Future Flags
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Future Flags and Deprecations

This guide walks you through the process of adopting future flags in your Remix app. By following this strategy, you will be able to upgrade to the next major version of Remix with minimal changes. To read more about future flags see Development Strategy.

We highly recommend you make a commit after each step and ship it instead of doing everything all at once. Most flags can be adopted in any order, with exceptions noted below.

Update to latest v2.x

First update to the latest minor version of v2.x to have the latest future flags. You will likely see a number of deprecation warnings as you upgrade, which we'll cover below.

👉 Update to latest v2

npm install @remix-run/{dev,react,node,etc.}@2

Remove installGlobals

Background

Previously Remix required a fetch polyfill to be installed. This was accomplished by calling installGlobals().

The next major version requires a minimum of Node 20 to take advantage of the built-in fetch support.

Note: if you are using miniflare/cloudflare worker with your remix project, ensure your compatibility flag is set to 2023-03-01 or later as well.

👉 Update to Node 20+

It is recommended that you upgrade to the latest even-numbered version of Node LTS.

👉 Remove installGlobals

import { vitePlugin as remix } from "@remix-run/dev";
import { defineConfig } from "vite";

-installGlobals();

export default defineConfig({
  plugins: [remix()],
});

Adopt the Vite Plugin

Background

Remix no longer uses its own, closed compiler (now referred to as the "Classic Compiler"), and instead uses Vite. Vite is a powerful, performant and extensible development environment for JavaScript projects. View the Vite docs for more information on performance, troubleshooting, etc.

While this is not a future flag, new features and some feature flags are only available in the Vite plugin, and the Classic Compiler will be removed in the next version of Remix.

👉 Install Vite

npm install -D vite

Update your Code

👉 Replace remix.config.js with vite.config.ts at the root of your Remix app

import { vitePlugin as remix } from "@remix-run/dev";
import { defineConfig } from "vite";

export default defineConfig({
  plugins: [remix()],
});

The subset of supported Remix config options should be passed directly to the plugin:

export default defineConfig({
  plugins: [
    remix({
      ignoredRouteFiles: ["**/*.css"],
    }),
  ],
});

👉 Add unstable_optimizeDeps (optional)

Many users found that automatically optimizing dependencies helped them more easily adopt the Vite plugin. For this reason we added the unstable_optimizeDeps flag to the Vite plugin.

This flag will remain in an "unstable" state until React Router v7 so it is not critical that you adopt this in your Remix v2 app prior to upgrading to React Router v7.

export default defineConfig({
  plugins: [
    remix({
      future: {
        unstable_optimizeDeps: true,
      },
    }),
  ],
});

👉 Remove <LiveReload/>, keep <Scripts />

  import {
-   LiveReload,
    Outlet,
    Scripts,
  }

  export default function App() {
    return (
      <html>
        <head>
        </head>
        <body>
          <Outlet />
-         <LiveReload />
          <Scripts />
        </body>
      </html>
    )
  }

👉 Update tsconfig.json

Update the types field in tsconfig.json and make sure skipLibCheck, module, and moduleResolution are all set correctly.

{
  "compilerOptions": {
    "types": ["@remix-run/node", "vite/client"],
    "skipLibCheck": true,
    "module": "ESNext",
    "moduleResolution": "Bundler"
  }
}

👉 Update/remove remix.env.d.ts

Remove the following type declarations in remix.env.d.ts

- /// <reference types="@remix-run/dev" />
- /// <reference types="@remix-run/node" />

If remix.env.d.ts is now empty, delete it

rm remix.env.d.ts

Configure path aliases

Vite does not provide any path aliases by default. If you were relying on this feature, such as defining ~ as an alias for the app directory, you can install the vite-tsconfig-paths plugin to automatically resolve path aliases from your tsconfig.json in Vite, matching the behavior of the Remix compiler:

👉 Install vite-tsconfig-paths

npm install -D vite-tsconfig-paths

👉 Add vite-tsconfig-paths to your Vite config

import { vitePlugin as remix } from "@remix-run/dev";
import { defineConfig } from "vite";
import tsconfigPaths from "vite-tsconfig-paths";

export default defineConfig({
  plugins: [remix(), tsconfigPaths()],
});

Remove @remix-run/css-bundle

Vite has built-in support for CSS side effect imports, PostCSS and CSS Modules, among other CSS bundling features. The Remix Vite plugin automatically attaches bundled CSS to the relevant routes.

The @remix-run/css-bundle package is redundant when using Vite since its cssBundleHref export will always be undefined.

