\

Show HN: QuickBEAM – run JavaScript as supervised Erlang/OTP processes

45 points - yesterday at 9:03 PM


QuickBEAM is a JavaScript runtime embedded inside the Erlang/OTP VM.

If you’re building a full-stack app, JavaScript tends to leak in anyway β€” frontend, SSR, or third-party code.

QuickBEAM runs that JavaScript inside OTP supervision trees.

Each runtime is a process with a `Beam` global that can: - call Elixir code - send/receive messages - spawn and monitor processes - inspect runtime/system state

It also provides browser-style APIs backed by OTP/native primitives (fetch, WebSocket, Worker, BroadcastChannel, localStorage, native DOM, etc.).

This makes it usable for: - SSR - sandboxed user code - per-connection state - backend JS with direct OTP interop

Notable bits:

- JS runtimes are supervised and restartable - sandboxing with memory/reduction limits and API control - native DOM that Erlang can read directly (no string rendering step) - no JSON boundary between JS and Erlang - built-in TypeScript, npm support, and native addons

QuickBEAM is part of Elixir Volt β€” a full-stack frontend toolchain built on Erlang/OTP with no Node.js.

Still early, feedback welcome.

Source
  • jbpd924

    today at 6:34 PM

    Interesting!! I've been playing around with QuickJS lately and uses Elixir at work.

    I'm interested to hear about your sandboxing approach running untrusted JS code. So you are setting an memory/reduction limit to the process which 100% is a good idea. What other defense-in-depth strategies are you using? possible support for seccomp in the future?

      • dannote

        today at 8:21 PM

        [dead]

    • hosh

      today at 7:56 PM

      1. Are each of the JS processes running in its own process and mailbox? (I assume from the description is that each runtime instance is its own process)

      2. can the BEAM scheduler pre-empt the JS processes?

      3. How is memory garbage collected? Do the JS processes garbage collect for each individual process?

      4. Are values within JS immutable?

      5. If they are not immutable, are there risk for memory errors? And if there is a memory error, would it crash the JS process without crashing the rest of the system?

        • dannote

          today at 8:19 PM

          1. Yes. Each runtime is a GenServer (= own process + mailbox). There's also a lighter-weight Context mode where many JS contexts share one OS thread via a ContextPool, but each context still maps 1:1 to a BEAM process.

          2. No. JS runs on a dedicated OS thread, outside the BEAM scheduler. But there's an interrupt handler (JS_SetInterruptHandler) that checks a deadline on every JS opcode boundary β€” pass timeout: 1000 to eval and it interrupts after 1s, runtime stays usable. For contexts there's also max_reductions β€” QuickJS-NG counts JS operations and interrupts when the budget runs out, closest analog to BEAM reductions.

          3. QuickJS-NG uses refcounting with cycle detection. Each runtime/context has its own GC β€” one collecting doesn't touch another. When a Runtime GenServer terminates, JS_FreeContext + JS_FreeRuntime release everything.

          4. No, standard JS mutability. But the JS↔Erlang boundary copies values β€” no shared mutable state across that boundary.

          5. QuickJS-NG enforces JS_SetMemoryLimit per-runtime (default 256 MB) and JS_SetContextMemoryLimit per-context. Exceeding the limit raises a JS exception, not a segfault. It propagates as {:error, ...} to the caller. Since each runtime is a supervised GenServer, the supervisor restarts it. There are tests for OOM in one context not crashing the pool, and one runtime crashing not affecting siblings.

      • waffleophagus

        today at 6:40 PM

        Running JS on the Beam VM, all written in C. I don't know if this is just cursed, or absolutely brilliant, either way I love it and will be following closely. Will definitely have to play with it.

        • dnautics

          today at 7:25 PM

          love this! a while back i noodled around with this idea, but didn't get that far:

          https://github.com/ityonemo/yavascript

          glad to see someone do a fuller implementation!

          • theflyinghorse

            today at 5:42 PM

            This is very interest to me because we have accumulated a few node packages containing logic that services simply import. So in theory I could now use those node packages in elixir?

              • dannote

                today at 8:22 PM

                Yes, if the packages are pure JS logic (no native C++ addons, no Node-specific I/O like child_process or net). The script option auto-resolves imports from node_modules/ and bundles via OXC. Node compat APIs (process, path, fs, os, Buffer) are available with apis: [:browser, :node]. For packages with native .node addons, there's load_addon/3 which supports N-API.