svelte-adapter-deno
Adapter for SvelteKit apps that generates a standalone Deno server.
Usage
Install with npm i -D svelte-adapter-deno
, then add the adapter to your svelte.config.js
:
// svelte.config.js
import adapter from 'svelte-adapter-deno';
export default {
kit: {
adapter: adapter({
// default options are shown
out: 'build',
deps: './deps.ts' // (relative to adapter-deno package)
})
}
};
After building the server (npm run build
), use the following command to start:
# with the default build directory
deno run --allow-env --allow-read --allow-net build/index.js
# with a custom build directory
deno run --allow-env --allow-read --allow-net path/to/build/index.js
You can use the deployctl GitHub Action to automatically deploy your app in Deno Deploy:
.github/workflows/ci.yml
name: ci
on:
push:
branches:
- main
pull_request:
branches:
- main
jobs:
deploy:
name: deploy
runs-on: ubuntu-latest
permissions:
id-token: write
contents: read
steps:
- name: Clone repository
uses: actions/checkout@v2
- name: Install Node
uses: actions/setup-node@v2
with:
node-version: 16
- name: Cache pnpm modules
uses: actions/cache@v2
with:
path: ~/.pnpm-store
key: ${{ runner.os }}-${{ hashFiles('**/pnpm-lock.yaml') }}
restore-keys: |
${{ runner.os }}-
- name: Install pnpm and node_modules
uses: pnpm/action-setup@v2
with:
version: latest
run_install: true
- name: Build site
run: pnpm build
working-directory: '<root>' # if necessary, should contain {out}
- name: Deploy to Deno Deploy
uses: denoland/deployctl@v1
with:
project: <YOUR PROJECT NAME>
entrypoint: '{out}/index.js' # same as `out` option in config
root: '<root>' # if necessary
The server needs at least the following permissions to run:
-
allow-env
- allow environment access, to support runtime configuration via runtime variables (can be further restricted to include just the necessary variables) -
allow-read
- allow file system read access (can be further restricted to include just the necessary directories) -
allow-net
- allow network access (can be further restricted to include just the necessary domains)
Additionally, --no-check
can be used if deno complains while typechecking upstream dependencies.
Related Deno issues
Options
out
The directory to build the server to. It defaults to build
— i.e. deno run --allow-env --allow-read --allow-net build/index.js
would start the server locally after it has been created.
precompress
Enables precompressing using gzip and brotli for assets and prerendered pages. It defaults to false
.
deps
The file re-exporting external runtime dependencies (deps.ts
by convention in Deno). It defaults to the deps.ts
included in the package.
Environment variables
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 deno run --allow-env --allow-read --allow-net build/server.js
You can specify different environment variables if necessary using the env
option.