Planning your implementation
Let's say, for example, that you are building a SaaS CRM platform like Salesforce. You want to empower your customers to write JavaScript code that would be executed every time a new lead was captured.
If you were going to implement this feature using Deno Deploy, here's how you might think about building it:
- Create a project and associate that project with a customer account in your database. This would allow you to track usage incurred by each customer, and potentially bill them for that usage, using analytics information about the project.
- Create a deployment that contains the code your end user provided, which should be run when a new lead is created.
- Using multiple deployments in the same project, you could implement "staging" or "production" versions of the event handling logic.
- Your CRM software would communicate with your end user's code by sending an HTTP request to a deployment and awaiting a response.
- In the future, if you wanted to support writing code for other events in your CRM (like creating a new contact, or to send automated reports every night), you could create a project for each of those events, and use a flow like the one described above for each.
Let's look at an example of the API endpoint required to make this happen.
Creating a deployment for a project Jump to heading
In the previous chapter, you created a new project and noted
its id
property. In the example in the previous chapter, the ID was:
f084712a-b23b-4aba-accc-3c2de0bfa26a
You can use a project identifier to
create a deployment
for that project. Create a new file called create_deployment.ts
and include
the following code to create a new "hello world" deployment for your project.
const accessToken = Deno.env.get("DEPLOY_ACCESS_TOKEN");
const API = "https://api.deno.com/v1";
// Replace with your desired project ID
const projectId = "your-project-id-here";
// Create a new deployment
const res = await fetch(`${API}/projects/${projectId}/deployments`, {
method: "POST",
headers: {
Authorization: `Bearer ${accessToken}`,
"Content-Type": "application/json",
},
body: JSON.stringify({
entryPointUrl: "main.ts",
assets: {
"main.ts": {
"kind": "file",
"content":
`export default { async fetch(req) { return new Response("Hello, World!"); } }`,
"encoding": "utf-8",
},
},
envVars: {},
}),
});
const deployment = await res.json();
console.log(res.status);
console.log(
"Visit your site here:",
`https://${project.name}-${deployment.id}.deno.dev`,
);
If you run this script with the following command:
deno run -A --env create_deployment.ts
You should soon have a simple "Hello World!" server live on a public URL, visible from your Deno Deploy dashboard.
Parts of a deployment Jump to heading
The example above showed a very simple example of a deployment. A more complex deployment might include some or all of these components, fully described here in the API docs.
- Assets: TypeScript or JavaScript source files, images, JSON documents -
code and static files that make your deployment run. These files can be
encoded in the JSON you upload to the server using
utf-8
(for plain source files) orbase64
for images and other text files. In addition to actual files, you can also include symbolic links to other files. - Entry point URL: A file path to an asset (a TypeScript or JavaScript file) from the collection above that should be executed to start a server in your deployment.
- Environment variables: You can specify values that should exist in the
system environment, to be retrieved by
Deno.env.get
. - Database ID: The identifier for a Deno KV database that should be made available to this deployment.
- Compiler options: A set of options that should be used to interpret TypeScript code.
Custom domains Jump to heading
After a deployment is created, it is assigned a generated URL. That may be fine for some scenarios, but often you'll want to associate a custom domain with your deployments as well. Check out the API reference for domains.
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