import type { PlatformProxy } from 'wrangler'; /** * Next.js uses the Node.js vm module's `runInContext()` function to evaluate the edge functions * in a runtime context that tries to simulate as accurately as possible the actual production runtime * behavior, see: https://github.com/vercel/next.js/blob/ec0a8da/packages/next/src/server/web/sandbox/context.ts#L450-L452 * * This function monkey-patches the Node.js vm module to override the `runInContext()` function so that * miniflare binding proxies can be added to the runtime context's `process.env` before the actual edge * functions are evaluated. * * @param platformProxy platform proxy obtained via wrangler's getPlatformProxy utility */ export declare function monkeyPatchVmModule({ env, cf, ctx, caches }: PlatformProxy): void; /** * Next dev server imports the config file twice (in two different processes, making it hard to track), * this causes the setup to run twice as well, to keep things clean and not allocate extra resources * (i.e. instantiate two miniflare instances) it would be best to run this function only once, this * function is used to try to run the setup only once, it returns a flag which indicates if the setup * should run in the current process or not. * * @returns boolean indicating if the setup should continue */ export declare function shouldSetupContinue(): boolean;