This is the updated Python wrapper for the Heroku API V3. The Heroku REST API allows Heroku users to manage their accounts, applications, addons, and other aspects related to Heroku. It allows you to easily utilize the Heroku platform from your applications.
First instantiate a heroku_conn as above:
import heroku3 heroku_conn = heroku3.from_key('YOUR_API_KEY')
Interact with your applications:
>>> heroku_conn.apps() [<app 'sharp-night-7758'>, <app 'empty-spring-4049'>, ...] >>> app = heroku_conn.apps()['sharp-night-7758']
Heroku provides some useful debugging information. This code exposes the following
Get the current ratelimit remaining:
num = heroku_conn.ratelimit_remaining()
Get the unique ID of the last request sent to heroku to give them for debugging:
id = heroku_conn.last_request_id
The new heroku3 API gives greater control over the interaction of the returned data. Primarily this centres around calls to the api which result in list objects being returned. e.g. multiple objects like apps, addons, releases etc.
Throughout the docs you'll see references to using limit & order_by. Wherever you see these, you should be able to use limit, order_by, sort and valrange.
You can control ordering, limits and pagination by supplying the following keywords:
order_by=<'id'|'version'> limit=<num> valrange=<string> - See api docs for this, This value is passed straight through to the API call *as is*. sort=<'asc'|'desc'>
You'll have to investigate the api for each object's *Accept-Ranges* header to work out which fields can be ordered by
List all apps in name order:
heroku_conn.apps(order_by='name')
List the last 10 releases:
app.releases(order_by='version', limit=10, sort='desc') heroku_conn.apps()['empty-spring-4049'].releases(order_by='version', limit=10, sort='desc')
List objects can be referred to directly by any of their primary keys too:
app = heroku_conn.apps()['myapp'] dyno = heroku_conn.apps()['myapp_id'].dynos()['web.1'] proc = heroku_conn.apps()['my_app'].process_formation()['web']
Be careful if you use *limit* in a list call *and* refer directly to an primary key E.g.Probably stupid...:
dyno = heroku_conn.apps()['myapp'].dynos(limit=1)['web.1']
To find out the Attributes available for a given object, look at the corresponding Documentation for that object. e.g.
Formation Object:
>>>print(feature.command) bundle exec rails server -p $PORT >>>print(feature.created_at) 2012-01-01T12:00:00Z >>>print(feature.id) 01234567-89ab-cdef-0123-456789abcdef >>>print(feature.quantity) 1 >>>print(feature.size) 1 >>>print(feature.type) web >>>print(feature.updated_at) 2012-01-01T12:00:00Z
It is also possible to change the underlying heroku_connection at any point on any object or listobject by creating a new heroku_conn and calling change_connection:
heroku_conn1 = heroku3.from_key('YOUR_API_KEY') heroku_conn2 = heroku3.from_key('ANOTHER_API_KEY') app = heroku_conn1.apps()['MYAPP'] app.change_connection(heroku_conn2) app.config() # this call will use heroku_conn2 ## or on list objects apps = heroku_conn1.apps() apps.change_connection(heroku_conn2) for app in apps: config = app.config()
The API has been built with an internal legacy=True ability, so any functionlity not implemented in the new API can be called via the previous legacy API. This is currently only used for rollbacks.
Get account:
account = heroku_conn.account()
Change Password:
account.change_password("<current_password>", "<new_password>")
List all configured keys:
keylist = account.keys(order_by='id')
Add Key:
account.add_key(<public_key_string>)
Remove key:
account.remove_key(<public_key_string - or fingerprint>)
List all configured account "features":
featurelist = account.features()
Disable a feature:
feature = account.disable_feature(id_or_name) feature.disable()
Enable a feature:
feature = account.enable_feature(id_or_name) feature.enable()
List all available Addon Services:
addonlist = heroku_conn.addon_services(order_by='id') addonlist = heroku_conn.addon_services()
Get specific available Addon Service:
addonservice = heroku_conn.addon_services(<id_or_name>)
The App Class is the starting point for most of the api functionlity.
