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StackPath Introduces EdgeEngine Serverless Computing Service

Earlier this week, StackPath announced StackPath EdgeEngine, a new serverless computing service designed to allow developers to run code at the edge without the need for a server, virtual machine or container.

“The edge is the new frontier in cloud computing,” said Lance Crosby, StackPath co-founder and CEO. “EdgeEngine gives developers the power to customize workloads at the edge without the burden or overhead of managing infrastructure. It’s just the first in a number of edge computing solutions we have in the works, and an unprecedented opportunity for businesses to control how data and traffic is handled right up to the point it reaches their end users, or where it hits their workloads.”

The EdgeEngine is built on Chrome’s V8 JavaScript engine, which allows StackPath customers to compose or paste scripts directly into the StackPath customer portal then assign them to routes on their delivery sites. The script is deployed straight away within every advanced edge PoP that StackPath has, ready to execute at the PoP closest to each end user.

“Having the ability to create a dynamic user-experience at the edge is a total game changer,” said Ben Gabler, StackPath Senior Vice President, Product. “ At StackPath, we can’t always predict every feature or use case that we will support, but today that’s no longer an issue. With the power of EdgeEngine the customer possibilities are endless.”

The Potential Uses of EdgeEngine

EdgeEngine has a range of potential uses for developers, including:

Use Case Scenarios 

As part of its release of EdgeEngine, StackPath has noted multiple possible use case scenarios and different industries primed to take advantage of the edge, including:

A Tool for Developers

EdgeEngine, as in the case of most of the edge services and platforms out there, is specifically catered to developers. Developers that “want to write code to meet functional requirements and create value, but do not want to have to worry about the process of deploying that code or the security implications of different deployment methods”. Developers in EdgeEngine upload their own code, which is then automatically deployed to the edge in an isolated runtime environment. Deployment, security and performance issues are taken care of by StackPath not the developer, giving the developer more time to write functional code. Developers can also implement responses to API queries at the edge itself, which eliminates a round trip request from the origin server.

StackPath claims that EdgeEngine allows developers to “not only run their own customized code but run it in more places on the globe and on a network with more capacity than most, if not all, of our competitors in the serverless computing space”.

The architects behind EdgeEngine are also targeting the needs of software architects, chief technical officers and chief security officers.

How EdgeEngine is Being Offered

StackPath is currently offering the new service as an add-on to its existing StackPath CDN and Edge Delivery packages, however, the company intends to soon make it available for use with any of its services, or as a standalone. They also intend for it to in time support a wide selection of languages.

EdgeEngine is priced at $10/month per stack for 15M requests ($0.60 for each additional 1M requests). There are no limits on the number of scripts or delivery domains per stack.

The History of StackPath

StackPath was founded in 2015 by Lance Crosby (formerly the CEO and founder of cloud computing provider SoftLayer) and has headquarters in Dallas, Texas with offices around the world. It is a platform of secure edge services targeted towards developers working on websites, media delivery services and IoT devices. The company grew extremely quickly over 2016 and 2017, in part through acquiring key services such as Highwinds Network Group (CDN), Max CDN (developer CDN), Fireblade (cloud security and traffic management), Encrypt.me (secure VPN provider, formerly Cloak)[4] and IPVanish (an anonymous VPN service. The company ended 2017 with an annual run rate of $200M, having bought in $157M across the year.

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