust and Cargo via [rustup](https://rustup.rs).
- Install the [GitHub CLI](https://github.com/cli/cli#installation).
- Enable pnpm:
```
corepack enable pnpm
```
- (Linux) Install LLD (the LLVM linker) and Clang (used by `rust-rocksdb`):
```
sudo apt install lld clang
```
## Local Development
1. Clone the Next.js repository (download only recent commits for faster clone):
```
gh repo clone vercel/next.js -- --filter=blob:none --branch canary --single-branch
```
1. Create a new branch:
```
git checkout -b MY_BRANCH_NAME origin/canary
```
1. Install the dependencies with:
```
pnpm install
```
1. Start developing and watch for code changes:
```
pnpm dev
```
1. In a new terminal, run `pnpm types` to compile declaration files from
TypeScript.
_Note: You may need to repeat this step if your types get outdated._
1. When your changes are finished, commit them to the branch:
```
git add .
git commit -m "DESCRIBE_YOUR_CHANGES_HERE"
```
1. To open a pull request you can use the GitHub CLI which automatically forks and sets up a remote branch. Follow the prompts when running:
```
gh pr create
```
For instructions on how to build a project with your local version of the CLI,
see **[Developing Using Your Local Version of Next.js](./developing-using-local-app.md)** as linking the package is not sufficient to develop locally.
## Testing a local Next.js version on an application
Since Turbopack doesn't support symlinks when pointing outside of the workspace directory, it can be difficult to develop against a local Next.js version. Neither `pnpm link` nor `file:` imports quite cut it. An alternative is to pack the Next.js version you want to test into a tarball and add it to the pnpm overrides of your test application. The following script will do it for you:
```bash
pnpm pack-next --tar && pnpm unpack-next path/to/project
```
Or without running the build:
```bash
pnpm pack-next --no-js-build --tar && pnpm unpack-next path/to/project
```
Without going through a tarball (only works if you've added the overrides from `pack-next`):
```bash
pnpm patch-next path/to/project
```
Supports the same arguments:
```bash
pnpm patch-next --no-js-build path/to/project
```
### Explanation of the scripts
```bash
# Generate a tarball of the Next.js version you want to test
$ pnpm pack-next --tar
# You can also pass any cargo argument to the script
# To skip the `pnpm i` and `pnpm build` steps in next.js (e. g. if you are running `pnpm dev`)
$ pnpm pack-next --no-js-build
```
Afterwards, you'll need to unpack the tarball into your test project. You can either manually edit the `package.json` to point to the new tarballs (see the stdout from `pack-next` script), or you can automatically unpack it with:
```bash
# Unpack the tarballs generated with pack-next into project's node_modules
$ pnpm unpack-next path/to/project
```
## Developing the Dev Overlay
The dev overlay is a feature of Next.js that allows you to see the internal state of the app including the errors. To learn more about contributing to the dev overlay, see the [Dev Overlay README.md](../../packages/next/src/client/components/react-dev-overlay/README.md).
## Recover disk space
Rust builds quickly add up to a lot of disk space, you can clean up old artifacts with this command:
```bash
pnpm sweep
```
It will also clean up other caches (pnpm store, cargo, etc.) and run `git gc` for you.
### MacOS disk compression
If you want to automatically use APFS disk compression on macOS for `node_modules/` and `target/` you can install a launch agent with:
```bash
./scripts/LaunchAgents/install-macos-agents.sh
```
Or run it manually with:
```bash
./scripts/macos-compress.sh
```