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Vercel

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To deploy to Vercel, use adapter-vercel.

This adapter will be installed by default when you use adapter-auto, but adding it to your project allows you to specify Vercel-specific options.

Usage

Install with npm i -D @sveltejs/adapter-vercel, then add the adapter to your svelte.config.js:

svelte.config.js
ts
import adapter from '@sveltejs/adapter-vercel';
 
export default {
kit: {
// default options are shown
adapter: adapter({
// if true, will deploy the app using edge functions
// (https://vercel.com/docs/concepts/functions/edge-functions)
// rather than serverless functions
edge: false,
 
// an array of dependencies that esbuild should treat
// as external when bundling functions. this only applies
// to edge functions, and should only be used to exclude
// optional dependencies that will not run outside Node
external: [],
 
// if true, will split your app into multiple functions
// instead of creating a single one for the entire app
split: false
})
}
};

Environment Variables

Vercel makes a set of deployment-specific environment variables available. Like other environment variables, these are accessible from $env/static/private and $env/dynamic/private (sometimes — more on that later), and inaccessible from their public counterparts. To access one of these variables from the client:

+layout.server.js
ts
import { VERCEL_COMMIT_REF } from '$env/static/private';
 
/** @type {import('./$types').LayoutServerLoad} */
export function load() {
return {
deploymentGitBranch: VERCEL_COMMIT_REF
};
}
+layout.server.ts
ts
import { VERCEL_COMMIT_REF } from '$env/static/private';
import type { LayoutServerLoad } from './$types';
 
export const load = (() => {
return {
deploymentGitBranch: VERCEL_COMMIT_REF
};
}) satisfies LayoutServerLoad;
+layout.svelte
<script>
  /** @type {import('./$types').LayoutServerData} */  export let data;
</script>

<p>This staging environment was deployed from {data.deploymentGitBranch}.</p>
+layout.svelte
<script lang="ts">
  import type { LayoutServerData } from './$types';

  export let data: LayoutServerData;
</script>

<p>This staging environment was deployed from {data.deploymentGitBranch}.</p>

Since all of these variables are unchanged between build time and run time when building on Vercel, we recommend using $env/static/private — which will statically replace the variables, enabling optimisations like dead code elimination — rather than $env/dynamic/private. If you're deploying with edge: true you must use $env/static/private, as $env/dynamic/private and $env/dynamic/public are not currently populated in edge functions on Vercel.

Notes

Vercel functions

If you have Vercel functions contained in the api directory at the project's root, any requests for /api/* will not be handled by SvelteKit. You should implement these as API routes in your SvelteKit app instead, unless you need to use a non-JavaScript language in which case you will need to ensure that you don't have any /api/* routes in your SvelteKit app.

Node version

Projects created before a certain date will default to using Node 14, while SvelteKit requires Node 16 or later. You can change the Node version in your project settings.

Troubleshooting

Accessing the file system

You can't access the file system through methods like fs.readFileSync in Serverless/Edge environments. If you need to access files that way, do that during building the app through prerendering. If you have a blog for example and don't want to manage your content through a CMS, then you need to prerender the content (or prerender the endpoint from which you get it) and redeploy your blog everytime you add new content.