Server Options
server.host
- Type:
string | boolean
- Default:
'localhost'
Specify which IP addresses the server should listen on. Set this to 0.0.0.0
or true
to listen on all addresses, including LAN and public addresses.
This can be set via the CLI using --host 0.0.0.0
or --host
.
NOTE
There are cases when other servers might respond instead of Vite.
The first case is when localhost
is used. Node.js under v17 reorders the result of DNS-resolved addresses by default. When accessing localhost
, browsers use DNS to resolve the address and that address might differ from the address which Vite is listening to. Vite prints the resolved address when it differs.
You can set dns.setDefaultResultOrder('verbatim')
to disable the reordering behavior. Vite will then print the address as localhost
.
// vite.config.js
import { defineConfig } from 'vite'
import dns from 'dns'
dns.setDefaultResultOrder('verbatim')
export default defineConfig({
// omit
})
The second case is when wildcard hosts (e.g. 0.0.0.0
) are used. This is because servers listening on non-wildcard hosts take priority over those listening on wildcard hosts.
Accessing the server on WSL2 from your LAN
When running Vite on WSL2, it is not sufficient to set host: true
to access the server from your LAN. See the WSL document for more details.
server.port
- Type:
number
- Default:
5173
Specify server port. Note if the port is already being used, Vite will automatically try the next available port so this may not be the actual port the server ends up listening on.
server.strictPort
- Type:
boolean
Set to true
to exit if port is already in use, instead of automatically trying the next available port.
server.https
- Type:
boolean | https.ServerOptions
Enable TLS + HTTP/2. Note this downgrades to TLS only when the server.proxy
option is also used.
The value can also be an options object passed to https.createServer()
.
A valid certificate is needed. For a basic setup, you can add @vitejs/plugin-basic-ssl to the project plugins, which will automatically create and cache a self-signed certificate. But we recommend creating your own certificates.
server.open
- Type:
boolean | string
Automatically open the app in the browser on server start. When the value is a string, it will be used as the URL's pathname. If you want to open the server in a specific browser you like, you can set the env p
(e.g. firefox
). You can also set p
to pass additional arguments (e.g. --incognito
).
BROWSER
and BROWSER_ARGS
are also special environment variables you can set in the .env
file to configure it. See the open
package for more details.
Example:
export default defineConfig({
server: {
open: '/docs/index.html',
},
})
server.proxy
- Type:
Record<string, string | ProxyOptions>
Configure custom proxy rules for the dev server. Expects an object of { key: options }
pairs. Any requests that request path starts with that key will be proxied to that specified target. If the key starts with ^
, it will be interpreted as a RegExp
. The configure
option can be used to access the proxy instance.
Note that if you are using non-relative base
, you must prefix each key with that base
.
Extends http-proxy
. Additional options are here.
In some cases, you might also want to configure the underlying dev server (e.g. to add custom middlewares to the internal connect app). In order to do that, you need to write your own plugin and use configureServer function.
Example:
export default defineConfig({
server: {
proxy: {
// string shorthand: http://localhost:5173/foo -> http://localhost:4567/foo
'/foo': 'http://localhost:4567',
// with options: http://localhost:5173/api/bar-> http://jsonplaceholder.typicode.com/bar
'/api': {
target: 'http://jsonplaceholder.typicode.com',
changeOrigin: true,
rewrite: (path) => path.replace(/^\/api/, ''),
},
// with RegEx: http://localhost:5173/fallback/ -> http://jsonplaceholder.typicode.com/
'^/fallback/.*': {
target: 'http://jsonplaceholder.typicode.com',
changeOrigin: true,
rewrite: (path) => path.replace(/^\/fallback/, ''),
},
// Using the proxy instance
'/api': {
target: 'http://jsonplaceholder.typicode.com',
changeOrigin: true,
configure: (proxy, options) => {
// proxy will be an instance of 'http-proxy'
},
},
// Proxying websockets or socket.io: ws://localhost:5173/socket.io -> ws://localhost:5174/socket.io
'/socket.io': {
target: 'ws://localhost:5174',
ws: true,
},
},
},
})
server.cors
- Type:
boolean | CorsOptions
Configure CORS for the dev server. This is enabled by default and allows any origin. Pass an options object to fine tune the behavior or false
to disable.
server.headers
- Type:
OutgoingHttpHeaders
Specify server response headers.
server.hmr
- Type:
boolean | { protocol?: string, host?: string, port?: number, path?: string, timeout?: number, overlay?: boolean, clientPort?: number, server?: Server }
Disable or configure HMR connection (in cases where the HMR websocket must use a different address from the http server).
Set server.hmr.overlay
to false
to disable the server error overlay.
clientPort
is an advanced option that overrides the port only on the client side, allowing you to serve the websocket on a different port than the client code looks for it on.
When server.hmr.server
is defined, Vite will process the HMR connection requests through the provided server. If not in middleware mode, Vite will attempt to process HMR connection requests through the existing server. This can be helpful when using self-signed certificates or when you want to expose Vite over a network on a single port.
Check out vite-setup-catalogue
for some examples.
NOTE
With the default configuration, reverse proxies in front of Vite are expected to support proxying WebSocket. If the Vite HMR client fails to connect WebSocket, the client will fall back to connecting the WebSocket directly to the Vite HMR server bypassing the reverse proxies:
Direct websocket connection fallback. Check out https://vitejs.dev/config/server-options.html#server-hmr to remove the previous connection error.
