# @astrojs/cloudflare An SSR adapter for use with Cloudflare Pages Functions targets. Write your code in Astro/Javascript and deploy to Cloudflare Pages. ## Install Add the Cloudflare adapter to enable SSR in your Astro project with the following `astro add` command. This will install the adapter and make the appropriate changes to your `astro.config.mjs` file in one step. ```sh # Using NPM npx astro add cloudflare # Using Yarn yarn astro add cloudflare # Using PNPM pnpm astro add cloudflare ``` If you prefer to install the adapter manually instead, complete the following two steps: 1. Add the Cloudflare adapter to your project's dependencies using your preferred package manager. If you’re using npm or aren’t sure, run this in the terminal: ```bash npm install @astrojs/cloudflare ``` 2. Add the following to your `astro.config.mjs` file: ```js ins={3, 6-7} // astro.config.mjs import { defineConfig } from 'astro/config'; import cloudflare from '@astrojs/cloudflare'; export default defineConfig({ output: 'server', adapter: cloudflare() }); ``` ## Options ### Mode `mode: "advanced" | "directory"` default `"advanced"` Cloudflare Pages has 2 different modes for deploying functions, `advanced` mode which picks up the `_worker.js` in `dist`, or a directory mode where pages will compile the worker out of a functions folder in the project root. For most projects the adapter default of `advanced` will be sufficient; the `dist` folder will contain your compiled project. Switching to directory mode allows you to use [pages plugins](https://developers.cloudflare.com/pages/platform/functions/plugins/) such as [Sentry](https://developers.cloudflare.com/pages/platform/functions/plugins/sentry/) or write custom code to enable logging. In directory mode the adapter will compile the client side part of your app the same way, but moves the worker script into a `functions` folder in the project root. The adapter will only ever place a `[[path]].js` in that folder, allowing you to add additional plugins and pages middleware which can be checked into version control. Cloudflare documentation contains more information about [writing custom functions](https://developers.cloudflare.com/pages/platform/functions/). ```ts // directory mode export default defineConfig({ adapter: cloudflare({ mode: "directory" }), }); ``` ## Enabling Preview In order for preview to work you must install `wrangler` ```sh $ pnpm install wrangler --save-dev ``` It's then possible to update the preview script in your `package.json` to `"preview": "wrangler pages dev ./dist"`. This will allow you to run your entire application locally with [Wrangler](https://github.com/cloudflare/wrangler2), which supports secrets, environment variables, KV namespaces, Durable Objects and [all other supported Cloudflare bindings](https://developers.cloudflare.com/pages/platform/functions/#adding-bindings). ## Access to the Cloudflare runtime You can access all the Cloudflare bindings and environment variables from Astro components and API routes through the adapter API. ```js import { getRuntime } from "@astrojs/cloudflare/runtime"; getRuntime(Astro.request); ``` Depending on your adapter mode (advanced = worker, directory = pages), the runtime object will look a little different due to differences in the Cloudflare API. ## Environment Variables See Cloudflare's documentation for [working with environment variables](https://developers.cloudflare.com/pages/platform/functions/bindings/#environment-variables). ```js // pages/[id].json.js export function get({ params }) { // Access environment variables per request inside a function const serverUrl = import.meta.env.SERVER_URL; const result = await fetch(serverUrl + "/user/" + params.id); return { body: await result.text(), }; } ``` ## Headers, Redirects and function invocation routes Cloudflare has support for adding custom [headers](https://developers.cloudflare.com/pages/platform/headers/), configuring static [redirects](https://developers.cloudflare.com/pages/platform/redirects/) and defining which routes should [invoke functions](https://developers.cloudflare.com/pages/platform/functions/routing/#function-invocation-routes). Cloudflare looks for `_headers`, `_redirects`, and `_routes.json` files in your build output directory to configure these features. This means they should be placed in your Astro project’s `public/` directory. ### Custom `_routes.json` By default, `@astrojs/cloudflare` will generate a `_routes.json` file that lists all files from your `dist/` folder and redirects from the `_redirects` file in the `exclude` array. This will enable Cloudflare to serve files and process static redirects without a function invocation. Creating a custom `_routes.json` will override this automatic optimization and, if not configured manually, cause function invocations that will count against the request limits of your Cloudflare plan. ## Troubleshooting For help, check out the `#support` channel on [Discord](https://astro.build/chat). Our friendly Support Squad members are here to help! You can also check our [Astro Integration Documentation][astro-integration] for more on integrations. ### Meaningful error messages Currently, errors during running your application in Wrangler are not very useful, due to the minification of your code. For better debugging, you can add `vite.build.minify = false` setting to your `astro.config.js` ``` export default defineConfig({ adapter: cloudflare(), output: 'server', vite: { build: { minify: false } } }); ``` ## Contributing This package is maintained by Astro's Core team. You're welcome to submit an issue or PR! [astro-integration]: https://docs.astro.build/en/guides/integrations-guide/