| name | nextjs-server-side-error-debugging |
| description | Debug getServerSideProps and getStaticProps errors in Next.js. Use when:
(1) Page shows generic error but browser console is empty, (2) API routes
return 500 with no details, (3) Server-side code fails silently, (4) Error
only occurs on refresh not client navigation. Check terminal/server logs
instead of browser for actual error messages.
|
| author | Claude Code |
| version | 1.0.0 |
| date | "2024-01-15T00:00:00.000Z" |
Next.js Server-Side Error Debugging
Problem
Server-side errors in Next.js don't appear in the browser console, making debugging
frustrating when you're looking in the wrong place. The browser shows a generic error
page or 500 status, but no stack trace or useful error information appears in DevTools.
Context / Trigger Conditions
This skill applies when:
- Page displays "Internal Server Error" or custom error page
- Browser console shows no errors, or only a generic fetch failure
- You're using
getServerSideProps, getStaticProps, or API routes
- Error only occurs on page refresh or direct navigation (not client-side transitions)
- The error is intermittent and hard to reproduce in the browser
Common misleading symptoms:
- "Unhandled Runtime Error" modal that doesn't show the real cause
- Network tab shows 500 but response body is empty or generic
- Error disappears when you add console.log (timing issue)
Solution
Step 1: Check the Terminal
The actual error with full stack trace appears in the terminal where npm run dev
or next dev is running. This is the first place to look.
ps aux | grep next
npm run dev
Step 2: Add Explicit Error Handling
For persistent debugging, wrap server-side code with try-catch:
export async function getServerSideProps(context) {
try {
const data = await fetchSomething();
return { props: { data } };
} catch (error) {
console.error('getServerSideProps error:', error);
return { props: { error: error.message } };
}
}
Step 3: For Production Errors
Check your hosting provider's logs:
- Vercel: Dashboard → Project → Logs (Functions tab)
- AWS: CloudWatch Logs
- Netlify: Functions tab in dashboard
- Self-hosted: Check your Node.js process logs
Step 4: Common Causes
- Environment variables: Missing in production but present locally
- Database connections: Connection string issues, cold starts
- Import errors: Server-only code accidentally imported on client
- Async/await: Missing await on async operations
- JSON serialization: Objects that can't be serialized (dates, functions)
Verification
After checking the terminal, you should see:
- Full stack trace with file name and line number
- The actual error message (not generic 500)
- Variable values if you added console.log statements
Example
Symptom: User reports page shows "Internal Server Error" after clicking a link.
Investigation:
- Open browser DevTools → Console: Empty
- Network tab shows:
GET /dashboard → 500
- Check terminal running
npm run dev:
Error: Cannot read property 'id' of undefined
at getServerSideProps (/app/pages/dashboard.tsx:15:25)
at renderToHTML (/app/node_modules/next/dist/server/render.js:428:22)
Cause found: Database query returned null instead of user object.
Notes
- In development, Next.js sometimes shows an error overlay, but it often has less
detail than the terminal output
reactStrictMode: true in next.config.js causes double-execution of server
functions in development, which can make debugging confusing
- For API routes, the error appears in the same terminal as page errors
- Client-side errors (in useEffect, event handlers) DO appear in browser console—
this skill only applies to server-side code
- If using
next start (production mode locally), errors may be less verbose;
check NODE_ENV and consider adding custom error logging