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Buildpack Deployment

Dokku normally defaults to using heroku buildpacks for deployment, though this may be overridden by committing a valid Dockerfile to the root of your repository and pushing the repository to your Dokku installation. To avoid this automatic Dockerfile deployment detection, you may do one of the following:

  • Use dokku config:set to set the BUILDPACK_URL environment variable.
  • Add BUILDPACK_URL to a committed .env file in the root of your repository.
  • See the environment variable documentation for more details.
  • Create a .buildpacks file in the root of your repository.

Specifying a custom buildpack

In certain cases you may want to specify a custom buildpack. While Dokku uses herokuish to support all the official heroku buildpacks, it is possible that the buildpack detection does not work well for your application. As well, you may wish to use a custom buildpack to handle specific application logic.

To use a specific buildpack, you can run the following Dokku command:

# replace REPOSITORY_URL with your buildpack's url
dokku config:set node-js-app BUILDPACK_URL=REPOSITORY_URL

# example: using a specific ruby buildpack version
dokku config:set node-js-app BUILDPACK_URL=https://github.com/heroku/heroku-buildpack-ruby.git#v142

Please check the documentation for your particular buildpack as you may need to include configuration files (such as a Procfile) in your project root.

Using multiple buildpacks

You can only set a single buildpack using the BUILDPACK_URL, though there may be times when you wish to use multiple buildpacks. To do so, simply create a .buildpacks file in the base of your repository. This file should list all the buildpacks, one-per-line. For instance, if you wish to use both the nodejs and ruby buildpacks, your .buildpacks file should contain the following:

https://github.com/heroku/heroku-buildpack-nodejs.git#v87
https://github.com/heroku/heroku-buildpack-ruby.git#v142

Info

Always remember to pin your buildpack versions when using the multi-buildpacks method, or you may find deploys changing your deployed environment.

You may also choose to set just a single buildpack in this file, though that is up to you.

Please check the documentation for your particular buildpack(s) as you may need to include configuration files (such as a Procfile) in your project root.

Using a specific buildpack version

As Dokku pins all buildpacks via herokuish releases, there may be occasions where a local buildpack version is out of date. If you wish to use a more recent version of the buildpack, you may use any of the above methods to specify a buildpack without the git sha attached like so:

# using the latest nodejs buildpack
dokku config:set node-js-app BUILDPACK_URL=https://github.com/heroku/heroku-buildpack-nodejs

You may also wish to use a specific version of a buildpack, which is also simple

# using v87 of the nodejs buildpack
dokku config:set node-js-app BUILDPACK_URL=https://github.com/heroku/heroku-buildpack-nodejs#v87

Specifying commands via Procfile

While many buildpacks have a default command that is run when a detected repository is pushed, it is possible to override this command via a Procfile. A Procfile can also be used to specify multiple commands, each of which is subject to process scaling. See the process scaling documentation for more details around scaling individual processes.

A Procfile is a file named Procfile. It should be named Procfile exactly, and not anything else. For example, Procfile.txt is not valid. The file should be a simple text file.

The file must be placed in the root directory of your application. It will not function if placed in a subdirectory.

If the file exists, it should not be empty, as doing so may result in a failed deploy.

The syntax for declaring a Procfile is as follows. Note that the format is one process type per line, with no duplicate process types.

<process type>: <command>

If, for example, you have multiple queue workers and wish to scale them separately, the following would be a valid way to work around the requirement of not duplicating process types:

worker:           env QUEUE=* bundle exec rake resque:work
importantworker:  env QUEUE=important bundle exec rake resque:work

The web process type holds some significance in that it is the only process type that is automatically scaled to 1 on the initial application deploy. See the process scaling documentation for more details around scaling individual processes.

Curl Build Timeouts

Certain buildpacks may time out in retrieving dependencies via curl. This can happen when your network connection is poor or if there is significant network congestion. You may see a message similar to gzip: stdin: unexpected end of file after a curl command.

If you see output similar this when deploying , you may need to override the curl timeouts to increase the length of time allotted to those tasks. You can do so via the config plugin:

dokku config:set --global CURL_TIMEOUT=600
dokku config:set --global CURL_CONNECT_TIMEOUT=180

Clearing buildpack cache

See the repository management documentation.