This is a Heroku buildpack for Swift apps that are powered by the Swift Package Manager.
Example usage:
$ ls
Procfile Package.swift Sources
$ heroku create --buildpack vapor/vapor
$ git push heroku master
remote: -----> Swift app detected
remote: -----> Installing clang 7.0.1
remote: -----> Installing swiftenv
remote: -----> Installing Swift 4.2.4
remote: -----> Building package (release configuration)
remote: -----> Installing dynamic libraries
remote: -----> Installing binaries
You can also add it to upcoming builds of an existing application:
$ heroku buildpacks:set vapor/vapor
The buildpack will detect your app as Swift if it has a Package.swift
file in
the root.
Using the Procfile, you can set the process to run for your web server. Any binaries built from your Swift source using swift package manager will be placed in your $PATH.
Example Procfile for Vapor 2 apps:
web: Run --env=production --port=$PORT
Example Procfile for Vapor 3 apps:
web: Run serve --env production --hostname 0.0.0.0 --port $PORT
The buildpack defaults to Swift 4.2.4 to maintain compatibility with Swift 3 projects. If you want to use the latest and greatest, or need a specific version – including snapshots, create a file called .swift-version
in the root of the project folder with the desired version number inside.
$ echo '5.0.3' > .swift-version
The .swift-version
file is completely compatible with
swiftenv.
NOTE: Since there are frequent Swift language changes, it's advised that you pin to your Swift version.
By default, the buildpack will use the release
build configuration to enable compiler optimizations. If you are experiencing mysterious crashes, you can try disabling them by setting the SWIFT_BUILD_CONFIGURATION
to debug
, then redeploying.
$ heroku config:set SWIFT_BUILD_CONFIGURATION=debug
$ git commit -m "Change to debug configuration on Heroku" --allow-empty
$ git push heroku master
...
remote: -----> Building package (debug configuration)
...
You can place custom scripts to be ran before and after compiling your Swift source code inside the following files in your repository:
bin/pre_compile
bin/post_compile
This is useful if you would need to install any other dependencies.
The vapor/vapor
buildpack from the Heroku Buildpack Registry represents the latest stable version of the buildpack. If you'd like to use the source code from this Github repository, you can set your buildpack to the Github URL:
$ heroku buildpacks:set https://github.com/vapor-community/heroku-buildpack.git