wrangler is a CLI tool designed for folks who are interested in using Cloudflare workers.
You have many options to install wrangler!
npm i @cloudflare/wrangler -g
cargo install wrangler
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Scaffold a project, including boilerplate for a Rust library and a Cloudflare Worker. You can pass a name and template to this command optionally.
wrangler generate <name> <template> --type=["webpack", "javascript", "rust"]All of the arguments and flags to this command are optional: -
name: defaults toworker-template: defaults to thehttps://github.com/cloudflare/worker-template-type: defaults to "webpack" -
Build your project. This command looks at your
wrangler.tomlfile and runs the build steps associated with the"type"declared there. -
Configure your global Cloudflare user. You will need to pass your email and API key:
wrangler config <email> <api_key> -
Publish your Worker to Cloudflare. This uses several keys in your
wrangler.tomldepending on whether you are publishing to a workers.dev subdomain or your own domain, registered with Cloudflare.wrangler publishBy default,
publishwill make your worker available at<project-name>.<subdomain>.workers.dev. To disable publishing to your workers.dev subdomain, setprivate = truein yourwrangler.toml. This setting prevents thepublishcommand from making your worker publicly available. To explicitly enable deployment to<project-name>.<subdomain>.workers.dev, you can setprivate = false.To use this command, you'll need to have the following keys in your
wrangler.toml:nametypeaccount_id
You'll also need to have a workers.dev subdomain registered. You can register a subdomain by using:
wrangler subdomain <name>A
--releasecan be optionally passed to publish your worker to a domain you have registered with Cloudflare. To use--releaseyourwrangler.tomlmust include:nametypeaccount_idzone_idroute
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Preview your project using the cloudflareworkers.com API.
You can optionally pass
getorpostand abodyto this command. This will send a request to your worker on the preview service and return the response in your terminal. For example:wrangler preview post hello=hello wrangler preview get // this is the default
There are two types of configuration that wrangler uses: global user and per project.
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In Cloudflare's system, you have a User that can have multiple Accounts and Zones. As a result, your User is configured globally on your machine. Your Account(s) and Zone(s) will be configured per project, but will use your User credentials to authenticate all API calls. This config file is created in a
.wranglerdirectory in your computer's home directory.To set up
wranglerto work with your Cloudflare user, use the following commands:- π§
config: a command that prompts you to enter youremailandapikey. - π΅οΈββοΈ
whoami: run this command to confirm that your configuration is appropriately set up. When successful, this command will print out your user information, including the type of plan you are currently on.
- π§
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Your project will need to have several things configured before you can publish your worker. These values are stored in a
wrangler.tomlfile thatwrangler generatewill make for you. You will need to manually edit this file to add these values before you can publish.-
name: This is the name of your project. It will be the name of your script. -
private: This is a boolean. If set totrue, when usingwrangler publish, it will push your script but not make it publically available. This does not affect publishing in--releasemode to a registered domain. Those pushes are always public. If this is not in yourwrangler.tomlit is assumed your project is public. -
type: This key tellswrangler buildhow to build your project. There are currently 3 options, but we expect there to be more as the community grows.javascript: This project contains a single JavaScript file, defined inpackage.json'smainkey.rust: This project contains a Rust crate that useswasm-bindgen. It will be built withwasm-pack.webpack: This project contains any number of JavaScript files or Rust/C/C++ files that compile to WebAssembly. Rust files will be built withwasm-pack. This project type uses webpack and webpack plugins in the background to build your worker.
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zone_id: This is the ID of the "zone" or domain you want to run your script on. This is optional if you are using a workers.dev subdomain and is only reuqired forpublish --release. -
account_id: This is the ID of the account associated with your zone. You might have more than one account, so make sure to use the ID of the account associated with thezone_idyou provide, if you provide one. -
route: This is the route you'd like to use your worker on. You need to include the hostname. Examples:*example.com/*http://example.com/helloThis key is optional if you are using a workers.dev subdomain and is only required forpublish --release.
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webpack_config: This is the path to the webpack configuration file for your worker. This is optional and defaults towebpack.config.js -
[[kv-namespaces]]: These specify any Workers KV namespaces you want to access from inside your Worker. Each namespace you include should have an entry in your wrangler.toml that includes:binding: the name you want to bind to in your scriptid: the namespace_id assigned to your kv namespace upon creation. e.g. (per namespace):
[[kv-namespaces]] binding = "foo" id = "0f2ac74b498b48028cb68387c421e279"
Note: Creating your KV Namespaces should be handled either via the api or via your Cloudflare dashboard.
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Wrangler can be installed both through npm and through Rust's package manager, Cargo.
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If you don't already have npm on your machine, install it using npm's recommended method, a node.js version manager.
If you have already installed npm with a package manager, it is possible you will run into an
EACCESerror while installing wrangler. This is related to how many system packagers install npm. You can either uninstall npm and reinstall using the npm recommended install method (a version manager), or use one of our other install methods. -
Install Wrangler by running:
npm i @cloudflare/wrangler -g
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Install
cargo:Rustup, a tool for installing Rust, will also install Cargo. On Linux and macOS systems,
rustupcan be installed as follows:curl https://sh.rustup.rs -sSf | shAdditional installation methods are available here.
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Install
wrangler:cargo install wrangler -
Troubleshooting OpenSSL errors
If you are on a Mac, you might encounter an OpenSSL error when attempting to generate a project. You can resolve that issue by installing OpenSSL v1.1 through Homebrew (need to install Homebrew? Instructions available here).
$ brew install [email protected]
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Download the binary tarball for your platform from our releases page. You don't need to download wranglerjs, wrangler will install that for you.
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Unpack the tarball and place the binary
wranglersomewhere on yourPATH, preferably/usr/local/binfor linux/macOS orProgram Filesfor windows.
To get the latest version of Wrangler, using Cargo, run:
cargo install wrangler --force
To get the latest version of Wrangler, using NPM, run:
npm install @cloudflare/wrangler
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Generate a new project:
wrangler generate -
Move into the new project directory:
cd worker -
Build your project:
wrangler build -
Preview your project:
wrangler preview -
(optional) Configure with your Cloudflare account:
wrangler config <email> <api_key>Configuring your account is required to use the
publishstep, which will push your Worker live to the Cloudflare edge. If you don't configure, you can still usewranglerto generate, build, and preview a Worker.Optionally, create a workers.dev subdomain:
wrangler subdomain <name> -
Check your configuration:
wrangler whoami -
Publish your project:
To publish to a workers.dev subdomain:
wrangler publishTo publish to a domain you have registered with Cloudflare, add a
routeand azone_idto yourwrangler.toml. Then run:wrangler publish --release
