Small, local HTTP server for static files.
- Small: no dependencies, 22 kilobytes gzipped.
- Local: designed for local development workflows.
- Static: serves files and directory listings.
npx servitsy [directory] [options]Note
servitsy is a command-line tool, published as a npm package. It requires Node.js version 18 or higher, or a compatible runtime like Deno or Bun.
# Running with Bun
bunx servitsy
# Running with Deno (will prompt for read access)
deno run --allow-net --allow-sys npm:servitsyCalling servitsy without options will:
- serve the current directory at
http://localhost:8080(listening on hostname0.0.0.0); - try the next port numbers if
8080is not available; - serve
index.htmlfiles for folders, and.htmlfiles when the extension was omitted in the URL; - serve directory listings (for folders without an index file).
You can configure servitsy's behavior with options. For example:
# Serve current folder on port 3000, with CORS headers
npx servitsy -p 3000 --cors
# Serve 'dist' folder and disable directory listings
npx servitsy dist --no-list- Use
npx servitsy --helpfor an overview of available options. - Read doc/options.md for details and examples.
See doc/changelog.md for the release history.
This package is licensed under the MIT license.
Warning
servitsy is not designed for production. There are safer and faster tools to serve a folder of static HTML to the public. See Apache, Nginx, @fastify/static, etc.
For local testing, here are a few established alternatives you may prefer, with their respective size:
| Package | Version | Dependencies | Installed size† |
|---|---|---|---|
| servitsy | 0.5.0 | 0 | 104 kB |
| servor | 4.0.2 | 0 | 144 kB |
| sirv-cli | 3.0.0 | 12 | 396 kB |
| serve | 14.2.4 | 87 | 7.5 MB |
| http-server | 14.1.1 | 52 | 9.4 MB |
If size and dependency count is not a concern and you want something stable and battle-tested, I recommend serve and http-server.
Otherwise servitsy, sirv-cli or servor might work for you.
† Installed size is the uncompressed size of the package and its dependencies (as reported by du on macOS; exact size may depend on the OS and/or filesystem).
