Heroku
Manual deployment
This tutorial assumes that you have already managed to clone Consul Democracy on your machine and gotten it to work.
First, create a Heroku account if it isn't already done.
Install the Heroku CLI and sign in using
Go to your Consul Democracy repository and instantiate the process
You can add the flag --region eu
if you want to use their European servers instead of the US ones.
If your-app-name is not already taken, Heroku should now create your app.
Create a database using
You should now have access to an empty Postgres database whose address was automatically saved as an environment variable named DATABASE_URL. Consul Democracy will automatically connect to it when deployed.
(Not needed) Add a file name heroku.yml at the root of your project and paste the following in it
Now, generate a secret key and save it to an ENV variable named SECRET_KEY_BASE using
Also add your server address:
You need to let the app know where the configuration variables are stored by adding a link to the ENV variables in config/secrets.yml
and commit this file in the repo by commenting out the corresponding line in the .gitignore.
Remember not to commit the file if you have any sensitive information in it!
You can now push your app using
It won't work straight away because the database doesn't contain the tables needed. To create them, run
If you want to add the test data in the database, move gem 'faker', '~> 1.8.7'
outside of group :development
and run
Your app should now be ready to use. You can open it with
You also can run the console on heroku using
Heroku doesn't allow to save images or documents in its servers, so it's necessary to setup a permanent storage space.
See our S3 guide for more details about configuring Paperclip with S3.
Configure Sendgrid
Add the SendGrid add-on in Heroku. It will create a SendGrid account for you with ENV["SENDGRID_USERNAME"]
and ENV["SENDGRID_PASSWORD"]
.
Add this to config/secrets.yml
, under the production:
section:
Important: Turn on one worker dyno so that emails get sent.
Optional but recommended
Install rails_12factor and specify the Ruby version
The rails_12factor is only useful if you use a version of Consul Democracy older than 1.0.0. The latter uses Rails 5 which includes the changes.
As recommended by Heroku, you can add the gem rails_12factor and specify the version of Ruby you want to use. You can do so by adding
in the file Gemfile_custom, where x.y.z
is the version defined in the .ruby-version
file in the Consul Democracy repository. Don't forget to run
to generate Gemfile.lock before committing and pushing to the server.
Use Puma as a web server
Heroku recommends to use Puma to improve the responsiveness of your app on a number of levels.
If you want to allow more concurrency, uncomment the line:
You can find an explanation for each of these settings in the Heroku tutorial.
The last part is to change the web task to use Puma by changing it to this in your heroku.yml file:
Add configuration variables to tune your app from the dashboard
The free and hobby versions of Heroku are barely enough to run an app like Consul Democracy. To optimise the response time and make sure the app doesn't run out of memory, you can change the number of workers and threads that Puma uses.
My recommended settings are one worker and three threads. You can set it by running these two commands:
I also recommend to set the following:
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