Nuxt 3 has a basic backward compatibility layer for Nuxt 2 modules using @nuxt/kit auto wrappers. But there are usually steps to follow to make modules compatible with Nuxt 3 and sometimes, using Nuxt Bridge is required for cross-version compatibility.
We have prepared a Dedicated Guide for authoring Nuxt 3 ready modules using @nuxt/kit. Currently best migration path is to follow it and rewrite your modules. Rest of this guide includes preparation steps if you prefer to avoid a full rewrite yet making modules compatible with Nuxt 3.
Nuxt 3 plugins are not fully backward compatible with Nuxt 2.
Plugins or components using the Composition API need exclusive Vue 2 or Vue 3 support.
By using vue-demi they should be compatible with both Nuxt 2 and 3.
When Nuxt 3 users add your module, you will not have access to the module container (this.*) so you will need to use utilities from @nuxt/kit to access the container functionality.
@nuxt/bridgeMigrating to @nuxt/bridge is the first and most important step for supporting Nuxt 3.
If you have a fixture or example in your module, add @nuxt/bridge package to its config (see example)
Nuxt 3 natively supports TypeScript and ECMAScript Modules. Please check Native ES Modules for more info and upgrading.
If you inject a Nuxt plugin that does not have export default (such as global Vue plugins), ensure you add export default () => { } to the end of it.
// ~/plugins/vuelidate.js
import Vue from 'vue'
import Vuelidate from 'vuelidate'
Vue.use(Vuelidate)
// ~/plugins/vuelidate.js
import Vue from 'vue'
import Vuelidate from 'vuelidate'
Vue.use(Vuelidate)
export default () => { }
With Nuxt 3, Nuxt is now a build-time-only dependency, which means that modules shouldn't attempt to hook into the Nuxt runtime.
Your module should work even if it's only added to buildModules (instead of modules). For example:
process.env within a Nuxt module and reading by a Nuxt plugin; use runtimeConfig instead.vue-renderer:* for productionserverMiddleware by importing them inside the module. Instead, add them by referencing a file path so that they are independent of the module's context(*) Unless it is for nuxt dev purpose only and guarded with if (nuxt.options.dev) { }.
While it is not essential, most of the Nuxt ecosystem is shifting to use TypeScript, so it is highly recommended to consider migration.
.js files, to .ts. TypeScript is designed to be progressive!