- Easy configuration with 
elixir_buildpack.configfile - Use prebuilt Elixir binaries
 DATABASE_URLcan be made available at compile time adding it toconfig_vars_to_exportinelixir_buildpack.config- Allows configuring Erlang
 - If your app doesn't have a Procfile, default web task 
mix run --no-haltwill be run. - Consolidates protocols
 - Hex and rebar support
 - Caching of Hex packages, Mix dependencies and downloads
 - Pre & Post compilation hooks through 
pre_compile,post_compileconfiguration 
- Erlang - Prebuilt packages (17.5, 17.4, etc)
 - Elixir - Prebuilt releases (1.0.4, 1.0.3, etc) or prebuilt branches (master, stable, etc)
 
heroku create --buildpack "https://github.com/HashNuke/heroku-buildpack-elixir.git"
heroku buildpacks:set https://github.com/HashNuke/heroku-buildpack-elixir
The above method always uses the latest version of the buildpack. To use a specific older version of the buildpack, see notes below.
Create a elixir_buildpack.config file in your app's root dir. The file's syntax is bash.
If you don't specify a config option, then the default option from the buildpack's elixir_buildpack.config file will be used.
Here's a full config file with all available options:
# Erlang version
erlang_version=18.2.1
# Elixir version
elixir_version=1.2.0
# Always rebuild from scratch on every deploy?
always_rebuild=false
# Export heroku config vars
config_vars_to_export=(DATABASE_URL)
# A command to run right before compiling the app (after elixir, .etc)
pre_compile="pwd"
# A command to run right after compiling the app
post_compile="pwd"
# Set the path the app is run from
runtime_path=/app
- Use prebuilt Elixir release
 
elixir_version=1.2.0
- Use prebuilt Elixir branch, the branch specifier ensures that it will be downloaded every time
 
elixir_version=(branch master)
- You can specify an Erlang release version like below
 
erlang_version=18.2.1
- To set a config var on your heroku node you can exec from the shell:
 
heroku config:set MY_VAR=the_value
- Add the config vars you want to be exported in your 
elixir_buildpack.configfile: 
config_vars_to_export=(DATABASE_URL MY_VAR)
- 
Add your own
Procfileto your application, else the default web taskmix run --no-haltwill be used. - 
Your application should build embedded and start permanent. Build embedded will consolidate protocols for a performance boost, start permanent will ensure that Heroku restarts your application if it crashes. See below for an example of how to use these features in your Mix project:
defmodule MyApp.Mixfile do use Mix.Project def project do [app: :my_app, version: "0.0.1", build_embedded: Mix.env == :prod, start_permanent: Mix.env == :prod] end end
 - 
The buildpack will execute the commands configured in
pre_compileand/orpost_compilein the root directory of your application before/after it has been compiled (respectively). These scripts can be used to build or prepare things for your application, for example compiling assets. 
Using the above methods always uses the latest version of the buildpack. We attempt to maintain the buildpack for as many old Elixir and Erlang releases as possible. But sometimes it does get hard since there's a matrix of 3 variables involved here (Erlang version, Elixir version and Heroku stack). If your application cannot be updated for some reason and requires an older version of the buildpack then use the releases page to pick a tag to use. Use the buildpack url with the tag name.
For example, if you pick the tag "v3", then the buildpack url for your app would be:
https://github.com/HashNuke/heroku-buildpack-elixir.git#v3
We only create a new tag/release when we've made breaking changes. So consider all tagged versions older than master as not recommended for use and not supported any further.
- Build scripts to build erlang are at https://github.com/HashNuke/heroku-buildpack-elixir-otp-builds
 - Sample app to test is available at https://github.com/HashNuke/heroku-buildpack-elixir-test
 
© Akash Manohar under The MIT License. Feel free to do whatever you want with it.