Ruroku
The better Ruby client for Heroku API, built on top of official
heroku.rb
gem.
Installation
Add this line to your application's Gemfile:
gem 'ruroku'
And then execute:
$ bundle
Or install it yourself as:
$ gem install ruroku
Usage
Start by initiating a connection with Heroku API:
heroku = Ruroku::API.new api_key: YOUR_HEROKU_API_KEY
(You can leave out :api_key
if ENV['HEROKU_API_KEY']
is set
instead.)
Now you can interact with Heroku API using Ruroku.
Apps
Each API object has apps associated with the Heroku account. You can
access an Array of all the associated apps with #apps
:
heroku.apps
app = heroku.apps.first
To get specific app:
app = heroku.app 'app-name'
app = heroku.apps['app-name']
app = heroku['app-name']
And access its properties such as:
id
name
stack
git_url
slug_size
repo_size
dynos
workers
Maintenance mode can be turned on and off:
app.maintenance!
app.no_maintenance!
Also, imagine you've created another app after you you queried
heroku.app
. To refresh collection of apps (or other collections:
addons, config vars, collaborators, and so on), just call #reload
on
collection:
apps.reload
Addons
To get a list of addons used by a particular app:
addons = app.addons
addon = app.addons.first
It's possible perform several actions on addon collections:
addons.add 'addon:plan'
addons.delete 'addon-name'
addons.upgrade 'addon:new-plan'
Each addon object is associated with the application. You can delete
addons from the app by calling #delete
method on the addon object as
well:
addon.delete!
Collaborators
List all app collaborators:
collaborators = app.collaborators
get a specific collaborator:
collaborators['guy@me.com']
and
collaborators.add 'email@me.com'
collaborators.delete 'email@me.com'
collaborator.delete!
Config variables
List all app config vars:
config_vars = app.config_vars
Add or delete a config var:
config_vars.add 'KEY' => 'value'
config_vars.delete 'KEY'
config_var.delete!
They can also be updated like that:
config_var.value = 'new value'
Get/set a specific var:
config_vars['DEBUG']
config_vars['DEBUG'] = true
And it'll instantly get updated.
Domains
Access domains used by the application:
domains = app.domains
Same as with other collection objects, they can be added or deleted:
domains.add 'domain.com'
domains.delete 'domain.com'
domain.delete!
Processes
Get current application processes:
processes = app.processes
You can also run, restart, scale, and stop method collections:
processes.run 'rake evolve'
processes.restart
processes.scale 'worker', 10
processes.stop 'ps' => 'run.1'
processes.stop 'type' => 'worker'
And access specific processes/process groups:
processes['web.1']
processes['web']
Releases
List all app releases:
releases = app.releases
Get specific release:
releases[2]
releases['v2']
Or a range of releases:
releases[1..10]
And rollback to any release:
releases.rollback 'v1'
release.rollback
Stacks
List stacks, available for the app:
app.stacks
Migrate the app to available stack:
stacks.migrate 'stack-name'
Logs
Get the Array of String log lines:
app.logs
User
Get User object associtaed with current heroku account:
heroku.user
Keys
Access all keys:
keys = heroku.keys
Add a key:
keys.add 'content of id_rsa.pub here...'
Delete specific key:
keys.delete 'email@me.com'
key.delete!
Delete all keys:
keys.delete_all
Mock
For practice or testing you can also use a simulated Heroku:
require 'ruroku'
heroku = Ruroku::API.new api_key: API_KEY, mock: true
After that commands should still behave the same, but they will only modify some local data instead of updating the state of things on Heroku.
Contributing
- Fork it
- Create your feature branch (
git checkout -b my-new-feature
) - Commit your changes (
git commit -am 'Added some feature'
) - Push to the branch (
git push origin my-new-feature
) - Create new Pull Request
License
Released under the MIT license.