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A wrapper for the Heroku v3 API

Package Exports

  • heroku-client

This package does not declare an exports field, so the exports above have been automatically detected and optimized by JSPM instead. If any package subpath is missing, it is recommended to post an issue to the original package (heroku-client) to support the "exports" field. If that is not possible, create a JSPM override to customize the exports field for this package.

Readme

heroku-client Build Status

A wrapper around the v3 Heroku API.

Install

$ npm install heroku-client --save

Documentation

Docs are auto-generated and live in the docs directory.

Usage

heroku-client works by providing functions that return proxy objects for interacting with different resources through the Heroku API.

To begin, require the Heroku module and create a client, passing in an API token:

var Heroku = require('heroku-client'),
    heroku = new Heroku({ token: process.env.HEROKU_API_TOKEN });

The simplest example is listing a user's apps. First, we call heroku.apps(), which returns a proxy object to the /apps endpoint, then we call list() to actually perform the API call:

heroku.apps().list(function (err, apps) {
  // `apps` is a parsed JSON response from the API
});

The advantage of using proxy objects is that they are reusable. Let's get the info for the user's app "my-app", get the dynos for the app, and remove a collaborator:

var app = heroku.apps('my-app');

app.info(function (err, app) {
  // Details about the `app`
});

app.dynos().list(function (err, dynos) {
  // List of the app's `dynos`
});

app.collaborators('user@example.com').delete(function (err, collaborator) {
  // The `collaborator` has been removed unless `err`
});

Requests that require a body are easy, as well. Let's add a collaborator to the user's app "another-app":

var app  = heroku.apps('another-app'),
    user = { email: 'new-user@example.com' };

app.collaborators().create({ user: user }, function (err, collaborator) {
  // `collaborator` is the newly added collaborator unless `err`
});

Promises

heroku-client works with Node-style callbacks, but also implements promises with the Q library.

var q = require('q');

// Fetches dynos for all of my apps.
heroku.apps().list().then(function (apps) {

  return q.all(apps.map(function (app) {
    return heroku.apps(app.name).dynos().list();
  }));

}).then(function (dynos) {

  console.log(dynos);

});

Caching

heroku-client performs caching by creating a memcached client using memjs. See the memjs repo for environment-specific configuration instructions and details.

To tell heroku-client to perform caching, call the configure function:

var Heroku = require('heroku').configure({ cache: true });

This requires a MEMCACHIER_SERVERS environment variable, as well as a HEROKU_CLIENT_ENCRYPTION_SECRET environment variable that heroku-client uses to build cache keys and encrypt cache contents.

Contributing

Updating resources

When a new resource manifest is available, download it into the repo, run tests, generate documentation, and bump the version number accordingly.

Generating documentation

Documentation for heroku-client is auto-generated from the resources manifest. Docs are generated like so:

$ bin/docs

Generating docs also runs a cursory test, ensuring that every documented function is a function that can be called.

Running tests

heroku-client uses jasmine-node for tests:

$ npm test