deno compile [--output <OUT>] <SRC>
will compile the script into a
self-contained executable.
> deno compile https://examples.deno.land/hello-world.ts
If you omit the OUT
parameter, the name of the executable file will be
inferred.
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 https://deno.land/std/http/file_server.ts
Script arguments can be partially embedded.
> deno compile --allow-read --allow-net https://deno.land/std/http/file_server.ts -p 8080
> ./file_server --help
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
Similarly to non-statically analyzable dynamic imports, code for
workers is not included in the compiled executable by
default. You must use the --include <path>
flag to include the worker code.
deno compile --include worker.ts main.ts
You can compile binaries for other platforms by adding the --target
CLI flag.
Deno currently supports compiling to Windows x64, macOS x64, macOS ARM and Linux
x64. Use deno compile --help
to list the full values for each compilation
target.