The official Heroku buildpack for Node.js Apps

Heroku Buildpack for Node.js

This is the official Heroku buildpack for Node.js apps.

Documentation

For more information about using this Node.js buildpack on Heroku, see these Dev Center articles:

For more general information about buildpacks on Heroku:

Locking to a buildpack version

In production, you may want to lock dependencies - including buildpacks - to a specific version.

First, find the version you want from the list of buildpack versions. Then, specify that version with buildpacks:set:

heroku buildpacks:set https://github.com/heroku/heroku-buildpack-nodejs#v170 -a my-app

If you have trouble upgrading to the latest version of the buildpack, please open a support ticket at help.heroku.com so we can assist.

Chain Node with multiple buildpacks

This buildpack automatically exports node, npm, and any node_modules binaries into the $PATH for easy use in subsequent buildpacks.

Feedback

Having trouble? Dig it? Feature request?

Development

Prerequisites

For local development, you may need the following tools:

Deploying an app with a fork or branch

To make changes to this buildpack, fork it on GitHub. Push up changes to your fork, then create a new Heroku app to test it, or configure an existing app to use your buildpack:

# Create a new Heroku app that uses your buildpack
heroku create --buildpack <your-github-url>

# Configure an existing Heroku app to use your buildpack
heroku buildpacks:set <your-github-url>

# You can also use a git branch!
heroku buildpacks:set <your-github-url>#your-branch

Downloading Plugins

In order to download the latest plugins that have been released, run the following:

plugin/download.sh v$VERSION

Make sure the version is in the format v#, ie. v7.

Tests

The buildpack tests use Docker to simulate Heroku’s stacks.

To run the test suite:

make test

Or to just test a specific stack:

make heroku-16
make heroku-18
make heroku-20

The tests are run via the vendored shunit2 test framework.

Debugging

To display the logged build outputs to assist with debugging, use the “echo” and “cat” commands. For example:

test() {
  local log_file var

  var="testtest"
  log_file=$(mktemp)
  echo "this is the log file" > "$log_file"
  echo "test log file" >> "$log_file"

  # use `echo` and `cat` for printing variables and reading files respectively
  echo $var
  cat $log_file

  # some cases when debugging is necessary
  assertEquals "$var" "testtest"
  assertFileContains "test log file" "$log_file"
}

Running the test above would produce:

testtest
this is the log file
test log file

The test output writes to $STD_OUT, so you can use cat $STD_OUT to read output.

Download Details:

Author: heroku

Demo: https://devcenter.heroku.com/articles/buildpacks

Source Code: https://github.com/heroku/heroku-buildpack-nodejs

#nodejs #node #javascript #node-js

The official Heroku buildpack for Node.js Apps
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