Deploying an ember-cli app to Heroku - Demo Apps Only!

— 3 minute read

Deploying to Heroku is easy… if you can figure out all of the hidden gotchas!

No dev dependencies permalink

That means that you cannot depend on any global npm packages.

Since ember-cli install itself locally by default, the only global package you will need is bower.

npm install --save bower

Except ember-cli

… which must be in both dependencies and devDependencies.

This is because the ember command inspects the package.json in the file, looking for ember-cli. It does this to determine if that project is indeed an ember-cli app. If it does not find this there, it will display an error saying that you need to run the command from within a folder containing an ember-cli app.

If this is too much trouble for what it is worth, simply issue this command instead:

heroku config:set NODE_ENV=staging

… so that Heroku will run npm install instead of npm install --production when it spins up the dyno.

Server on web Proc only permalink

The process that runs the server must be called web. Do not call it main or anything else. If you want to access a server running on a Heroku dyno from port 80 externally, that server must be running in a Proc named web. I wish Heroku’s documents actually stated this explicitly.

web: npm run start

Use scripts in package.json permalink

NodeJs packages may define an optional scripts section in their package.json file. For ember-cli apps, use scripts.postinstall to do a bower install; and use scripts.start to start run ember serve

Use the PORT environment variable

When running ember serve, do not use a default port number. Whenever heroku spins up a dyno (which happens at least once per deploy), it will assign a new port number (among other things), and this is the one that Heroku will port forward from port 80.

“scripts”: { “start”: “./node_modules/ember-cli/bin/ember serve --environment=production --port=${PORT}”, “build”: “./node_modules/ember-cli/bin/ember build”, “test”: “./node_modules/ember-cli/bin/ember test”, “postinstall”: “./node_modules/bower/bin/bower install” },

Note that npm install is not necessary in scripts.postinstall - Heroku does that automatically for all NodeJs projects.

A Word of Caution permalink

You should not use ember serve to deploy production apps. There are possibly some security and performance problems that this entails. But of course, sometimes you simply want to deploy a demo app, and in these cases deploying and ember-cli app like this works quite well.

New to Heroku? - Quick Run-down permalink

Heroku is a cloud hosting service, which allows you to spin up and down instances on the fly. You can operate it entirely via the command line by installing Heroku toolbelt, and deployment happens by pushing to a git remote hosted on Heroku.

If deploying to Heroku for the first time, you will need to set up the requisites on your computer

wget -qO- https://toolbelt.heroku.com/install-ubuntu.sh | sh # for other OS’es: https://toolbelt.heroku.com/ ssh-keygen # save to id_rsa_heroku echo “Host heroku.com” >> ~/.ssh/config echo " IdentityFile ~/.ssh/id_rsa_heroku" >> ~/.ssh/config chmod 600 ~/.ssh/config heroku keys:add

To get a NodeJs app up and running on Heroku, first create the app, and when ready for deployment:

git init # if you have not done so already git add . && git commit -a # commit whatever should be deployed heroku create name-of-your-app git push heroku master

Heroku’s git repository has a post-hook that runs upon each push, which will attempt to (re)install and (re)deploy your app, and the push will only succeed if it the installation and deployment succeeds.