> nextjs-turbopack
Next.js 16+ and Turbopack — incremental bundling, FS caching, dev speed, and when to use Turbopack vs webpack.
curl "https://skillshub.wtf/affaan-m/everything-claude-code/nextjs-turbopack?format=md"Next.js and Turbopack
Next.js 16+ uses Turbopack by default for local development: an incremental bundler written in Rust that significantly speeds up dev startup and hot updates.
When to Use
- Turbopack (default dev): Use for day-to-day development. Faster cold start and HMR, especially in large apps.
- Webpack (legacy dev): Use only if you hit a Turbopack bug or rely on a webpack-only plugin in dev. Disable with
--webpack(or--no-turbopackdepending on your Next.js version; check the docs for your release). - Production: Production build behavior (
next build) may use Turbopack or webpack depending on Next.js version; check the official Next.js docs for your version.
Use when: developing or debugging Next.js 16+ apps, diagnosing slow dev startup or HMR, or optimizing production bundles.
How It Works
- Turbopack: Incremental bundler for Next.js dev. Uses file-system caching so restarts are much faster (e.g. 5–14x on large projects).
- Default in dev: From Next.js 16,
next devruns with Turbopack unless disabled. - File-system caching: Restarts reuse previous work; cache is typically under
.next; no extra config needed for basic use. - Bundle Analyzer (Next.js 16.1+): Experimental Bundle Analyzer to inspect output and find heavy dependencies; enable via config or experimental flag (see Next.js docs for your version).
Examples
Commands
next dev
next build
next start
Usage
Run next dev for local development with Turbopack. Use the Bundle Analyzer (see Next.js docs) to optimize code-splitting and trim large dependencies. Prefer App Router and server components where possible.
Best Practices
- Stay on a recent Next.js 16.x for stable Turbopack and caching behavior.
- If dev is slow, ensure you're on Turbopack (default) and that the cache isn't being cleared unnecessarily.
- For production bundle size issues, use the official Next.js bundle analysis tooling for your version.
> related_skills --same-repo
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> santa-method
Multi-agent adversarial verification with convergence loop. Two independent review agents must both pass before output ships.
> safety-guard
# Safety Guard — Prevent Destructive Operations ## When to Use - When working on production systems - When agents are running autonomously (full-auto mode) - When you want to restrict edits to a specific directory - During sensitive operations (migrations, deploys, data changes) ## How It Works Three modes of protection: ### Mode 1: Careful Mode Intercepts destructive commands before execution and warns: ``` Watched patterns: - rm -rf (especially /, ~, or project root) - git push --force
> product-lens
# Product Lens — Think Before You Build ## When to Use - Before starting any feature — validate the "why" - Weekly product review — are we building the right thing? - When stuck choosing between features - Before a launch — sanity check the user journey - When converting a vague idea into a spec ## How It Works ### Mode 1: Product Diagnostic Like YC office hours but automated. Asks the hard questions: ``` 1. Who is this for? (specific person, not "developers") 2. What's the pain? (quantify