issue_comments: 558437707
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html_url | issue_url | id | node_id | user | created_at | updated_at | author_association | body | reactions | issue | performed_via_github_app |
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https://github.com/simonw/datasette/issues/639#issuecomment-558437707 | https://api.github.com/repos/simonw/datasette/issues/639 | 558437707 | MDEyOklzc3VlQ29tbWVudDU1ODQzNzcwNw== | 172847 | 2019-11-26T03:02:53Z | 2019-11-26T03:03:29Z | NONE | @simonw - Thanks for the reply! My reading of the heroku documents is that if one sets things up using git, then one can use "git push" (from a {local, GitHub, GitLab} git repository to Heroku) to "update" a Heroku deployment, but I'm not sure exactly how this works. However, assuming there is some way to use "git push" to update the Heroku deployment, the question becomes how can one do this in conjunction with datasette. Again based on my reading the heroku documents, it would seem that the following should work (but it doesn't quite): 1) Use datasette to create a deployment (named MYAPP) 2) Put it in maintenance mode 3) heroku git:clone -a MYAPP -- This results in an empty repository (as expected) 4) In another directory, heroku slugs:download -a MYAPP 5) Copy the downloaded slug into the repository 6) Make some change to metadata.json 6) Commit and push it back 7) Take the deployment out of maintenance mode 8) Refresh the deployment Using the heroku console, I've verified that the edits appear on heroku, but somehow they are not reflected in the running app. I'm hopeful that with some small tweak or perhaps the addition of a bit of voodoo, this strategy will work. I think it will be important to get this working for another reason: getting Heroku, Cloudcube, and datasette to work together, to overcome the slug size limitation so that large SQLite databases can be deployed to Heroku using Datasette. |
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