heroku and github at the same time
So I understand that heroku functions as a git repository, but let's say i want to use github as well as a repository. How do I set it up such that I have two repositories and both are in sync?
Solution 1:
You can have multiple remotes on a git installation. You would have a github remote, and a heroku remote.
Assuming you already have github setup, then you probably push to github with something like:
git push origin master
origin
is your remote, and master
is your branch.
Follow the instructions in getting started with Heroku choose your desired language and continue through the tutorial. This tutorial assumes that you already have github setup, and will show you how to create your heroku
remote - via heroku create
.
You then push to github as normal, and push to heroku via:
git push heroku master
The same format applies - heroku
is your remote, and master
is your branch. You are not overwriting your Github remote here, you are adding another, so you can still do both pushes via one commit with workflow such as:
git add .
git commit -m "Going to push to Heroku and Git"
git push origin master -- push to Github Master branch
git push heroku master -- push to Heroku
Solution 2:
If you want to be able to push and pull to multiple remotes:
First add them:
git remote add origin <github repo>
git remote add heroku [email protected]:<app name>.git
Then push
git push origin master
git push heroku master
If you want to push to both remotes at the same time:
Edit you configuration file so origin
points to both heroku and github:
git config -e
Add/Replace:
[remote "origin"]
url = [email protected]:username/somerepo.git
url = ssh://[email protected]/username/somerepo.git
Since you are using github you can integrate with heroku by navigating to:
https://dashboard.heroku.com/apps/<app name>/settings#github-repo
and adding your repository's name.
If you want to automatically push to heroku after committing to GitHub:
you will need to use a continuous integration platform like TravisCI.
Here are the steps to make this work. Be careful what you push to production, make sure it works before it gets deployed. Each method has its pros and cons.
Solution 3:
I think this is actually the recommended case; the Heroku git repository function is really for deployment and not code management.
Just use github to manage your code as usual, but additionally push to the Heroku git repository when you are ready to deploy. There is no need to keep them in sync with automated tools etc., because you want to be able to push to your github repository without deploying, for instance so that you can back up or collaborate on unfinished features or maintain separate staging and production environments.
Solution 4:
I do this quite often. I create a site for Heroku but I want to keep my source in Github for archival purposes. I set up to remotes:
git remote add origin <github repo>
and
git remote add heroku <heroku repo>
Then you can just git push origin master
and then git push heroku master
. Heroku also allows you to associate a github repo for the purposes of seeing commit diffs.
Solution 5:
Since nobody mentioned that before. Git allows you now to add multiple urls to each remote. Just do it like this:
this will add fetch
and push
from github:
git remote add origin [email protected]:yourName/yourGithubRepo.git
this will override github push
with heroku push
:
git remote set-url origin --push --add [email protected]:yourHerokuRepo.git
this will re-add github push
:
git remote set-url origin --push --add [email protected]:yourName/yourGithubRepo.git
and that's a final output:
$ git remote -v
origin [email protected]:yourName/yourGithubRepo.git (fetch)
origin [email protected]:yourHerokuRepo.git (push)
origin [email protected]:yourName/yourGithubRepo.git (push)
After that just run:
git push
If, instead of working, it's saying sth about setting upstream, then type this first:
git push --set-upstream origin master