👉 Uninstall @remix-run/css-bundle

npm uninstall @remix-run/css-bundle

👉 Remove references to cssBundleHref

- import { cssBundleHref } from "@remix-run/css-bundle";
  import type { LinksFunction } from "@remix-run/node"; // or cloudflare/deno

  export const links: LinksFunction = () => [
-   ...(cssBundleHref
-     ? [{ rel: "stylesheet", href: cssBundleHref }]
-     : []),
    // ...
  ];

Fix up CSS imports referenced in links

If you are referencing CSS in a links function, you'll need to update the corresponding CSS imports to use Vite's explicit ?url import syntax.

👉 Add ?url to CSS imports used in links

-import styles from "~/styles/dashboard.css";
+import styles from "~/styles/dashboard.css?url";

export const links = () => {
  return [
    { rel: "stylesheet", href: styles }
  ];
}

Migrate Tailwind CSS or Vanilla Extract

If you are using Tailwind CSS or Vanilla Extract, see the full migration guide.

Migrate from Remix App Server

👉 Update your dev, build and start scripts

{
  "scripts": {
    "dev": "remix vite:dev",
    "build": "remix vite:build",
    "start": "remix-serve ./build/server/index.js"
  }
}

👉 Configure your Vite dev server port (optional)

export default defineConfig({
  server: {
    port: 3000,
  },
  plugins: [remix()],
});

Migrate a custom server

If you are migrating a customer server or Cloudflare Functions, see the full migration guide.

Migrate MDX routes

If you're using MDX, you should use the official MDX Rollup plugin. See the full migration guide for a step-by-step walkthrough.

v3_fetcherPersist

Background

The fetcher lifecycle is now based on when it returns to an idle state rather than when its owner component unmounts: View the RFC for more information.

👉 Enable the Flag

remix({
  future: {
    v3_fetcherPersist: true,
  },
});

Update your Code

It's unlikely to affect your app. You may want to check any usage of useFetchers as they may persist longer than they did before. Depending on what you're doing, you may render something longer than before.

v3_relativeSplatPath

Background

Changes the relative path matching and linking for multi-segment splats paths like dashboard/* (vs. just *). View the CHANGELOG for more information.

👉 Enable the Flag

remix({
  future: {
    v3_relativeSplatPath: true,
  },
});

Update your Code

If you have any routes with a path + a splat like dashboard.$.tsx or route("dashboard/*") that have relative links like <Link to="relative"> or <Link to="../relative"> beneath it, you will need to update your code.

👉 Split the route into two

For any splat routes split it into a layout route and a child route with the splat:


└── routes
    ├── _index.tsx
+   ├── dashboard.tsx
    └── dashboard.$.tsx

// or
routes(defineRoutes) {
  return defineRoutes((route) => {
    route("/", "home/route.tsx", { index: true });
-    route("dashboard/*", "dashboard/route.tsx")
+    route("dashboard", "dashboard/layout.tsx", () => {
+      route("*", "dashboard/route.tsx");
    });
  });
},

👉 Update relative links

Update any <Link> elements with relative links within that route tree to include the extra .. relative segment to continue linking to the same place:

// dashboard.$.tsx or dashboard/route.tsx
function Dashboard() {
  return (
    <div>
      <h2>Dashboard</h2>
      <nav>
-        <Link to="">Dashboard Home</Link>
-        <Link to="team">Team</Link>
-        <Link to="projects">Projects</Link>
+        <Link to="../">Dashboard Home</Link>
+        <Link to="../team">Team</Link>
+        <Link to="../projects">Projects</Link>
      </nav>
    </div>
  );
}

v3_throwAbortReason

Background

When a server-side request is aborted, such as when a user navigates away from a page before the loader finishes, Remix will throw the request.signal.reason instead of an error such as new Error("query() call aborted...").

👉 Enable the Flag

remix({
  future: {
    v3_throwAbortReason: true,
  },
});

Update your Code

You likely won't need to adjust any code, unless you had custom logic inside of handleError that was matching the previous error message to differentiate it from other errors.

v3_lazyRouteDiscovery

Background

With this flag, Remix no longer sends the full route manifest up to the client on initial load. Instead, Remix only sends the server-rendered routes up in the manifest and then fetches the remaining routes as the user navigated around the application. Additional details are available in the docs and the blog post

👉 Enable the Flag

remix({
  future: {
    v3_lazyRouteDiscovery: true,
  },
});

Update your Code

You shouldn't need to make any changes to your application code for this feature to work.

You may find some usage for the new <Link discover> API if you wish to disable eager route discovery on certain links.

v3_singleFetch

This flag requires the Vite plugin.

