Get started with Edge Functions
This page will help you get started with Edge Functions. It describes how to create, test, deploy, invoke, and monitor your edge functions.
Create an edge function
Section titled “Create an edge function”To create an edge function to deploy with your site, write a JavaScript or TypeScript file stored in your edge functions directory. The default edge functions directory is YOUR_BASE_DIRECTORY/netlify/edge-functions
.
For example, create a function file at netlify/edge-functions/hello.js
:
export default () => new Response("Hello world");
export const config = { path: "/test" };
The file includes two parts:
- The default export contains the handler function that runs when you make requests to the edge function. It often contains logic to modify requests and responses.
- The
config
export configures the file as an edge function and provides the path on which the edge function will be invoked.
In this example, requests to /test
will trigger the edge function and it will respond with Hello world
.
Edge functions with .jsx
or .tsx
Section titled “Edge functions with .jsx or .tsx”You also have the option to use .jsx
and .tsx
files for your edge functions. This can be helpful if you want your function to handle server-side rendering (SSR) at the network edge.
For example, this .tsx
file contains the code to stream React SSR at the edge without a meta-framework:
import React from "https://esm.sh/react";import { renderToReadableStream } from "https://esm.sh/react-dom/server";import type { Config, Context } from "@netlify/edge-functions";
export default async function handler(req: Request, context: Context) { const stream = await renderToReadableStream( <html> <title>Hello</title> <body> <h1>Hello {context.geo.country?.name}</h1> </body> </html> );
return new Response(stream, { status: 200, headers: { "Content-Type": "text/html" }, });}
export const config: Config = { path: "/hello",};
Test locally
Section titled “Test locally”You can use Netlify CLI to test edge functions locally before deploying them to Netlify.
-
Ensure you have the latest version of Netlify CLI installed:
Terminal window npm install netlify-cli -g -
Launch Netlify Dev to start a development environment that executes edge functions on local requests:
Terminal window netlify dev -
Visit localhost:8888/test to execute the
hello
edge function declared for the/test
route.
Changes to edge functions are applied on new requests.
-
Edit
hello.js
to change theResponse
:export default () => new Response("Updated hello!");export const config = { path: "/test" }; -
Save your updated function file.
-
Reload localhost:8888/test and note that the response has changed.
To debug edge functions locally, launch Netlify Dev with the edge-inspect
or edge-inspect-brk
flag. For details, visit the CLI docs.
By default, the geo
location used is the location of your local environment. To override this to a default mock location of San Francisco, CA, USA, use the --geo=mock
flag. To mock a specific country, use --geo=mock --country=
with a two-letter country code. For more information about the --geo
flag, visit the CLI docs.
Deploy
Section titled “Deploy”Use continuous deployment or Netlify CLI manual deploys to deploy your edge functions.
If a project has TypeScript and JavaScript edge functions with the same name, for example, my-function.ts
and my-function.js
, the TypeScript function is ignored while the JavaScript function is deployed.
Invoke
Section titled “Invoke”Invoke the deployed production version of your hello
edge function declared for the /test
route by accessing yoursitename.netlify.app/test
Deploys of edge functions are atomic. This means that when a new deploy includes changes to function logic or declarations, the behavior of edge functions in old deploys won’t be impacted. Updates to edge functions move to production only when you publish a new production deploy.
Monitor
Section titled “Monitor”To access logs for your production edge functions:
- In the Netlify UI, for your chosen site, visit Logs . Edge Functions
To access logs for other versions of your edge functions:
- In the Netlify UI, go to your site’s Deploys tab.
- Find the deploy of interest.
- Follow the Edge Functions link in the deploy detail page header.
Log contents
Section titled “Log contents”Netlify provides a log of any console statements output by your edge functions. The log for each console statement includes the name of the edge function that generated the output.
Date filter
Section titled “Date filter”By default, the Edge Function log displays a live tail of the latest activity in Real-time. You can also filter to review data from a specific time period, including the Last hour, Last day, Last 7 days, or select Custom to input a specific date and time range.
Text filter
Section titled “Text filter”To make debugging easier, you can filter the logs by edge function name or path. If desired, you can also use pattern matching as part of your query.
Log retention
Section titled “Log retention”Logs are retained for at least 24 hours of edge function activity, even after a new edge function deployment. This log retention period increases to 7 days for certain pricing plans.
Log Drains
Section titled “Log Drains”You can connect your edge function logs to third-party monitoring services for analysis using Netlify’s Log Drains feature. Check out our Log Drains doc for more information.
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