It's worth checking out, even if you are not specifically interested in rails. A great example of how to operate 'up in the clouds'.
A couple of key things I've learned/noted in working with heroku..
Disabling the heroku toolbar
You probably don't want the heroku toolbar appearing for public users of your application (and I found it had some issues with IE). Disabling the toolbar is done by creating a file config/heroku.yml:
toolbar_collaborators: true
toolbar_public: false
request_timeout: 10
(picked this tip up from the mailing list)
Running with Rails 2.1
Rails 2.0.2 is the default, and 2.1 support took a while to arrive. It's here now. Simply update your config/environment.rb file to specify..
RAILS_GEM_VERSION = '2.1'
Distributed Version Control
Version control using git is rolled into heroku. And if you want to develop locally, there's a heroku gem that simplifies setting up your local clone. Once git and the heroku gem are installed, a typical session goes like this:
heroku create myapp
heroku clone myapp
cd myapp
ruby script/server
[..work locally for a while..]
git add .
git commit -m "some changes made locally"
git push
[..work on the server for a while and commit..]
git pull
Postscript Aug-09: heroku have since split their services in two: herokugarden.com, which includes the online, web-based editor, and heroku.com which is intended for high-performance production deployment (with no online editing)
3 comments:
thanks for the tip about removing the heroku toolbar. It was behaving very badly in IE6.
no probs Darren. Just passing along the good stuff that Adam posted to the mailing list;-)
i also want to thanks for the tip about removing the heroku toolbar.
Post a Comment