Real Mission Movement website
Cloudflare's wrangler CLI can be used to preview a production build locally. To start a local server, run:
bun serve
Then visit http://localhost:8787/
Cloudflare Pages are deployable through their Git provider integrations.
If you don't already have an account, then create a Cloudflare account here. Next go to your dashboard and follow the Cloudflare Pages deployment guide.
Within the projects "Settings" for "Build and deployments", the "Build command" should be bun build
, and the "Build output directory" should be set to dist
.
Cloudflare Page's function-invocation-routes config can be used to include, or exclude, certain paths to be used by the worker functions. Having a _routes.json
file gives developers more granular control over when your Function is invoked.
This is useful to determine if a page response should be Server-Side Rendered (SSR) or if the response should use a static-site generated (SSG) index.html
file.
By default, the Cloudflare pages adaptor does not include a public/_routes.json
config, but rather it is auto-generated from the build by the Cloudflare adaptor. An example of an auto-generate dist/_routes.json
would be:
{
"include": [
"/*"
],
"exclude": [
"/_headers",
"/_redirects",
"/build/*",
"/favicon.ico",
"/manifest.json",
"/service-worker.js",
"/about"
],
"version": 1
}
In the above example, it's saying all pages should be SSR'd. However, the root static files such as /favicon.ico
and any static assets in /build/*
should be excluded from the Functions, and instead treated as a static file.
In most cases the generated dist/_routes.json
file is ideal. However, if you need more granular control over each path, you can instead provide you're own public/_routes.json
file. When the project provides its own public/_routes.json
file, then the Cloudflare adaptor will not auto-generate the routes config and instead use the committed one within the public
directory.
Cloudflare's wrangler CLI can be used to preview a production build locally. To start a local server, run:
bun serve
Then visit http://localhost:8787/
Cloudflare Pages are deployable through their Git provider integrations.
If you don't already have an account, then create a Cloudflare account here. Next go to your dashboard and follow the Cloudflare Pages deployment guide.
Within the projects "Settings" for "Build and deployments", the "Build command" should be bun build
, and the "Build output directory" should be set to dist
.
Cloudflare Page's function-invocation-routes config can be used to include, or exclude, certain paths to be used by the worker functions. Having a _routes.json
file gives developers more granular control over when your Function is invoked.
This is useful to determine if a page response should be Server-Side Rendered (SSR) or if the response should use a static-site generated (SSG) index.html
file.
By default, the Cloudflare pages adaptor does not include a public/_routes.json
config, but rather it is auto-generated from the build by the Cloudflare adaptor. An example of an auto-generate dist/_routes.json
would be:
{
"include": [
"/*"
],
"exclude": [
"/_headers",
"/_redirects",
"/build/*",
"/favicon.ico",
"/manifest.json",
"/service-worker.js",
"/about"
],
"version": 1
}
In the above example, it's saying all pages should be SSR'd. However, the root static files such as /favicon.ico
and any static assets in /build/*
should be excluded from the Functions, and instead treated as a static file.
In most cases the generated dist/_routes.json
file is ideal. However, if you need more granular control over each path, you can instead provide you're own public/_routes.json
file. When the project provides its own public/_routes.json
file, then the Cloudflare adaptor will not auto-generate the routes config and instead use the committed one within the public
directory.