Module Not Found
Why This Error Occurred​
A module not found error can occur for many different reasons:
- The module you're trying to import is not installed in your dependencies
- The module you're trying to import is in a different directory
- The module you're trying to import has a different casing
- The module you're trying to import uses Node.js specific modules, for example
dns
, outside ofgetStaticProps
/getStaticPaths
/getServerSideProps
Possible Ways to Fix It​
The module you're trying to import is not installed in your dependencies​
When importing a module from npm this module has to be installed locally.
For example when importing the swr
package:
import useSWR from 'swr'
The swr
module has to be installed using a package manager.
- When using
npm
:npm install swr
- When using
yarn
:yarn add swr
The module you're trying to import is in a different directory​
Make sure that the path you're importing refers to the right directory and file.
The module you're trying to import has a different casing​
Make sure the casing of the file is correct.
Example:
export default function MyComponent() {
return <h1>Hello</h1>
}
// Note how `components/MyComponent` exists but `Mycomponent` without the capital `c` is imported
import MyComponent from '../components/Mycomponent'
Incorrect casing will lead to build failures on case-sensitive environments like most Linux-based continuous integration and can cause issues with Fast Refresh.
The module you're trying to import uses Node.js specific modules​
getStaticProps
, getStaticPaths
, and getServerSideProps
allow for using modules that can only run in the Node.js environment. This allows you to do direct database queries or reading data from Redis to name a few examples.
The tree shaking only runs on top level pages, so it can't be relied on in separate React components.
You can verify the tree shaking on next-code-elimination.vercel.app.
Example of correctly tree-shaken code:
import Redis from 'ioredis'
const redis = new Redis(process.env.REDIS_URL)
export default redis
import redis from '../lib/redis'
export async function getStaticProps() {
const message = await redis.get('message')
return {
message,
}
}
export default function Home({ message }) {
return <h1>{message}</h1>
}
Example of code that would break:
import Redis from 'ioredis'
const redis = new Redis(process.env.REDIS_URL)
export default redis
// Redis is a Node.js specific library that can't run in the browser
// Trying to use it in code that runs on both Node.js and the browser will result in a module not found error for modules that ioredis relies on
// If you run into such an error it's recommended to move the code to `getStaticProps` or `getServerSideProps` as those methods guarantee that the code is only run in Node.js.
import redis from '../lib/redis'
import { useEffect, useState } from 'react'
export default function Home() {
const [message, setMessage] = useState()
useEffect(() => {
redis.get('message').then((result) => {
setMessage(result)
})
}, [])
return <h1>{message}</h1>
}
Example of code that would break:
import Redis from 'ioredis'
// Modules that hold Node.js-only code can't also export React components
// Tree shaking of getStaticProps/getStaticPaths/getServerSideProps is ran only on page files
const redis = new Redis(process.env.REDIS_URL)
export function MyComponent() {
return <h1>Hello</h1>
}
export default redis
// In practice you'll want to refactor the `MyComponent` to be a separate file so that tree shaking ensures that specific import is not included for the browser compilation
import redis, { MyComponent } from '../lib/redis'
export async function getStaticProps() {
const message = await redis.get('message')
return {
message,
}
}
export default function Home() {
return <MyComponent />
}