This is a Next.js project bootstrapped with create-next-app.
The dl.rustfs.com/artifacts/* download path is served by a Cloudflare Worker that reads objects from the dl-rustfs R2 bucket.
The Worker entrypoint is worker/index.ts, and the R2 binding is pinned in wrangler.toml:
[[r2_buckets]]
binding = "R2_DOWNLOAD_BUCKET"
bucket_name = "dl-rustfs"Deploy the Worker with Wrangler from this repository:
pnpm dlx wrangler deployAfter deployment, verify the custom domain route:
curl -I https://dl.rustfs.com/artifacts/rustfs/release/rustfs-macos-x86_64-v1.0.0-beta.8.zipThe expected result is 200 OK. If the public R2 URL works but this URL returns 404, check the Worker logs for the requested object key. The Worker maps /artifacts/... directly to the R2 key artifacts/....
First, run the development server:
npm run dev
# or
yarn dev
# or
pnpm dev
# or
bun devOpen http://localhost:3000 with your browser to see the result.
You can start editing the page by modifying app/page.tsx. The page auto-updates as you edit the file.
This project uses next/font to automatically optimize and load Geist, a new font family for Vercel.
To learn more about Next.js, take a look at the following resources:
- Next.js Documentation - learn about Next.js features and API.
- Learn Next.js - an interactive Next.js tutorial.
You can check out the Next.js GitHub repository - your feedback and contributions are welcome!
The easiest way to deploy your Next.js app is to use the Vercel Platform from the creators of Next.js.
Check out our Next.js deployment documentation for more details.