You can deploy by CLI (`vercel deploy`) or by connecting your new repo in the [Vercel Dashboard](https://vercel.com/). Alternatively, you can create a production build locally:
**Vercel's [Build Output API](https://vercel.com/docs/build-output-api/v3) must be enabled.** You must enable it yourself by setting the environment variable: `ENABLE_VC_BUILD=1`.
-`edge`: SSR inside a [Edge function](https://vercel.com/docs/concepts/functions/edge-functions).
-`serverless`: SSR inside a [Node.js function](https://vercel.com/docs/concepts/functions/serverless-functions).
-`static`: generates a static website following Vercel's output formats, redirects, etc.
> **Note**: deploying to the Edge has [its limitations](https://vercel.com/docs/concepts/functions/edge-functions#known-limitations) — they can't be more than 1 MB in size and they don't support native Node.js APIs, among others.
You can change where to target by changing the import:
**A few known complex packages (example: [puppeteer](https://github.com/puppeteer/puppeteer)) do not support bundling and therefore will not work properly with this adapter.** By default, Vercel doesn't include npm installed files & packages from your project's `./node_modules` folder. To address this, the `@astrojs/vercel` adapter automatically bundles your final build output using `esbuild`.