#EU Ref Guide
Now live (work-in-progress!) at referendum.wtf
This project is a template for installing and running WordPress on Heroku. The repository comes bundled with:
Clone the repository from Github
$ git clone git://github.com/mhoofman/wordpress-heroku.git
With the Heroku gem, create your app
$ cd wordpress-heroku
$ heroku create
Creating strange-turtle-1234... done, stack is cedar
http://strange-turtle-1234.herokuapp.com/ | [email protected]:strange-turtle-1234.git
Git remote heroku added
Add a database to your app
$ heroku addons:create heroku-postgresql
Creating HEROKU_POSTGRESQL_INSTANCE... done, (free)
Adding HEROKU_POSTGRESQL_INSTANCE to strange-turtle-1234... done
Setting DATABASE_URL and restarting strange-turtle-1234... done, v3
Database has been created and is available
! This database is empty. If upgrading, you can transfer
! data from another database with pgbackups:restore
Use `heroku addons:docs heroku-postgresql` to view documentation.
Promote the database (replace HEROKU_POSTGRESQL_INSTANCE with the name from the above output)
$ heroku pg:promote HEROKU_POSTGRESQL_INSTANCE
Promoting HEROKU_POSTGRESQL_INSTANCE to DATABASE_URL... done
Ensuring an alternate alias for existing DATABASE... done, HEROKU_POSTGRESQL_COLOR
Promoting HEROKU_POSTGRESQL_INSTANCE to DATABASE_URL on strange-turtle-1234... done
Add the ability to send email (i.e. Password Resets etc)
$ heroku addons:create sendgrid:starter
Creating SENDGRID_INSTANCE... done, (free)
Adding SENDGRID_INSTANCE to strange-turtle-1234... done
Setting SENDGRID_PASSWORD, SENDGRID_USERNAME and restarting strange-turtle-1234... done, v7
Use `heroku addons:docs sendgrid` to view documentation.
Create a new branch for any configuration/setup changes needed
$ git checkout -b production
Store unique keys and salts in Heroku environment variables. Wordpress can provide random values here.
heroku config:set AUTH_KEY='put your unique phrase here' \
SECURE_AUTH_KEY='put your unique phrase here' \
LOGGED_IN_KEY='put your unique phrase here' \
NONCE_KEY='put your unique phrase here' \
AUTH_SALT='put your unique phrase here' \
SECURE_AUTH_SALT='put your unique phrase here' \
LOGGED_IN_SALT='put your unique phrase here' \
NONCE_SALT='put your unique phrase here'
Deploy to Heroku
$ git push heroku production:master
-----> Deleting 0 files matching .slugignore patterns.
-----> PHP app detected
! WARNING: No composer.json found.
Using index.php to declare PHP applications is considered legacy
functionality and may lead to unexpected behavior.
-----> No runtime requirements in composer.json, defaulting to PHP 5.6.2.
-----> Installing system packages...
- PHP 5.6.2
- Apache 2.4.10
- Nginx 1.6.0
-----> Installing PHP extensions...
- zend-opcache (automatic; bundled, using 'ext-zend-opcache.ini')
-----> Installing dependencies...
Composer version 1.0-dev (ffffab37a294f3383c812d0329623f0a4ba45387) 2014-11-05 06:04:18
Loading composer repositories with package information
Installing dependencies
Nothing to install or update
Generating optimized autoload files
-----> Preparing runtime environment...
NOTICE: No Procfile, defaulting to 'web: vendor/bin/heroku-php-apache2'
-----> Discovering process types
Procfile declares types -> web
-----> Compressing... done, 78.5MB
-----> Launcing... done, v5
http://strange-turtle-1234.herokuapp.com deployed to Heroku
To git@heroku:strange-turtle-1234.git
* [new branch] production -> master
After deployment WordPress has a few more steps to setup and thats it!
Because a file cannot be written to Heroku's file system, updating and installing plugins or themes should be done locally and then pushed to Heroku.
Updating your WordPress version is just a matter of merging the updates into the branch created from the installation.
$ git pull # Get the latest
Using the same branch name from our installation:
$ git checkout production
$ git merge master # Merge latest
$ git push heroku production:master
WordPress needs to update the database. After push, navigate to:
http://your-app-url.herokuapp.com/wp-admin
WordPress will prompt for updating the database. After that you'll be good to go.
If you have files that you want tracked in your repo, but do not need deploying (for example, *.md, *.pdf, *.zip). Then add path or linux file match to the .slugignore
file & these will not be deployed.
Examples:
path/to/ignore/
bin/
*.md
*.pdf
*.zip