Background

With this flag, Remix uses a single fetch for data requests during client-side navigations. This simplifies data loading by treating data requests the same as document requests, eliminating the need to handle headers and caching differently. For advanced use cases, you can still opt into fine-grained revalidations. View the "Single Fetch" docs for more information.

👉 Enable the Flag (and the types)

import { vitePlugin as remix } from "@remix-run/dev";
import { defineConfig } from "vite";
import tsconfigPaths from "vite-tsconfig-paths";

declare module "@remix-run/node" {
  // or cloudflare, deno, etc.
  interface Future {
    v3_singleFetch: true;
  }
}

export default defineConfig({
  plugins: [
    remix({
      future: {
        v3_singleFetch: true,
      },
    }),
    tsconfigPaths(),
  ],
});

Update your Code

You should be able to mostly use your code as-is with the flag enabled, but the following changes should be made over time and will be required prior to the next major version.

👉 Remove json()/defer() in favor of raw objects

Single Fetch supports JSON objects and Promises out of the box, so you can return the raw data from your loader/action functions:

-import { json } from "@remix-run/node";

export async function loader({}: LoaderFunctionArgs) {
  let tasks = await fetchTasks();
- return json(tasks);
+ return tasks;
}
-import { defer } from "@remix-run/node";

export async function loader({}: LoaderFunctionArgs) {
  let lazyStuff = fetchLazyStuff();
  let tasks = await fetchTasks();
- return defer({ tasks, lazyStuff });
+ return { tasks, lazyStuff };
}

If you were using the second parameter of json/defer to set a custom status or headers on your response, you can continue doing do via the new data API:

-import { json } from "@remix-run/node";
+import { data } from "@remix-run/node";

export async function loader({}: LoaderFunctionArgs) {
  let tasks = await fetchTasks();
-  return json(tasks, {
+  return data(tasks, {
    headers: {
      "Cache-Control": "public, max-age=604800"
    }
  });
}

👉 Adjust your server abort delay

If you were using a custom ABORT_DELAY in your entry.server.tsx file, you should change that to use thew new streamTimeout API leveraged by Single Fetch:

-const ABORT_DELAY = 5000;
+// Reject/cancel all pending promises after 5 seconds
+export const streamTimeout = 5000;

// ...

function handleBrowserRequest(/* ... */) {
  return new Promise((resolve, reject) => {
    const { pipe, abort } = renderToPipeableStream(
      <RemixServer
        context={remixContext}
        url={request.url}
-        abortDelay={ABORT_DELAY}
      />,
      {
        onShellReady() {
          /* ... */
        },
        onShellError(error: unknown) {
          /* ... */
        },
        onError(error: unknown) {
          /* ... */
        },
      }
    );

-    setTimeout(abort, ABORT_DELAY);
+   // Automatically timeout the React renderer after 6 seconds, which ensures
+   // React has enough time to flush down the rejected boundary contents
+   setTimeout(abort, streamTimeout + 1000);
  });
}

unstable_routeConfig

This flag requires the Vite plugin.

Config-based routing is the new default in React Router v7, configured via the routes.ts file in the app directory. Support for routes.ts and its related APIs in Remix are designed as a migration path to help minimize the number of changes required when moving your Remix project over to React Router v7. While some new packages have been introduced within the @remix-run scope, these new packages only exist to keep the code in routes.ts as similar as possible to the equivalent code for React Router v7.

When the unstable_routeConfig future flag is enabled, Remix's built-in file system routing will be disabled and your project will opted into React Router v7's config-based routing. If you prefer to keep using Remix's file-based routing we cover how to enable it in routes.ts below.

Update your code

To migrate Remix's file system routing and route config to the equivalent setup in React Router v7, you can follow these steps:

👉 Enable the Flag

remix({
  future: {
    unstable_routeConfig: true,
  },
});

👉 Install @remix-run/route-config

This package matches the API of React Router v7's @react-router/dev/routes, making the React Router v7 migration as easy as possible.

npm install -D @remix-run/route-config

This provides the core RouteConfig type as well as a set of helpers for configuring routes in code.

👉 Add an app/routes.ts file without any configured routes

touch app/routes.ts
import type { RouteConfig } from "@remix-run/route-config";

export const routes: RouteConfig = [];

This is a good way to check that your new routes.ts file is being picked up successfully. Your app should now be rendering a blank page since there aren't any routes defined yet.

