Deploy Serverless Functions at the Edge
Open Source • TypeScript • Web APIs
Cron triggers • Instant deployments
Interactive Playground
Lagon is an open-source runtime and platform that allows developers to run TypeScript and JavaScript Functions at the Edge, using V8 Isolates. It's also self-hostable.
Warning: Lagon is still in heavy development. Do not use for production usages.
Current status:
- Dev: In heavy development, features are being added and APIs have breaking changes
Alpha: Missing features and bugs to fix, not ready for production usageBeta: Stable APIs, last bugs are being fixed and last features are being addedGeneral Availability: Cloud and self-hosted versions available for production usage
- cli CLI to manage Functions
- dashboard Dashboard and API
- docs Documentation website
- js-runtime JavaScript code for the Runtime, containing the Web APIs
- runtime Rust JavaScript Runtime, using V8 Isolates
- serverless HTTP entrypoint for Functions, using the Runtime and exporting metrics
- ui Design system
- wpt-runner Run web-platform-tests on Lagon
- www Public website
- JavaScript Runtime written in Rust using V8 Isolates
- Native Web APIs like
Request
,Response
... - 100% open-source
- Deploy APIs, SSR(ed) websites, Webhooks endpoints, Cron jobs...
- CLI to manage Functions and develop locally
- Deploy at the Edge using the Cloud version, or self-host it
Lagon is a fairly recent project. It is still in heavy development, so expect breaking changes and buggy features.
The roadmap is accessible to anyone on GitHub. Feel free to open an issue to discuss new features that you would like to see implemented.
Lagon uses V8 Isolates, which are sandboxed environments used to run plain JavaScript. That means each Function's memory is isolated from each others, and you can run a lot of them at the same time with very few resources. Node.js, Electron, Deno (and Deno Deploy), Cloudflare Workers are also using V8 Isolates to execute JavaScript.
Starting an Isolate is a lot faster than starting a whole Node.js process, which allows for almost free cold starts.