Using Next.js middleware as a reverse proxy

Last updated:

|Edit this page

If you are using Next.js and rewrites aren't working for you, you can write custom middleware to proxy requests to PostHog.

To do this using the app directory, create a file named middleware.js in your base directory (same level as the app folder). In this file, set up code to match requests to a custom route, set a new host header, change the URL to point to PostHog, and rewrite the response.

JavaScript
import { NextResponse } from 'next/server'
export function middleware(request) {
const hostname = 'app.posthog.com' // or 'eu.posthog.com'
const requestHeaders = new Headers(request.headers)
requestHeaders.set('host', hostname)
let url = request.nextUrl.clone()
url.protocol = 'https'
url.hostname = hostname
url.port = 443
url.pathname = url.pathname.replace(/^\/ingest/, '');
return NextResponse.rewrite(url, {
headers: requestHeaders,
})
}
export const config = {
matcher: '/ingest/:path*',
}

Once done, configure the PostHog client to send requests via your rewrite.

JavaScript
posthog.init(process.env.NEXT_PUBLIC_POSTHOG_KEY, {
api_host: "https://your-host.com/ingest"
})

Questions?

Was this page useful?