List all apps:
applist = heroku_conn.apps(order_by='id') applist = heroku_conn.apps()
Get specific app:
app = heroku_conn.app(<id_or_name>) app = heroku_conn.apps()[id_or_name]
Create an app:
app = heroku_conn.create_app(name=None, stack_id_or_name='cedar', region_id_or_name=<region_id>)
Destroy an app (Warning this is irreversible):
app.delete()
List all Addons:
addonlist = app.addons(order_by='id') addonlist = applist[<id_or_name>].addons(limit=10) addonlist = heroku_conn.addons(<app_id_or_name>)
Install an Addon:
addon = app.install_addon(plan_id_or_name='<id>', config={}) addon = app.install_addon(plan_id_or_name='<name>', config={}) addon = app.install_addon(plan_id_or_name=addonservice.id, config={})
Remove an Addon:
addon = app.remove_addon(<id>) addon = app.remove_addon(addonservice.id) addon.delete()
Update/Upgrade an Addon:
addon = addon.upgrade(plan_id_or_name='<name>') addon = addon.upgrade(plan_id_or_name='<id>')
Update all buildpacks:
buildpack_urls = ['https://github.com/some/buildpack', 'https://github.com/another/buildpack'] app.update_buildpacks(buildpack_urls)
N.B. buildpack_urls can also be empty. This clears all buildpacks.
List all features:
appfeaturelist = app.features() appfeaturelist = app.labs() #nicename for features() appfeaturelist = app.features(order_by='id', limit=10)
Add a Feature:
appfeature = app.enable_feature(<feature_id_or_name>)
Remove a Feature:
appfeature = app.disable_feature(<feature_id_or_name>)
List all Transfers:
transferlist = app.transfers() transferlist = app.transfers(order_by='id', limit=10)
Create a Transfer:
transfer = app.create_transfer(recipient_id_or_name=<user_id>) transfer = app.create_transfer(recipient_id_or_name=<valid_email>)
Delete a Transfer:
deletedtransfer = app.delete_transfer(<transfer_id>) deletedtransfer = transfer.delete()
Update a Transfer's state:
transfer.update(state) transfer.update("Pending") transfer.update("Declined") transfer.update("Accepted")
List all Collaborators:
collaboratorlist = app.collaborators() collaboratorlist = app.collaborators(order_by='id')
Add a Collaborator:
collaborator = app.add_collaborator(user_id_or_email=<valid_email>, silent=0) collaborator = app.add_collaborator(user_id_or_email=user_id, silent=0) collaborator = app.add_collaborator(user_id_or_email=user_id, silent=1) #don't send invitation email
Remove a Collaborator:
collaborator = app.remove_collaborator(userid_or_email)
Get an apps config:
config = app.config()
Add a config Variable:
config['New_var'] = 'new_val'
Update a config Variable:
config['Existing_var'] = 'new_val'
Remove a config Variable:
del config['Existing_var'] config['Existing_var'] = None
Update Multiple config Variables:
# newconfig will always be a new ConfigVars object representing all config values for an app # i.e. there won't be partial configs newconfig = config.update({u'TEST1': u'A1', u'TEST2': u'A2', u'TEST3': u'A3'}) newconfig = heroku_conn.update_appconfig(<app_id_or_name>, {u'TEST1': u'A1', u'TEST2': u'A2', u'TEST3': u'A3'}) newconfig = app.update_config({u'TEST1': u'A1', u'TEST2': u'A2', u'TEST3': u'A3'})
Check if a var exists:
if 'KEY' in config: print("KEY = {0}".format(config[KEY]))
Get dict of config vars:
my_dict = config.to_dict()
Get a list of domains configured for this app:
domainlist = app.domains(order_by='id')
Add a domain to this app:
domain = app.add_domain('domain_hostname')
Remove a domain from an app:
domain = app.remove_domain('domain_hostname')
Dynos represent all your running dyno processes. Use dynos to investigate whats running on your app. Use Dynos to create one off processes/run commands.
