by opencounter
GitHub Readme.md
A simple buildpack to run after all other buildpacks have completed,
which removes a set of files defined in .slug-post-clean
, so that they
are not included in the finished slug.
While this may seem to duplicate functionality provided by Heroku's
.slugignore
, there is a key difference: .slugignore
'd files are
removed after the repo is cloned, but before any buildpack is run. They
can therefore not be involved in the build process itself.
However, it is not uncommon for there to exist files in the repo that are necessary for the build, but are not required at runtime. There may also be installable build dependencies that are not runtime dependencies.
In our case, a complex front-end build involves significant CSS, JS and image assets, along with a large installation of node modules, all of which are used only for building the production assets, but then remain part of the slug.
Add the buildpack to the app:
heroku buildpacks:add https://github.com/opencounter/heroku-buildpack-post-build-clean.git
The post-build-clean buildpack must be last in the buildpack order.
# .buildpacks
https://github.com/heroku/heroku-buildpack-nodejs
https://github.com/heroku/heroku-buildpack-ruby
https://github.com/opencounter/heroku-buildpack-post-build-clean
The .slug-post-clean
file supports a single declatation per line.
A declaration can include bash globs (*
and ?
wildcards, and []
classes), whitespace in the filename, comments starting with #
.
Regular files, directories, symlinks, sockets, etc can all be removed.
some_huge_file.psd
some/nested/directory
why_does_this_app_even_contain_a.tiff
a file with whitespace.txt
# declaration below removes all *.log and *.out files/dirs
*.log
# declaration below removes all logfile?.txt files, except logfile0.txt
logfile[^0].txt
Copy the snippet above into CLI.