The error that appears in the Browser when the fallback happens can be ignored. To avoid the error by directly bypassing reverse proxies, you could either:
- configure the reverse proxy to proxy WebSocket too
- set
server.strictPort = true
and setserver.hmr.clientPort
to the same value withserver.port
- set
server.hmr.port
to a different value fromserver.port
server.watch
- Type:
object
File system watcher options to pass on to chokidar.
The Vite server watcher skips .git/
and node_modules/
directories by default. If you want to watch a package inside node_modules/
, you can pass a negated glob pattern to server.watch.ignored
. That is:
export default defineConfig({
server: {
watch: {
ignored: ['!**/node_modules/your-package-name/**'],
},
},
// The watched package must be excluded from optimization,
// so that it can appear in the dependency graph and trigger hot reload.
optimizeDeps: {
exclude: ['your-package-name'],
},
})
Using Vite on Windows Subsystem for Linux (WSL) 2
When running Vite on WSL2, file system watching does not work when a file is edited by Windows applications (non-WSL2 process). This is due to a WSL2 limitation. This also applies to running on Docker with a WSL2 backend.
To fix it, you could either:
- Recommended: Use WSL2 applications to edit your files.
- It is also recommended to move the project folder outside of a Windows filesystem. Accessing Windows filesystem from WSL2 is slow. Removing that overhead will improve performance.
- Set
{ usePolling: true }
.- Note that
usePolling
leads to high CPU utilization.
- Note that
server.middlewareMode
- Type:
boolean
- Default:
false
Create Vite server in middleware mode.
Related: appType, SSR - Setting Up the Dev Server
Example:
import express from 'express'
import { createServer as createViteServer } from 'vite'
async function createServer() {
const app = express()
// Create Vite server in middleware mode
const vite = await createViteServer({
server: { middlewareMode: true },
appType: 'custom', // don't include Vite's default HTML handling middlewares
})
// Use vite's connect instance as middleware
app.use(vite.middlewares)
app.use('*', async (req, res) => {
// Since `appType` is `'custom'`, should serve response here.
// Note: if `appType` is `'spa'` or `'mpa'`, Vite includes middlewares to handle
// HTML requests and 404s so user middlewares should be added
// before Vite's middlewares to take effect instead
})
}
createServer()
server.fs.strict
- Type:
boolean
- Default:
true
(enabled by default since Vite 2.7)
Restrict serving files outside of workspace root.
server.fs.allow
- Type:
string[]
Restrict files that could be served via /@fs/
. When server.fs.strict
is set to true
, accessing files outside this directory list that aren't imported from an allowed file will result in a 403.
Both directories and files can be provided.
Vite will search for the root of the potential workspace and use it as default. A valid workspace met the following conditions, otherwise will fall back to the project root.
- contains
workspaces
field inpackage.json
- contains one of the following file
lerna.json
pnpm-workspace.yaml
Accepts a path to specify the custom workspace root. Could be a absolute path or a path relative to project root. For example:
export default defineConfig({
server: {
fs: {
// Allow serving files from one level up to the project root
allow: ['..'],
},
},
})
When server.fs.allow
is specified, the auto workspace root detection will be disabled. To extend the original behavior, a utility searchForWorkspaceRoot
is exposed:
import { defineConfig, searchForWorkspaceRoot } from 'vite'
export default defineConfig({
server: {
fs: {
allow: [
// search up for workspace root
searchForWorkspaceRoot(process.cwd()),
// your custom rules
'/path/to/custom/allow_directory',
'/path/to/custom/allow_file.demo',
],
},
},
})
server.fs.deny
- Type:
string[]
- Default:
['.env', '.env.*', '*.{crt,pem}']
Blocklist for sensitive files being restricted to be served by Vite dev server. This will have higher priority than server.fs.allow
. picomatch patterns are supported.
server.origin
- Type:
string
Defines the origin of the generated asset URLs during development.
export default defineConfig({
server: {
origin: 'http://127.0.0.1:8080',
},
})
server.sourcemapIgnoreList
- Type:
false | (sourcePath: string, sourcemapPath: string) => boolean
- Default:
(sourcePath) => sourcePath.includes('node_modules')
Whether or not to ignore source files in the server sourcemap, used to populate the x_google_ignoreList
source map extension.
server.sourcemapIgnoreList
is the equivalent of build.rollupOptions.output.sourcemapIgnoreList
for the dev server. A difference between the two config options is that the rollup function is called with a relative path for sourcePath
while server.sourcemapIgnoreList
is called with an absolute path. During dev, most modules have the map and the source in the same folder, so the relative path for sourcePath
is the file name itself. In these cases, absolute paths makes it convenient to be used instead.
By default, it excludes all paths containing node_modules
. You can pass false
to disable this behavior, or, for full control, a function that takes the source path and sourcemap path and returns whether to ignore the source path.
export default defineConfig({
server: {
// This is the default value, and will add all files with node_modules
// in their paths to the ignore list.
sourcemapIgnoreList(sourcePath, sourcemapPath) {
return sourcePath.includes('node_modules')
}
}
};
Note
server.sourcemapIgnoreList
and build.rollupOptions.output.sourcemapIgnoreList
need to be set independently. server.sourcemapIgnoreList
is a server only config and doesn't get its default value from the defined rollup options.