Create your own URL shortener with Next.js and MongoDB in 10 Minutes
Anshuman Bhardwaj
Posted on March 14, 2022
Motivation
A few weeks back, I was working on a Twitter bot to post my popular articles and I realized that links of some articles are not parsed well in the Tweet. However, shortening them using Rebrandly worked well.
So, I decided to make a URL shortener for myself.
Breakdown
We need a
- service to create a unique hash for each long URL
- database to persist long to short URL mapping
- service to redirect short links to their destination
As always, Next.js was my first choice for building the complete service and MongoDB for storing links.
Development
Now that we have figured out the steps, let's work on them one by one
Setup the project
Let's use the npx create-next-app url-shortener
command to generate a boilerplate for our app.
./.env.local
DB_NAME=url-shortner
ATLAS_URI_PROD=mongodb+srv://<user>:<password><cluster>.mongodb.net/url-shortner?retryWrites=true&w=majority
API_KEY=<a-long-random-string>
HOST=http://localhost:3000
These environment variables should also be stored in your Vercel project.
The value of
HOST
should be set to your domain when you host this project. If you don't have a public domain, just youNEXT_PUBLIC_VERCEL_URL
environment variable instead ofHOST
.
Setting up MongoDB
- Run
npm i --save mongodb
- Create a
mongodb.ts
file at the root of the repo.
// ./mongodb.ts
import { Db, MongoClient } from "mongodb";
import { formatLog } from "./utils";
// Create cached connection variable
let cachedDB: Db | null = null;
// A function for connecting to MongoDB,
export default async function connectToDatabase(): Promise<Db> {
// If the database connection is cached, use it instead of creating a new connection
if (cachedDB) {
console.info(formatLog("Using cached client!"));
return cachedDB;
}
const opts = {
useNewUrlParser: true,
useUnifiedTopology: true,
};
console.info(formatLog("No client found! Creating a new one."));
// If no connection is cached, create a new one
const client = new MongoClient(process.env.ATLAS_URI_PROD as string, opts);
await client.connect();
const db: Db = client.db(process.env.DB_NAME);
cachedDB = db;
return cachedDB;
}
Add create-short-link service
Go ahead and add a ./api/create-link.ts
file to create a REST endpoint for this service.
Couple of things we need to be aware of
- A unique Hash is required to make short URLs. I used
nanoid
to generate a random short hash for the long URL. - This endpoint should only be accessed by the POST method.
- We should set up an API-KEY authentication to secure the endpoint. This can be done by generating a long string and using it as an API-KEY header.
// ./api/create-link.ts
import { NextApiRequest, NextApiResponse } from "next";
import connectToDatabase from "../../mongodb";
import { customAlphabet } from "nanoid";
import { COLLECTION_NAMES } from "../../types";
const characters =
"ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZabcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz0123456789";
const getHash = customAlphabet(characters, 4);
export default async function CreateLink(
request: NextApiRequest,
response: NextApiResponse
) {
const apiKey = request.headers["api-key"] as string;
if (request.method !== "POST" || apiKey !== process.env.API_KEY) {
return response.status(405).json({
type: "Error",
code: 405,
message: "Only POST method is accepted on this route",
});
}
const { link } = request.body;
if (!link) {
response.status(400).send({
type: "Error",
code: 400,
message: "Expected {link: string}",
});
return;
}
try {
const database = await connectToDatabase();
const urlInfoCollection = database.collection(COLLECTION_NAMES["url-info"]);
const hash = getHash();
const linkExists = await urlInfoCollection.findOne({
link,
});
const shortUrl = `${process.env.HOST}/${hash}`;
if (!linkExists) {
await urlInfoCollection.insertOne({
link,
uid: hash,
shortUrl: shortUrl,
createdAt: new Date(),
});
}
response.status(201);
response.send({
type: "success",
code: 201,
data: {
shortUrl: linkExists?.shortUrl || shortUrl,
link,
},
});
} catch (e: any) {
response.status(500);
response.send({
code: 500,
type: "error",
message: e.message,
});
}
}
Redirect short links to destination
Now that we can create short links, let's add the logic to redirect users to the actual destination.
For that, we can make a dynamic route in Next.js app and write the redirect logic on the server-side.
// ./pages/[hash].tsx
import { NextApiRequest, NextApiResponse, NextPage } from "next";
import Head from "next/head";
import connectToDatabase from "../mongodb";
import { COLLECTION_NAMES } from "../types";
export async function getServerSideProps(request: NextApiRequest) {
const hash = request.query.hash as string;
const database = await connectToDatabase();
const campaign = await database
.collection(COLLECTION_NAMES["url-info"])
.findOne({ uid: hash });
if (campaign) {
return {
redirect: {
destination: campaign.link,
permanent: false,
},
};
}
return {
props: {},
};
}
const HashPage: NextPage = () => {
return (
<div>
<Head>
<title>URL Shortener</title>
<meta name="description" content="Generated by create next app" />
<link rel="icon" href="/favicon.ico" />
</Head>
<h1>Requested link not found</h1>
</div>
);
};
export default HashPage;
This page will redirect the user to the destination if the hash
value is available in the database otherwise, it'll show the "Link not found" message.
Hosting
Hosting this project is a piece of cake because Next.js integration with Vercel is excellent.
A simplified list of steps:
- Push your Next.js project to a GitHub repository
- Go to https://vercel.app and login with your GitHub account
- Import the
url-shortener
repository by clicking on the "New Project" button on the Vercel dashboard.
You can also read about this in detail here.
Once done with the above steps, head to project settings and add the environment variables we defined in our .env.local
file to the Vercel project's environment variables.
You can also connect your custom domain to this project from the settings.
š Tada! Your URL shortener is ready and hosted now.
What's next?
Well, you can continue to use this project as a REST API like I do or you can create a front-end to make it a web app.
Before making it a public web app, make sure you put in additional security.
You can clone this project from this GitHub Repo.
This article is not meant to be followed in production and should only be taken for learning purposes.
Many optimizations can be made in the above approach like using a better database or indexing it properly to make it faster.
I hope you find this article helpful! Should you have any feedback or questions, please feel free to put them in the comments below.
For more such content, please follow me on Twitter
Until next time
Posted on March 14, 2022
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