On this page
Deploy Quick Start
Deno Deploy is a globally distributed platform for serverless JavaScript applications. Your JavaScript, TypeScript, and WebAssembly code runs on managed servers geographically close to your users, enabling low latency and faster response times. Deploy applications run on fast, light-weight V8 isolates rather than virtual machines, powered by the Deno runtime.
Let's deploy your first application - it should only take a few minutes.
Install Deno and deployctl
Jump to heading
If you haven't already, you can install the Deno runtime using one of the commands below:
curl -fsSL https://deno.land/install.sh | sh
irm https://deno.land/install.ps1 | iex
curl -fsSL https://deno.land/install.sh | sh
After Deno is installed, install the deployctl
utility:
deno install -A jsr:@deno/deployctl --global
You can confirm deployctl
has been installed correctly by running:
deployctl --help
Now, you're ready to deploy a Deno script from the command line!
Write and test a Deno program Jump to heading
First, create a directory for the project and create a file called main.ts
in
it, with the following "Hello World" web server:
Deno.serve(() => new Response("Hello, world!"));
You can test that it works by running it with the command below:
deno run --allow-net main.ts
Your server should be viewable at localhost:8000. Now let's run this code on the edge with Deno Deploy!
Deploy your project Jump to heading
From the directory of the main.ts
file you just created, run this command:
deployctl deploy
You will be asked to authorize Deno Deploy in GitHub to sign up to Deno Deploy
and/or to provision an access token for deployctl
. A few moments after that,
your Hello World server will be deployed in Deno Deploy infrastructure all
around the world, ready to handle all the traffic you expect.
Next Steps Jump to heading
Now that you've created your first deployment, you can learn what kinds of apps you can run on Deno Deploy, check out what else you can do with deployctl, or keep reading to find out what other options you have to deploy your code to Deno Deploy. We're so excited to see what you'll ship with Deno Deploy!
Deploy your existing project Jump to heading
Import a project and run it on the edge it with Deno Deploy.
-
From the Deno Deploy dashboard click the "New Project" button.
-
Connect to your GitHub account and select the repository you would like to deploy.
-
Follow the on-screen instructions to deploy your existing application.
If your project requires a build step, use the Project Configuration form to create a GitHub action to deploy your project. Give your project a name and select from the optional framework presets. If you are not using a framework, you can set up your build settings using the form.
-
Confirm that your build options are correct and click the "Deploy Project" button to kick off your new Github action and deploy your project.
In a few moments, your project will be deployed across ~12 data centers around the world, ready to handle large volumes of traffic.
Once your deployment is successful you can visit your newly deployed project at the url provided on the success page or manage it in your dashboard.
Start with a playground Jump to heading
A playground is a browser-based editor that enables you to write and run JavaScript or TypeScript code right away This is a great choice for just kicking the tires on Deno and Deno Deploy!
From the Deno Deploy dashboard, click the "New
Playground" button to create a playground. We also have a variety of ready built
tutorials for you to try out Deno Deploy try them out by clicking on "Learning
Playground" or visiting:
Simple HTTP server playground
Using the Deno KV database playground
RESTful API server playground
Realtime app with WebSockets playground
Recurring tasks with Deno.cron playground
Help us make these docs great!
Make a contribution
Deno's docs are open source. See something that's wrong or unclear? Submit a pull request:
Edit this page