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deno compile
, standalone executables
Command line usage
deno compile [OPTIONS] [SCRIPT_ARG]...
Compiles the given script into a self contained executable.
deno compile --allow-read --allow-net jsr:@std/http/file-server
deno compile --output file_server jsr:@std/http/file-server
Any flags specified which affect runtime behavior will be applied to the resulting binary.
This allows distribution of a Deno application to systems that do not have Deno installed. Under the hood, it bundles a slimmed down version of the Deno runtime along with your JavaScript or TypeScript code.
Cross-compiling to different target architectures is supported using the --target
flag.
On the first invocation with deno will download the proper binary and cache it in $DENO_DIR
.
Type checking options Jump to heading
--check
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Set type-checking behavior. This subcommand type-checks local modules by default, so adding --check
is redundant
If the value of "all" is supplied, remote modules will be included.
Alternatively, the 'deno check' subcommand can be used.
--no-check
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Skip type-checking. If the value of "remote" is supplied, diagnostic errors from remote modules will be ignored.
Dependency management options Jump to heading
--cached-only
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Require that remote dependencies are already cached.
--frozen
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Error out if lockfile is out of date.
--import-map
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Load import map file from local file or remote URL.
--lock
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Check the specified lock file. (If value is not provided, defaults to "./deno.lock").
--no-lock
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Disable auto discovery of the lock file.
--no-npm
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Do not resolve npm modules.
--no-remote
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Do not resolve remote modules.
--node-modules-dir
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Sets the node modules management mode for npm packages.
--reload
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Short flag: -r
Reload source code cache (recompile TypeScript) no value Reload everything jsr:@std/http/file-server,jsr:@std/assert/assert-equals Reloads specific modules npm: Reload all npm modules npm:chalk Reload specific npm module.
--vendor
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Toggles local vendor folder usage for remote modules and a node_modules folder for npm packages.
Options Jump to heading
--allow-scripts
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Allow running npm lifecycle scripts for the given packages
Note: Scripts will only be executed when using a node_modules directory (--node-modules-dir
).
--cert
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Load certificate authority from PEM encoded file.
--config
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Short flag: -c
Configure different aspects of deno including TypeScript, linting, and code formatting
Typically the configuration file will be called deno.json
or deno.jsonc
and
automatically detected; in that case this flag is not necessary.
--env-file
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Load environment variables from local file Only the first environment variable with a given key is used. Existing process environment variables are not overwritten.
--ext
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Set content type of the supplied file.
--location
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Value of globalThis.location used by some web APIs.
--no-config
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Disable automatic loading of the configuration file.
--seed
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Set the random number generator seed.
--v8-flags
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To see a list of all available flags use --v8-flags=--help
Flags can also be set via the DENO_V8_FLAGS environment variable.
Any flags set with this flag are appended after the DENO_V8_FLAGS environment variable.
Compile options Jump to heading
--icon
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Set the icon of the executable on Windows (.ico).
--include
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Includes an additional module in the compiled executable's module graph. Use this flag if a dynamically imported module or a web worker main module fails to load in the executable. This flag can be passed multiple times, to include multiple additional modules.
--no-terminal
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Hide terminal on Windows.
--output
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Short flag: -o
Output file (defaults to $PWD/
--target
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Target OS architecture.
Flags Jump to heading
As with deno install
, the runtime flags
used to execute the script must be specified at compilation time. This includes
permission flags.
deno compile --allow-read --allow-net jsr:@std/http@1.0.0/file-server
Script arguments can be partially embedded.
deno compile --allow-read --allow-net jsr:@std/http@1.0.0/file-server -p 8080
./file_server --help
Cross Compilation Jump to heading
You can cross-compile binaries for other platforms by using the --target
flag.
# Cross compile for Apple Silicon
deno compile --target aarch64-apple-darwin main.ts
# Cross compile for Windows with an icon
deno compile --target x86_64-pc-windows-msvc --icon ./icon.ico main.ts
Supported Targets Jump to heading
Deno supports cross compiling to all targets regardless of the host platform.
OS | Architecture | Target |
---|---|---|
Windows | x86_64 | x86_64-pc-windows-msvc |
macOS | x86_64 | x86_64-apple-darwin |
macOS | ARM64 | aarch64-apple-darwin |
Linux | x86_64 | x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu |
Linux | ARM64 | aarch64-unknown-linux-gnu |
Icons Jump to heading
It is possible to add an icon to the executable by using the --icon
flag when
targeting Windows. The icon must be in the .ico
format.
deno compile --icon icon.ico main.ts
# Cross compilation with icon
deno compile --target x86_64-pc-windows-msvc --icon ./icon.ico main.ts
Dynamic Imports Jump to heading
By default, statically analyzable dynamic imports (imports that have the string
literal within the import("...")
call expression) will be included in the
output.
// calculator.ts and its dependencies will be included in the binary
const calculator = await import("./calculator.ts");
But non-statically analyzable dynamic imports won't:
const specifier = condition ? "./calc.ts" : "./better_calc.ts";
const calculator = await import(specifier);
To include non-statically analyzable dynamic imports, specify an
--include <path>
flag.
deno compile --include calc.ts --include better_calc.ts main.ts
Workers Jump to heading
Similarly to non-statically analyzable dynamic imports, code for workers is not included in the compiled executable by default. There are two ways to include workers:
- Use the
--include <path>
flag to include the worker code.
deno compile --include worker.ts main.ts
- Import worker module using a statically analyzable import.
// main.ts
import "./worker.ts";
deno compile main.ts
Code Signing Jump to heading
macOS Jump to heading
By default, on macOS, the compiled executable will be signed using an ad-hoc
signature which is the equivalent of running codesign -s -
:
$ deno compile -o main main.ts
$ codesign --verify -vv ./main
./main: valid on disk
./main: satisfies its Designated Requirement
You can specify a signing identity when code signing the executable just like you would do with any other macOS executable:
codesign -s "Developer ID Application: Your Name" ./main
Refer to the official documentation for more information on codesigning and notarization on macOS.
Windows Jump to heading
On Windows, the compiled executable can be signed using the SignTool.exe
utility.
$ deno compile -o main.exe main.ts
$ signtool sign /fd SHA256 main.exe
Unavailable in executables Jump to heading
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