You don't "scale" dyno Processes. You "scale" Formation Processes. See Formations section Below
Get a list of running dynos:
dynolist = app.dynos() dynolist = app.dynos(order_by='id')
Kill a dyno:
app.kill_dyno(<dyno_id_or_name>) app.dynos['run.1'].kill() dyno.kill()
Restarting your dynos is achieved by killing existing dynos, and allowing heroku to auto start them. A Handy wrapper for this proceses has been provided below.
N.B. This will only restart Formation processes, it will not kill off other processes.
Restart a Dyno:
#a simple wrapper around dyno.kill() with run protection so won't kill any proc of type='run' e.g. 'run.1' dyno.restart()
Restart all your app's Formation configured Dyno's:
app.restart()
Run a command without attaching to it. e.g. start a command and return the dyno object representing the command:
dyno = app.run_command_detached('fab -l', size=1, env={'key': 'val'}) dyno = heroku_conn.run_command_on_app(<appname>, <command>, size=1, attach=False, printout=True, env={'key': 'val'})
Run a command and attach to it, returning the commands output as a string:
#printout is used to control if the task should also print to STDOUT - useful for long running processes #size = is the processes dyno size 1X(default), 2X, 3X etc... #env = Envrionment variables for the dyno output, dyno = heroku_conn.run_command_on_app(<appname>, <command>, size=1, attach=True, printout=True, env={'key': 'val'}) output = app.run_command('fab -l', size=1, printout=True, env={'key': 'val'}) print output
Formations represent the dynos that you have configured in your Procfile - whether they are running or not. Use Formations to scale dynos up and down
Get a list of your configured Processes:
proclist = app.process_formation() proclist = app.process_formation(order_by='id') proc = app.process_formation()['web'] proc = heroku_conn.apps()['myapp'].process_formation()['web']
Scale your Procfile processes:
app.process_formation()['web'].scale(2) # run 2 dynos app.process_formation()['web'].scale(0) # don't run any dynos proc = app.scale_formation_process(<formation_id_or_name>, <quantity>)
Resize your Procfile Processes:
app.process_formation()['web'].resize(2) # for 2X app.process_formation()['web'].resize(1) # for 1X proc = app.resize_formation_process(<formation_id_or_name>, <size>)
List all active logdrains:
logdrainlist = app.logdrains() logdrainlist = app.logdrains(order_by='id')
Create a logdrain:
loggdrain = app.create_logdrain(<url>)
Remove a logdrain:
delete_logdrain - app.remove_logdrain(<id_or_url>)
Access the logs:
log = heroku_conn.get_app_log(<app_id_or_name>, dyno='web.1', lines=2, source='app', timeout=False) log = app.get_log() log = app.get_log(lines=100) print(app.get_log(dyno='web.1', lines=2, source='app')) 2011-12-21T22:53:47+00:00 heroku[web.1]: State changed from down to created 2011-12-21T22:53:47+00:00 heroku[web.1]: State changed from created to starting
You can even stream the tail:
#accepts the same params as above - lines|dyno|source|timeout (passed to requests) log = heroku_conn.stream_app_log(<app_id_or_name>, lines=1, timeout=100) #or for line in app.stream_log(lines=1): print(line) 2011-12-21T22:53:47+00:00 heroku[web.1]: State changed from down to created 2011-12-21T22:53:47+00:00 heroku[web.1]: State changed from created to starting
Enable Maintenance Mode:
app.enable_maintenance_mode()
Disable Maintenance Mode:
app.disable_maintenance_mode()
List all OAuthAuthorizations:
authorizations = heroku_conn.oauthauthorizations(order_by=id)
Get a specific OAuthAuthorization:
authorization = authorizations[<oauthauthorization_id>] authorization = heroku_conn.oauthauthorization(oauthauthorization_id)
Create an OAuthAuthorization:
authorization = heroku_conn.oauthauthorization_create(scope, oauthclient_id=None, description=None)
Delete an OAuthAuthorization:
authorization.delete() heroku_conn.oauthauthorization_delete(oauthauthorization_id)
