Adapter for SvelteKit apps that generates a standalone Node server.
Install with npm i -D @sveltejs/adapter-node@next
, then add the adapter to your svelte.config.js
:
// svelte.config.js
import adapter from '@sveltejs/adapter-node';
export default {
kit: {
adapter: adapter({
// default options are shown
out: 'build',
precompress: false,
env: {
path: 'SOCKET_PATH',
host: 'HOST',
port: 'PORT',
origin: 'ORIGIN',
headers: {
protocol: 'PROTOCOL_HEADER',
host: 'HOST_HEADER'
}
}
})
}
};
The directory to build the server to. It defaults to build
— i.e. node build
would start the server locally after it has been created.
Enables precompressing using gzip and brotli for assets and prerendered pages. It defaults to false
.
By default, the server will accept connections on 0.0.0.0
using port 3000. These can be customised with the PORT
and HOST
environment variables:
HOST=127.0.0.1 PORT=4000 node build
HTTP doesn't give SvelteKit a reliable way to know the URL that is currently being requested. The simplest way to tell SvelteKit where the app is being served is to set the ORIGIN
environment variable:
ORIGIN=https://my.site node build
With this, a request for the /stuff
pathname will correctly resolve to https://my.site/stuff
. Alternatively, you can specify headers that tell SvelteKit about the request protocol and host, from which it can construct the origin URL:
PROTOCOL_HEADER=x-forwarded-proto HOST_HEADER=x-forwarded-host node build
x-forwarded-proto
andx-forwarded-host
are de facto standard headers that forward the original protocol and host if you're using a reverse proxy (think load balancers and CDNs). You should only set these variables if you trust the reverse proxy.
All of these environment variables can be changed, if necessary, using the env
option:
env: {
host: 'MY_HOST_VARIABLE',
port: 'MY_PORT_VARIABLE',
origin: 'MY_ORIGINURL',
headers: {
protocol: 'MY_PROTOCOL_HEADER',
host: 'MY_HOST_HEADER'
}
}
MY_HOST_VARIABLE=127.0.0.1 \
MY_PORT_VARIABLE=4000 \
MY_ORIGINURL=https://my.site \
node build
The adapter creates two files in your build directory — index.js
and handler.js
. Running index.js
— e.g. node build
, if you use the default build directory — will start a server on the configured port.
Alternatively, you can import the handler.js
file, which exports a handler suitable for use with Express, Connect or Polka (or even just the built-in http.createServer
) and set up your own server:
// my-server.js
import { handler } from './build/handler.js';
import express from 'express';
const app = express();
// add a route that lives separately from the SvelteKit app
app.get('/healthcheck', (req, res) => {
res.end('ok');
});
// let SvelteKit handle everything else, including serving prerendered pages and static assets
app.use(handler);
app.listen(3000, () => {
console.log('listening on port 3000');
});
You will need the output directory (build
by default), the project's package.json
, and the production dependencies in node_modules
to run the application. Production dependencies can be generated with npm ci --prod
, you can also skip this step if your app doesn't have any dependencies. You can then start your app with
node build