Deploy a Nuxt site
Nuxt is a web framework making web Vue.js-based development simple and powerful.
In this guide, you will create a new Nuxt application and deploy it using Cloudflare Pages.
Create a new project
Create a new project by running the following commands in your terminal:
$ npx nuxi init my-nuxt-app$ cd my-nuxt-app$ npm install
Next, run the application using the command:
$ npm run dev
Before you continue
All of the framework guides assume you already have a fundamental understanding of Git. If you are new to Git, refer to this summarized Git handbook on how to set up Git on your local machine.
If you clone with SSH, you must generate SSH keys on each computer you use to push or pull from GitHub.
Refer to the GitHub documentation and Git documentation for more information.
Create a GitHub repository
Create a new GitHub repository by visiting repo.new. After creating a new repository, prepare and push your local application to GitHub by running the following commands in your terminal:
$ git init$ git remote add origin https://github.com/<your-gh-username>/<repository-name>$ git add .$ git commit -m "Initial commit"$ git branch -M main$ git push -u origin main
Deploying with Cloudflare Pages
To deploy your site to Pages:
- Log in to the Cloudflare dashboard and select your account.
- In Account Home, select Workers & Pages > Create application > Pages > Connect to Git.
You will be asked to authorize access to your GitHub account if you have not already done so. Cloudflare needs this so that it can monitor and deploy your projects from the source. You may narrow access to specific repositories if you prefer; however, you will have to manually update this list within your GitHub settings when you want to add more repositories to Cloudflare Pages.
Select the new GitHub repository that you created and, in the Set up builds and deployments section, provide the following information:
Configuration option | Value |
---|---|
Production branch | main |
Build command | npm run build |
Build directory | dist |
Optionally, you can customize the Project name field. It defaults to the GitHub repository’s name, but it does not need to match. The Project name value is assigned as your *.pages.dev
subdomain.
After completing configuration, click the Save and Deploy button.
You will see your first deploy pipeline in progress. Pages installs all dependencies and builds the project as specified.
Cloudflare Pages will automatically rebuild your project and deploy it on every new pushed commit.
Additionally, you will have access to preview deployments, which repeat the build-and-deploy process for pull requests. With these, you can preview changes to your project with a real URL before deploying them to production.
Use bindings in your Nuxt application
A binding allows your application to interact with Cloudflare developer products, such as KV, Durable Object, R2, and D1.
In Nuxt, add server-side code via
Server Routes and Middleware. The defineEventHandler()
method is used to define your API endpoints in which you can access Cloudflare’s context via the provided context
field. The context
field allows you to access any bindings set for your application.
The following code block shows an example of accessing a KV namespace in Nuxt.
src/my-endpoint.get.tsexport default defineEventHandler(({ context }) => { // the type `KVNamespace` comes from the @cloudflare/workers-types package const MY_KV: KVNamespace = context.cloudflare.env.MY_KV;
return { // ... };
});
Learn more
By completing this guide, you have successfully deployed your Nuxt site to Cloudflare Pages. To get started with other frameworks, refer to the list of Framework guides.