List all OAuthClients:
clients = heroku_conn.oauthclients(order_by=id)
Get a specific OAuthClient:
client = clients[<oauthclient_id>] client = heroku_conn.oauthclient(oauthclient_id)
Create an OAuthClient:
client = heroku_conn.oauthclient_create(name, redirect_uri)
Update an existing OAuthClient:
client = client.update(name=None, redirect_uri=None)
Delete an OAuthClient:
client.delete() heroku_conn.oauthclient_delete(oauthclient_id)
Create an OAuthToken:
heroku_conn.oauthtoken_create(client_secret=None, grant_code=None, grant_type=None, refresh_token=None)
List all releases:
releaselist = app.releases() releaselist = app.releases(order_by='version')
release information:
for release in app.releases(): print("{0}-{1} released by {2} on {3}".format(release.id, release.description, release.user.name, release.created_at))
Rollbck to a release:
app.rollback("v{0}".format(release.version)) app.rollback("v108")
Rename App:
app.rename('Carrot-kettle-teapot-1898')
Heroku.py is powered by Requests and supports all customized sessions:
Note: logging is now achieved by the following method:
import httplib httplib.HTTPConnection.debuglevel = 1 logging.basicConfig() # you need to initialize logging, otherwise you will not see anything from requests logging.getLogger().setLevel(logging.INFO) requests_log = logging.getLogger("requests.packages.urllib3") requests_log.setLevel(logging.INFO) requests_log.propagate = True heroku_conn.ratelimit_remaining() >>>INFO:requests.packages.urllib3.connectionpool:Starting new HTTPS connection (1): api.heroku.com >>>send: 'GET /account/rate-limits HTTP/1.1\r\nHost: api.heroku.com\r\nAuthorization: Basic ZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZ=\r\nContent-Type: application/json\r\nAccept-Encoding: gzip, deflate, compress\r\nAccept: application/vnd.heroku+json; version=3\r\nUser-Agent: python-requests/1.2.3 CPython/2.7.2 Darwin/12.4.0\r\n\r\n' >>>reply: 'HTTP/1.1 200 OK\r\n' >>>header: Content-Encoding: gzip >>>header: Content-Type: application/json;charset=utf-8 >>>header: Date: Thu, 05 Sep 2013 11:13:03 GMT >>>header: Oauth-Scope: global >>>header: Oauth-Scope-Accepted: global identity >>>header: RateLimit-Remaining: 2400 >>>header: Request-Id: ZZZZZZ2a-b704-4bbc-bdf1-e4bc263586cb >>>header: Server: nginx/1.2.8 >>>header: Status: 200 OK >>>header: Strict-Transport-Security: max-age=31536000 >>>header: Vary: Accept-Encoding >>>header: X-Content-Type-Options: nosniff >>>header: X-Runtime: 0.032193391 >>>header: Content-Length: 44 >>>header: Connection: keep-alive
To install heroku3.py
, simply:
$ pip install heroku3
Or, if you absolutely must:
$ easy_install heroku3
But, you really shouldn't do that.
Original Heroku License left intact, The code in this repository is mostly my own, but credit where credit is due and all that :)
Copyright (c) 2013 Heroku, Inc.
Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining a copy of this software and associated documentation files (the "Software"), to deal in the Software without restriction, including without limitation the rights to use, copy, modify, merge, publish, distribute, sublicense, and/or sell copies of the Software, and to permit persons to whom the Software is furnished to do so, subject to the following conditions:
The above copyright notice and this permission notice shall be included in all copies or substantial portions of the Software.
THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS", WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY, FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE AND NONINFRINGEMENT. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHORS OR COPYRIGHT HOLDERS BE LIABLE FOR ANY CLAIM, DAMAGES OR OTHER LIABILITY, WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT, TORT OR OTHERWISE, ARISING FROM, OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER DEALINGS IN THE SOFTWARE.