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chore(deps): bump astro from 5.18.1 to 6.3.1#12

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chore(deps): bump astro from 5.18.1 to 6.3.1#12
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@dependabot dependabot Bot commented on behalf of github May 2, 2026

Bumps astro from 5.18.1 to 6.3.1.

Release notes

Sourced from astro's releases.

astro@6.3.1

Patch Changes

  • #16646 15fbc41 Thanks @​matthewp! - Fixes local images returning 404 on non-prerendered pages when using the generic image endpoint

astro@6.3.0

Minor Changes

  • #16366 d69f858 Thanks @​matthewp! - Adds a new experimental.advancedRouting option that lets you take full control of Astro's request handling pipeline by creating a src/app.ts file in your project.

    Today, Astro handles every incoming request through a fixed internal pipeline: trailing slash normalization, redirects, actions, middleware, page rendering, i18n, and so on. That pipeline works great for most sites, but as projects grow you often want to run your own logic between those steps — an auth check before rendering, a rate limiter before actions, custom logging around the whole stack. Advanced routing gives you that control.

    When enabled, Astro looks for a src/app.ts file in your project. If it finds one, that file becomes the entrypoint for all server-rendered requests. You compose the pipeline yourself using the handlers Astro provides, and you can slot your own logic anywhere in the chain.

    Enabling advanced routing

    // astro.config.mjs
    import { defineConfig } from 'astro/config';
    export default defineConfig({
    experimental: {
    advancedRouting: true,
    },
    });

    Two ways to build your pipeline

    Astro ships two entrypoints for advanced routing: astro/fetch and astro/hono.

    astro/fetch is a low-level, framework-free API built on the Web Fetch standard. You create a FetchState from the incoming request, then call handler functions in sequence. Each handler takes the state, does its work, and returns a Response (or undefined to pass through). This is the core primitive that everything else is built on:

    // src/app.ts
    import {
      FetchState,
      trailingSlash,
      redirects,
      actions,
      middleware,
      pages,
      i18n,
    } from 'astro/fetch';
    export default {
    async fetch(request: Request) {
    const state = new FetchState(request);
    // Early exits — these return a Response only when they apply.

... (truncated)

Changelog

Sourced from astro's changelog.

6.3.1

Patch Changes

  • #16646 15fbc41 Thanks @​matthewp! - Fixes local images returning 404 on non-prerendered pages when using the generic image endpoint

6.3.0

Minor Changes

  • #16366 d69f858 Thanks @​matthewp! - Adds a new experimental.advancedRouting option that lets you take full control of Astro's request handling pipeline by creating a src/app.ts file in your project.

    Today, Astro handles every incoming request through a fixed internal pipeline: trailing slash normalization, redirects, actions, middleware, page rendering, i18n, and so on. That pipeline works great for most sites, but as projects grow you often want to run your own logic between those steps — an auth check before rendering, a rate limiter before actions, custom logging around the whole stack. Advanced routing gives you that control.

    When enabled, Astro looks for a src/app.ts file in your project. If it finds one, that file becomes the entrypoint for all server-rendered requests. You compose the pipeline yourself using the handlers Astro provides, and you can slot your own logic anywhere in the chain.

    Enabling advanced routing

    // astro.config.mjs
    import { defineConfig } from 'astro/config';
    export default defineConfig({
    experimental: {
    advancedRouting: true,
    },
    });

    Two ways to build your pipeline

    Astro ships two entrypoints for advanced routing: astro/fetch and astro/hono.

    astro/fetch is a low-level, framework-free API built on the Web Fetch standard. You create a FetchState from the incoming request, then call handler functions in sequence. Each handler takes the state, does its work, and returns a Response (or undefined to pass through). This is the core primitive that everything else is built on:

    // src/app.ts
    import {
      FetchState,
      trailingSlash,
      redirects,
      actions,
      middleware,
      pages,
      i18n,
    } from 'astro/fetch';
    export default {
    async fetch(request: Request) {
    const state = new FetchState(request);

... (truncated)

Commits

@dependabot dependabot Bot added dependencies Pull requests that update a dependency file javascript Pull requests that update javascript code labels May 2, 2026
@dependabot dependabot Bot changed the title chore(deps): bump astro from 5.18.1 to 6.2.1 chore(deps): bump astro from 5.18.1 to 6.3.1 May 8, 2026
Bumps [astro](https://github.com/withastro/astro/tree/HEAD/packages/astro) from 5.18.1 to 6.3.1.
- [Release notes](https://github.com/withastro/astro/releases)
- [Changelog](https://github.com/withastro/astro/blob/main/packages/astro/CHANGELOG.md)
- [Commits](https://github.com/withastro/astro/commits/astro@6.3.1/packages/astro)

---
updated-dependencies:
- dependency-name: astro
  dependency-version: 6.2.1
  dependency-type: direct:production
  update-type: version-update:semver-major
...

Signed-off-by: dependabot[bot] <support@github.com>
@dependabot dependabot Bot force-pushed the dependabot/npm_and_yarn/astro-6.2.1 branch from 5a145c7 to 29eb31a Compare May 8, 2026 09:54
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dependabot Bot commented on behalf of github May 8, 2026

Looks like astro is up-to-date now, so this is no longer needed.

@dependabot dependabot Bot closed this May 8, 2026
@dependabot dependabot Bot deleted the dependabot/npm_and_yarn/astro-6.2.1 branch May 8, 2026 10:26
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