# Deploying When it comes to deploying Sanic, there's not much to it, but there are a few things to take note of. ## Workers By default, Sanic listens in the main process using only 1 CPU core. To crank up the juice, just specify the number of workers in the run arguments like so: ```python app.run(host='0.0.0.0', port=1337, workers=4) ``` Sanic will automatically spin up multiple processes and route traffic between them. We recommend as many workers as you have available cores. ## Running via Command If you like using command line arguments, you can launch a sanic server by executing the module. For example, if you initialized sanic as app in a file named server.py, you could run the server like so: `python -m sanic server.app --host=0.0.0.0 --port=1337 --workers=4` With this way of running sanic, it is not necessary to run app.run in your python file. If you do, just make sure you wrap it in name == main like so: ```python if __name__ == '__main__': app.run(host='0.0.0.0', port=1337, workers=4) ``` ## Disable Sanic logo ```python from sanic.config import Config class MyConfig(Config): LOGO = '' app = Sanic(__name__, config=MyConfig()) ```