Imagine you have a single code base, which has a few different applications within it... or at least the ability to run a few different applications. Or, maybe you're Google with your mono repo?
In any case, how do you manage this on Heroku? You don't. Heroku applications assume one repo to one application.
Enter the Monorepo buildpack, which is a copy of heroku-buildpack-multi-procfile except it moves the target path in to the root, rather than just the Procfile. This helps for ruby apps etc.
- Write a bunch of
Procfilesapps and scatter them through out your code base. - Create a bunch of Heroku apps.
- For each app, set
APP_BASE=relative/path/to/app/root
, and of course:heroku buildpacks:add -a <app> https://github.com/lstoll/heroku-buildpack-monorepo
- For each app,
git push git@heroku.com:<app> master
Note: If you already have other buildpacks defined, you'll need to make sure that the heroku-buildpack-monorepo buildpack is defined first. You can do this by adding -i 1
to the heroku buildpacks:add
command or changing the buildpack order visually in the application settings under "buildpacks" in the Heroku dashboard.
If you have local dependencies (e.g. a lerna monorepo with file:../packagename
style dependencies pointing to packages contained in the same repo, exactly one level above your package) you can add them using the DEPENDENCIES build var. E.g.
APP_BASE=packages/frontend
DEPENDENCIES=packages/shared packages/util
to include two packages,packages/shared
andpackages/util
.
would add packages/shared
and packages/util
to one level above the Heroku BUILD_DIR
and make them available for the build process.
Andrew Gwozdziewycz apg@heroku.com and Cyril David cyx@heroku.com and now Lincoln Stoll lstoll@heroku.com and Jan Tietze jan@tietze.io