sirv 
The optimized and lightweight middleware for serving requests to static assets
You may use sirv as a very fast and lightweight alternative to serve-static. While (currently), sirv may not have the same options, it handles the majority of use cases without a hitch!
The massive performance advantage over serve-static is explained by not relying on the file system for existence checks on every request. These are expensive interactions & must be avoided whenever possible! Instead, sirv performs all its work upfront and recycles the initial resultset for existence checks & writing header values based on files' stats.
This middleware will work out of the box for Polka and other Express-like frameworks. It requires very little effort to modify/wrap it for servers that don't accept the (req, res, next) signature.
:bulb: For a feature-complete CLI application, check out the sibling sirv-cli package as an alternative to zeit/serve~!
Install
$ npm install --save sirvUsage
const sirv = require('sirv');
const polka = require('polka');
const compress = require('compression')();
// Init `sirv` handler
const assets = sirv('public', {
  maxAge: 31536000, // 1Y
  immutable: true
});
polka()
  .use(compress, assets)
  .use('/api', require('./api'))
  .listen(3000)
  .then(() => {
    console.log('> Ready on localhost:3000~!');
  });API
sirv(dir, opts={})
Returns: Function
The returned function is a middleware in the standard Express-like signature: (req, res, next), where req is the http.IncomingMessage, res is the http.ServerResponse, and next (in this case) is the function to call if no file was found for the given path.
For sirv, the next() callback is functionally synonymous with opts.onNoMatch; however next() is given priority if/when defined and will not receive the res as an argument.
dir
Type: String
Default: .
The directory from which to read and serve assets. It is resolved to an absolute path — you must provide an absolute path yourself if process.cwd() is not the correct assumption.
opts.dev
Type: Boolean
Default: false
Enable "dev" mode, which disables/skips caching. Instead, sirv will traverse the file system on every request.
Additionally, dev mode will ignore maxAge, immutable, etag, and setHeaders as these options are geared towards production response headers.
Important: Do not use
devmode in production!
opts.etag
Type: Boolean
Default: false
Generate and attach an ETag header to responses.
opts.dotfiles
Type: Boolean
Default: false
Allow requests to dotfiles (files or directories beginning with a .).
opts.extensions
Type: Array
Default: ['html', 'htm']
The file extension fallbacks to check for if a pathame is not initially found. For example, if a /login request cannot find a login filename, it will then look for login.html and login.htm before giving up~!
Important: Actually,
sirvwill also look forlogin/index.htmlandlogin/index.htmbefore calling it quits.
opts.maxAge
Type: Number
Default: undefined
Enables the Cache-Control header on responses & sets the max-age value (in seconds). For example 31536000 is equivalent to one year.
opts.immutable
Type: Boolean
Default: false
Appends the immutable directive on your Cache-Control header, used for uniquely-named assets that will not change!
Note: Requires
opts.maxAgeto contain a value!
opts.onNoMatch
Type: Function
A custom function to run if a file cannot be found for a given request. 
By default, sirv will send a basic (404) Not found response.
The function receives the current req <IncomingMessage>, res <ServerResponse> pair for as its two arguments.
Note: This won't run if a
nextcallback has been provided to the middleware; seesirvdescription.
opts.setHeaders
Type: Function
A custom function to append or change any headers on the outgoing response. There is no default.
Its signature is (res, pathname, stats), where res is the ServerResponse, pathname is incoming request path (stripped of queries), and stats is the file's result from fs.statSync.
License
MIT © Luke Edwards
 lukeed
lukeed