See what changed, and take your history with you
New `percher diff` shows what changed between deploys, and `percher export --git` hands you your whole history as a git bundle.
Read more →Every shipped change, newest first. Follow along via RSS.
New `percher diff` shows what changed between deploys, and `percher export --git` hands you your whole history as a git bundle.
Read more →Tell your AI assistant to publish and your app goes live in seconds, no signup. Claim it to a real account whenever you want to keep it.
Read more →Share a link to your app's live status and recent deploys — no login, nothing sensitive, revocable any time.
Read more →Percher now scans every app image for known vulnerabilities, surfaces them in your Security tab, and emails you only when something critical needs a fix.
Read more →New accounts confirm their email and accept the terms before going active, with a one-click resend if the link expires.
Read more →Download your whole app — source, config, env keys, and database — as a single archive. No lock-in.
Read more →Apps that run migrations or warm a cache on boot can now extend the health-check window in percher.toml.
Read more →When you invite someone to an app, they now get an email with the role, what it can do, and a link straight to accept.
Read more →Starter gets a full 1.0 vCPU pool, disk pools across paid tiers were resized to match the VPS steps we actually run on, and the app cap was raised on every tier.
Read more →Settings → Danger zone now lists everything blocking account deletion before the button is enabled — owned apps, collaborators, in-flight deploys, pending transfers.
Read more →Each paid tier now sells a per-account RAM, vCPU, and disk pool that you distribute freely across your apps.
Read more →Static sites run on a slim, fast Caddy-based container — quick cold starts and small images.
Read more →Node and Bun apps build through a purpose-built pipeline — cold builds in ~15–25s, warm redeploys in ~10–15s.
Read more →Browse starter templates at percher.app/new and deploy one in a click.
Read more →Narrow runtime logs by severity and date range, with shareable URLs that preserve the filter.
Read more →percher_publish returns immediately and hands the assistant a wait-for-deploy step, so agents stay responsive during long builds.
Read more →Install the Percher GitHub App once — every push deploys, pull requests get preview URLs, and deploy status posts back as a commit check.
Read more →A new version goes live only after it passes a health check; the running version keeps serving until the swap completes.
Read more →Apps can run multiple container instances, with optional CPU-based autoscaling configured in percher.toml.
Read more →Every app's database is backed up nightly and replicated off-site; restore from the dashboard or with percher restore.
Read more →Subscribe to deploy events with HMAC-SHA256-signed webhooks and wire Percher into your own automation.
Read more →Add password = true to percher.toml and visitors get a branded login page before they reach your site.
Read more →Say "publish my app" to your AI assistant — or run bunx percher publish — and your app is live at name.percher.run with SSL.
Read more →When an app crashes, Percher reads the logs and explains what went wrong in plain language.
Read more →Free, Starter, Maker, and Pro plans — start free with no credit card.
Read more →The Percher API ships a full OpenAPI spec, and the platform exposes operational metrics in Prometheus format.
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