Security News
38% of CISOs Fear They’re Not Moving Fast Enough on AI
CISOs are racing to adopt AI for cybersecurity, but hurdles in budgets and governance may leave some falling behind in the fight against cyber threats.
heroku-client
Advanced tools
A wrapper around the v3 Heroku API.
$ npm install heroku-client --save
Docs are auto-generated and live in the docs directory.
heroku-client
works by providing functions that return proxy objects for
interacting with different resources through the Heroku API.
To begin, require the Heroku module and create a client, passing in an API token:
var Heroku = require('heroku-client'),
heroku = new Heroku({ token: process.env.HEROKU_API_TOKEN });
The simplest example is listing a user's apps. First, we call heroku.apps()
,
which returns a proxy object to the /apps endpoint, then we call list()
to
actually perform the API call:
heroku.apps().list(function (err, apps) {
// `apps` is a parsed JSON response from the API
});
The advantage of using proxy objects is that they are reusable. Let's get the info for the user's app "my-app", get the dynos for the app, and remove a collaborator:
var app = heroku.apps('my-app');
app.info(function (err, app) {
// Details about the `app`
});
app.dynos().list(function (err, dynos) {
// List of the app's `dynos`
});
app.collaborators('user@example.com').delete(function (err, collaborator) {
// The `collaborator` has been removed unless `err`
});
Requests that require a body are easy, as well. Let's add a collaborator to the user's app "another-app":
var app = heroku.apps('another-app'),
user = { email: 'new-user@example.com' };
app.collaborators().create({ user: user }, function (err, collaborator) {
// `collaborator` is the newly added collaborator unless `err`
});
heroku-client has get
, post
, patch
, and delete
functions which can make
requests with the specified HTTP method to any endpoint:
heroku.get('/apps', function (err, apps) {
});
// Request body is optional on both `post` and `patch`
heroku.post('/apps', function (err, app) {
});
heroku.post('/apps', { name: 'my-new-app' }, function (err, app) {
});
heroku.patch('/apps/my-app', { name: 'my-renamed-app' }, function (err, app) {
});
heroku.delete('/apps/my-old-app', function (err, app) {
});
There is also an even more generic request
function that can accept many more
options:
heroku.request({
method: 'GET',
path: '/apps',
headers: {
'Foo': 'Bar'
},
parseJSON: false
}, function (err, responseBody) {
});
heroku-client works with Node-style callbacks, but also implements promises with the Q library.
var q = require('q');
// Fetches dynos for all of my apps.
heroku.apps().list().then(function (apps) {
return q.all(apps.map(function (app) {
return heroku.apps(app.name).dynos().list();
}));
}).then(function (dynos) {
console.log(dynos);
});
It's easy to get heroku-client working with generators. In this example, I'll use the co library to wrap a function that will get the list of all of my apps, and then get the dynos for each of those apps:
let co = require('co');
let heroku = require('heroku-client');
let hk = heroku.createClient({ token: process.env.HEROKU_API_KEY });
let main = function* () {
let apps = yield hk.apps().list();
let dynos = yield apps.map(getDynos);
console.log(dynos);
function getDynos(app) {
return hk.apps(app.name).dynos().list();
}
};
co(main)();
As long as you're using Node >= 0.11, you can run this script with:
$ node --harmony --use-strict file.js
Hooray, no callbacks or promises in sight!
If you'd like to make requests through an HTTP proxy, set the
HEROKU_HTTP_PROXY_HOST
environment variable with your proxy host, and
HEROKU_HTTP_PROXY_PORT
with the desired port (defaults to 8080). heroku-client
will then make requests through this proxy instead of directly to
api.heroku.com.
heroku-client can optionally perform caching of API requests.
heroku-client will cache any response from the Heroku API that comes with an
ETag
header, and each response is cached individually (i.e. even though the
client might make multiple calls for a user's apps and then aggregate them into
a single JSON array, each required API call is individually cached). For each
API request it performs, heroku-client sends an If-None-Match
header if there
is a cached response for the API request. If API returns a 304 response code,
heroku-client returns the cached response. Otherwise, it writes the new API
response to the cache and returns that.
To tell heroku-client to perform caching, add a config object to the options with store and encryptor objects. These can be instances of memjs and simple-encryptor, respectively.
var Heroku = require('heroku-client');
var memjs = require('memjs').Client.create();
var encryptor = require('simple-encryptor')(SECRET_CACHE_KEY);
var hk = new Heroku({
cache: { store: memjs, encryptor: encryptor }
});
Alternatively you can specify a custom cache implementation. Your custom implementation must define get(key, cb(err, value))
and set(key, value)
functions.
Here's a sample implementation that uses Redis to cache API responses for 5-minutes each:
var redis = require('redis');
var client = redis.createClient();
var cacheTtlSecs = 5 * 60; // 5 minutes
var redisStore = {
get: function(key, cb) {
// Namespace the keys:
var redisKey = 'heroku:api:' + key;
client.GET(redisKey, cb);
},
set: function(key, value) {
// Namespace the keys:
var redisKey = 'heroku:api:' + key;
client.SETEX(redisKey, cacheTtlSecs, value, function(err) {
// ignore errors on set
});
}
};
var encryptor = require('simple-encryptor')(SECRET_CACHE_KEY);
var Heroku = require('heroku-client');
var hk = new Heroku({
cache: {store: redisStore, encryptor: encryptor}
});
To fetch the latest schema, generate documentation, and run the tests:
$ bin/update
Inspect your changes, and bump the version number accordingly when cutting a release.
Documentation for heroku-client is auto-generated from the API schema.
Docs are generated like so:
$ bin/docs
Generating docs also runs a cursory test, ensuring that every documented function is a function that can be called.
heroku-client uses jasmine-node for tests:
$ npm test
FAQs
A wrapper for the Heroku v3 API
The npm package heroku-client receives a total of 75,424 weekly downloads. As such, heroku-client popularity was classified as popular.
We found that heroku-client demonstrated a not healthy version release cadence and project activity because the last version was released a year ago. It has 31 open source maintainers collaborating on the project.
Did you know?
Socket for GitHub automatically highlights issues in each pull request and monitors the health of all your open source dependencies. Discover the contents of your packages and block harmful activity before you install or update your dependencies.
Security News
CISOs are racing to adopt AI for cybersecurity, but hurdles in budgets and governance may leave some falling behind in the fight against cyber threats.
Research
Security News
Socket researchers uncovered a backdoored typosquat of BoltDB in the Go ecosystem, exploiting Go Module Proxy caching to persist undetected for years.
Security News
Company News
Socket is joining TC54 to help develop standards for software supply chain security, contributing to the evolution of SBOMs, CycloneDX, and Package URL specifications.