Cloudworker allows you to run Cloudflare Worker scripts locally.
Install via NPM:
npm install -g @dollarshaveclub/cloudworker
const Cloudworker = require('@dollarshaveclub/cloudworker')
const simpleScript = `addEventListener('fetch', event => {
event.respondWith(new Response('hello', {status: 200}))
})`
const req = new Cloudworker.Request('https://myfancywebsite.com/someurl')
const cw = new Cloudworker(simpleScript)
cw.dispatch(req).then((res) => {
console.log("Response Status: ", res.status)
res.text().then((body) =>{
console.log("Response Body: ", body)
})
})
Usage: cloudworker [options] <file>
Options:
-p, --port <port> Port (default: 3000)
-d, --debug Debug
-s, --kv-set [variable.key=value] Binds variable to a local implementation of Workers KV and sets key to value (default: [])
-f, --kv-file [variable=path] Set the filepath for value peristence for the local implementation of Workers KV (default: [])
-w, --wasm [variable=path] Binds variable to wasm located at path (default: [])
-c, --enable-cache Enables cache <BETA>
-r, --watch Watch the worker script and restart the worker when changes are detected
--tls-key <tlsKey> Optional. Path to encryption key for serving requests with TLS enabled. Must specify --tls-cert when using this option.
--tls-cert <tlsCert> Optional. Path to certificate for serving requests with TLS enabled. Must specify --tls-key when using this option.
--https-port <httpsPort> Optional. Port to listen on for HTTPS requests. Must specify --tls-cert and --tls-key when using this option. May not be the same value as --port.
-h, --help output usage information
cloudworker example/example.js
curl localhost:3000/
cloudworker --debug example/example.js
curl localhost:3000/
cloudworker --debug --kv-set KeyValueStore.key=value --kv-set KeyValueStore.hello=world example/example-kv.js
curl localhost:3000/
cloudworker --debug --kv-file KeyValueStore=kv.json --kv-set KeyValueStore.key=value --kv-set KeyValueStore.hello=world example/example-kv.js
curl localhost:3000/
cloudworker --debug --wasm Wasm=example/simple.wasm example/example-wasm-simple.js
curl localhost:3000/
cloudworker --debug --wasm isqrt=example/isqrt.wasm example/example-wasm-isqrt.js
curl localhost:3000/?num=9
cloudworker --debug --wasm RESIZER_WASM=example/resizer.wasm example/example-wasm-resizer.js
curl localhost:3000/wasm-demo/dogdrone.png?width=210 # or open in browser
Cloudworker strives to be as similar to the Cloudflare Worker runtime as possible. A script should behave the same when executed by Cloudworker and when run within Cloudflare Workers. Please file an issue for scenarios in which Cloudworker behaves differently. As behavior differences are found, this package will be updated to match the Cloudflare Worker runtime. This may result in breakage if scripts depended on those behavior differences.
For beta releases:
- Create a new release branch named
v[version]-beta
. e.g.v0.0.10-beta
- Run
npm version [version]-beta.[beta number]
. e.gnpm version 0.0.10-beta.1
- Push branch to origin.
- Run
npm publish --tag beta
. - Create a new release in Github using tag created by
npm version
, write relevant release notes, and ensure "This is a pre-release" is checked. - Bug fixes and changes should be made on feature branches, merged into master, and then merged into the release branch.
- Subsequent beta releases of the same beta version should be made off of the same release branch.
For production releases:
- Merge release branch (if one exists) into master.
- Run
npm version [version]
. e.g.npm version 0.0.10
- Push master to origin.
- Run
npm publish
. - Create a new release in Github using tag created by
npm version
and copy release notes from beta.
MIT