| name | fastly-compute-publish-ignores-draft-versions |
| description | Fix "backend exists on a draft version but isn't reachable from the new Compute deploy"
bugs after `fastly compute publish`. Use when: (1) You ran `fastly service backend create
--autoclone` (or any dashboard/CLI change that creates a draft version) but did not
activate that draft, (2) You then ran `fastly compute publish` which appeared successful
but your backend / ACL / header / dictionary change is missing from the active version,
(3) Compute code returns backend-not-found errors or misroutes requests, (4) You're
surprised to see your draft version number "skipped over" in the version chain.
Root cause: `fastly compute publish` clones from the currently-active version, not from
the latest draft, so dashboard changes made in an un-activated draft get stranded.
|
| author | Claude Code |
| version | 1.0.0 |
| date | "2026-04-05T00:00:00.000Z" |
fastly compute publish ignores non-active draft versions
Problem
Fastly service versions are immutable. To change a service you clone the active version,
edit the clone (a draft), then activate the clone. Multiple tools create drafts:
fastly service backend create --autoclone — creates a draft off the active version and
adds the backend
fastly service domain create --autoclone — same, for domains
- Dashboard UI "Clone" button
fastly compute publish — also creates a draft, uploads WASM, activates
If you mix these tools on the same service you get a surprising footgun: each tool clones
from the currently-active version, independently, and each activates its own clone. Draft
versions that were never activated are abandoned. Their edits are invisible to whatever the
next tool clones from.
Example sequence that bites:
t0 Active = v250
t1 $ fastly service backend create --version latest --autoclone \
--name cloud_run_transcoder --address ...
→ creates v251 (clone of v250) + adds backend
→ v251 is DRAFT, not active
→ "latest" in this context means "highest version number" (v251), not "active version"
t2 $ fastly compute publish --comment "ship fix"
→ creates v252 (clone of v250, NOT v251) + new WASM
→ stages and activates v253 (clone of v252) + activates
→ v251's backend change was never carried forward
→ active = v253, which does NOT contain cloud_run_transcoder
t3 Compute code at v253 calls send_async("cloud_run_transcoder")
→ backend name does not exist on v253
→ silent failure, fire-and-forget hides it
The naming is misleading: --version latest does not mean "the latest active version," it
means "the highest-numbered version," which can be a draft nobody activated. And fastly compute publish never looks at your draft — it clones from whatever is currently active.
So your backend change is orphaned in an unreachable draft version, and the active version
has the new code but the old backend list.
Context / Trigger Conditions
- Compute logs show
Backend X does not exist or similar after a deploy that "worked"
send_async(BACKEND) calls return errors that the code silently swallows (see skill
fastly-compute-async-request-reliability)
fastly service version list --service-id ID shows a gap or out-of-order creation
timestamps — e.g. v251 created at 23:17, v252/v253 created at 23:27, v253 active, but
v252 was cloned from v250 not v251
fastly service backend list --version N where N is active shows a DIFFERENT backend
set from fastly service backend list --version (N-2) where N-2 is the draft you
thought you were building on
- You added a dashboard resource "just before" running
fastly compute publish and the
publish succeeded but the resource seems to be ignored
Solution
Detection
fastly service version list --service-id YOUR_SERVICE_ID
for v in 250 251 252 253 254; do
echo "=== v$v ==="
fastly service backend list --service-id YOUR_SERVICE_ID --version $v | grep MY_BACKEND_NAME
done
If the backend appears on a non-active draft (e.g. v251) but is absent from active (e.g.
v253), you have this bug.
Fix: add the resource to the currently-active version via --autoclone
fastly service backend create --service-id YOUR_SERVICE_ID --version latest --autoclone \
--name cloud_run_transcoder \
--address divine-transcoder-149672065768.us-central1.run.app \
--port 443 --use-ssl \
--ssl-sni-hostname divine-transcoder-149672065768.us-central1.run.app \
--override-host divine-transcoder-149672065768.us-central1.run.app
fastly service backend list --service-id YOUR_SERVICE_ID --version LATEST_DRAFT \
| grep cloud_run_transcoder
fastly service version activate --service-id YOUR_SERVICE_ID --version LATEST_DRAFT
fastly purge --all --service-id YOUR_SERVICE_ID
Note: --version latest in the backend create command here is safe because after the
previous drifted fastly compute publish, the latest draft's parent IS the currently-active
version. You're cloning off the right base now.
Prevention (choose one)
-
Do all non-code changes through fastly compute publish first, then WASM changes.
If you ran fastly compute publish without any dashboard/CLI changes queued, the active
version gets incremented by 2 (clone → activate) and there are no stranded drafts. Add
your backend after the publish via --autoclone, which then creates a fresh draft off
the new active version, and activate it.
-
Always activate your draft before running fastly compute publish. If you ran
fastly service backend create --autoclone and got v251, activate v251 before the
compute publish. Then compute publish will clone from v251 and carry the backend.
-
Treat every draft version as an unshipped change. Before any fastly compute publish,
run fastly service version list --service-id ID and verify no drafts exist that you
intended to ship. If there are drafts you don't want, explicitly abandon them; if there
are drafts you do want, activate them first.
-
Use --verbose on fastly compute publish. The verbose output shows which version
number it cloned from. If that number is older than your last draft, you know you've
drifted.
Verification
After the fix, confirm:
fastly service backend list --service-id YOUR_SERVICE_ID --version $(fastly service version list --service-id YOUR_SERVICE_ID | awk '$3=="true"{print $1}') | grep MY_BACKEND_NAME
fastly log tail --service-id YOUR_SERVICE_ID | grep -iE "backend|MY_BACKEND"
For the Divine Blossom example (2026-04-05), the symptom was that PR #59's fix to route
transcoder triggers via a new TRANSCODER_BACKEND = "cloud_run_transcoder" constant was
deployed in version 253 but the backend itself was stranded in v251. The compute code was
silently 404-ing on every send_async to the transcoder. Fix was fastly service backend create --version latest --autoclone → new v254 with both the WASM and the backend →
activate v254 → purge.
Notes
- The same issue applies to any resource you can add with
--autoclone: backends,
domains, ACLs, dictionaries, edge dictionaries, header rules, VCL snippets (on VCL
services), logging endpoints. Anything that creates a draft version is at risk.
- The
fastly compute publish command has no --base-version flag to explicitly say "clone
from this version." It always clones from active.
- VCL services that mix
fastly vcl snippet create --autoclone + fastly vcl custom update
can hit the same trap.
- If you have multiple people making changes concurrently, the risk multiplies: one person's
draft can be invalidated by another person's publish without either of them noticing.
- The Fastly CLI does not warn about stranded drafts. They don't expire automatically
(AFAIK); they just become zombie versions.
- Check
fastly service version list --service-id ID output carefully — the "active"
column tells you which version is live; everything else is a draft or a previous active.
Timestamps can be misleading because draft versions carry the timestamp of the fastly service version clone call, not of the content change.
References
fastly compute publish source behavior documented in the Fastly CLI repo — see the
publish subcommand implementation for the clone-active-and-activate flow
- Related skill:
fastly-compute-async-request-reliability — covers how silently-failing
send_async hides this exact bug when the backend goes missing
- Related skill:
fastly-compute-backend-production-setup — covers the "backend exists
locally but not in production" sibling bug