👉 Install @remix-run/fs-routes and use it in routes.ts

npm install -D @remix-run/fs-routes

This package matches the API of React Router v7's @react-router/fs-routes, making the React Router v7 migration as easy as possible.

If you've configured ignoredRouteFiles to ["**/*"], you should skip this step since you're already opting out of Remix's file system routing.

import { flatRoutes } from "@remix-run/fs-routes";
import type { RouteConfig } from "@remix-run/route-config";

export const routes: RouteConfig = flatRoutes();

👉 If you used the routes config option, add @remix-run/routes-option-adapter and use it in routes.ts

Remix provides a mechanism for defining routes in code and plugging in alternative file system routing conventions, available via the routes option on the Vite plugin.

To make migration easier, an adapter package is available that converts Remix's routes option into React Router's RouteConfig array.

To get started, first install the adapter:

npm install -D @remix-run/routes-option-adapter

This package matches the API of React Router v7's @react-router/remix-routes-option-adapter, making the React Router v7 migration as easy as possible.

Then, update your routes.ts file to use the adapter, passing the value of your routes option to the remixRoutesOptionAdapter function which will return an array of configured routes.

For example, if you were using the routes option to use an alternative file system routing implementation like remix-flat-routes:

import { type RouteConfig } from "@remix-run/route-config";
import { remixRoutesOptionAdapter } from "@remix-run/routes-option-adapter";
import { flatRoutes } from "remix-flat-routes";

export const routes: RouteConfig = remixRoutesOptionAdapter(
  (defineRoutes) => flatRoutes("routes", defineRoutes)
);

Or, if you were using the routes option to define config-based routes:

import { flatRoutes } from "@remix-run/fs-routes";
import { type RouteConfig } from "@remix-run/route-config";
import { remixRoutesOptionAdapter } from "@remix-run/routes-option-adapter";

export const routes: RouteConfig = remixRoutesOptionAdapter(
  (defineRoutes) => {
    return defineRoutes((route) => {
      route("/", "home/route.tsx", { index: true });
      route("about", "about/route.tsx");
      route("", "concerts/layout.tsx", () => {
        route("trending", "concerts/trending.tsx");
        route(":city", "concerts/city.tsx");
      });
    });
  }
);

If you're defining config-based routes in this way, you might want to consider migrating to the new route config API since it's more streamlined while still being very similar to the old API. For example, the routes above would look like this:

import {
  type RouteConfig,
  route,
  layout,
  index,
} from "@remix-run/route-config";

export const routes: RouteConfig = [
  index("home/route.tsx"),
  route("about", "about/route.tsx"),
  layout("concerts/layout.tsx", [
    route("trending", "concerts/trending.tsx"),
    route(":city", "concerts/city.tsx"),
  ]),
];

Note that if you need to mix and match different route config approaches, they can be merged together into a single array of routes. The RouteConfig type ensures that everything is still valid.

import { flatRoutes } from "@remix-run/fs-routes";
import type { RouteConfig } from "@remix-run/route-config";
import { route } from "@remix-run/route-config";
import { remixRoutesOptionAdapter } from "@remix-run/routes-option-adapter";

export const routes: RouteConfig = [
  ...(await flatRoutes({ rootDirectory: "fs-routes" })),

  ...(await remixRoutesOptionAdapter(/* ... */)),

  route("/hello", "routes/hello.tsx"),
];

Deprecations

@remix-run/eslint-config

The @remix-run/eslint-config package is deprecated and will not be included in React Router v7. We recommend moving towards a streamlined ESLint config such as the ones included in the Remix templates.

json

This utility is deprecated and will be removed in React Router v7 in favor of Single Fetch naked object returns.

  • If you were not relying on json to serialize your data (such as stringifying Date objects), you can safely remove it.
  • If you were returning headers or status via json, you can use the new data util as a drop-in replacement to set those values.
  • If you want to serialize your data to JSON, you can use the native Response.json() method.

View the Single Fetch docs for more information.

defer

This utility is deprecated and will be removed in React Router v7 in favor of Single Fetch naked object returns.

  • If you were returning headers or status via defer, you can use the new data util as a drop-in replacement to set those values.

View the Single Fetch docs for more information.

SerializeFrom

This type is deprecated and will be removed in React Router v7 since Single Fetch no longer serializes data to JSON.

If you are relying on SerializeFrom to unwrap your loader/action data, you can use a custom type like this:

type SerializeFrom<T> = ReturnType<typeof useLoaderData<T>>;

In most cases, you should be able to just remove SerializeFrom and use the types returned from useLoaderData/useActionData, or the types of the data in loader/action functions.

Docs and examples licensed under MIT