I'm trying to use php git deploy for AWS Beanstalk
I got python, ruby etc installed. I setup the repository, did a git aws.config which went well. Then whenever I try to run git aws.push I get this error.
./.git/AWSDevTools/aws/dev_tools.rb:53:in `host': private method `split' called for nil:NilClass (NoMethodError)
from ./.git/AWSDevTools/aws/dev_tools.rb:112:in `signed_uri'
from .git/AWSDevTools/aws.elasticbeanstalk.push:86
Don't know much about ruby, but from what I gather it looks like it's missing a dependency maybe? I guess I'm not sure what's wrong, any help would really be appreciated.
I had this same problem, and I tracked it to a missing appRoot/.elasticbeanstalk/config file.
I added the file with the following content. Note: substitute your actual app/environment where appropriate.
.elasticbeanstalk/config >>
[global]
ApplicationName=your-application-name-east
DevToolsEndpoint=git.elasticbeanstalk.us-east-1.amazonaws.com
EnvironmentName=your-environment-name
Region=us-east-1
Ok so I did some digging through the source files. Turns out there was a permissions issue in a config file so it was creating a null class, and thus you can't string split a null.
Related
I am a newbie in go and go-swagger. I am following steps in Simple Server tutorial in goswagger.io.
I am using Ubuntu 18.04, swagger v0.25.0 and go 1.15.6.
Following the same steps, there are a few differences of the files generated. For instance, goswagger.io's has find_todos_okbody.go and get_okbody.go in models but mine does not. Why is that so?
Link to screenshot of my generated files vs
Link to screenshot of generated files by swagger.io
Starting the server as written in the tutorial go install ./cmd/todo-list-server/ gives me the following error. Can anyone please help with this?
# my_folder/swagger-todo-list/restapi
restapi/configure_todo_list.go:41:8: api.TodosGetHandler undefined (type *operations.TodoListAPI has no field or method TodosGetHandler)
restapi/configure_todo_list.go:42:6: api.TodosGetHandler undefined (type *operations.TodoListAPI has no field or method TodosGetHandler)
The first step in goswagger.io todo-list is swagger init spec .... Which directory should I run this command in? I ran it in a newly created folder in my home directory. However, from the page, it shows the path to be ~/go/src/github.com/go-swagger/go-swagger/examples/tutorials/todo-list. I am not sure whether I should use go get ..., git clone ... or create those folders. Can someone advise me?
Thanks.
This is likely the documentation lagging behind the version of the code that you are running. As long as it compiles, the specific files the tool generates isn't so crucial.
This is a compilation error. When you do go install foo it will try to build the foo package as an executable and then move that to your GOPATH/bin directory. It seems that the generated code in restapi/configure_todo_list.go isn't correct for the operations code generated.
All you need to run this tutorial yourself is an empty directory and the swagger tool (not its source code). You run the commands from the root of this empty project. In order not to run into GOPATH problems I would initialise a module with go mod init todo-list-example before doing anything else.
Note that while the todo-list example code exists inside the go-swagger source, it's there just for documenting example usage and output.
What I would advice for #2 is to make sure you're using a properly released version of go-swagger, rather than installing from the latest commit (which happens when you just do a go get), as I have found that to be occasionally unstable.
Next, re-generate the entire server, but make sure you also regenerate restapi/configure_todo_list.go by passing --regenerate-configureapi to your swagger generate call. This file isn't always refreshed because you're meant to modify it to configure your app, and if you changed versions of the tool it may be different and incompatible.
If after that you still get the compilation error, it may be worth submitting a bug report at https://github.com/go-swagger/go-swagger/issues.
Thanks #EzequielMuns. The errors in #2 went away after I ran go get - u -f ./... as stated in
...
For this generation to compile you need to have some packages in your GOPATH:
* github.com/go-openapi/runtime
* github.com/jessevdk/go-flags
You can get these now with: go get -u -f ./...
I think it's an error of swagger code generation. You can do as folloing to fix this:
delete file configure_todo_list.go;
regenerate code.
# swagger generate server -A todo-list -f ./swagger.yml
Then, you can run command go install ./cmd/todo-list-server/, it will succeed.
When I run the following:
go get github.com/docker/go-plugins-helpers/volume
It prints:
github.com/docker/go-connections/sockets
../github.com/docker/go-connections/sockets/sockets.go:35:26: dialer.DialContext undefined (type proxy.Dialer has no field or method DialContext)
../github.com/docker/go-connections/sockets/sockets_unix.go:24:28: undefined: context
You are using proxy.Dialer whereas it seems you want net.Dialer, as that one has a DialContext.
For those not familiar with go (like me), a very temporary workaround (until there is a fix for https://github.com/docker/go-connections/issues/60) would be:
cd ~/go/src/github.com/docker/go-connections
git checkout 9885905e989f4d8cc9f42d3549c5be9c27e4460d
go get github.com/docker/go-connections/sockets
cd -
Cheers
I have been attempting to setup a chef recipe which installs ruby using RVM and then uses the application_ruby cookbook to configure the application, however I keep running into the error
NameError: Cannot find a resource for bundle_options on ubuntu version 12.04
I am using the following code
application "application setup" do
owner "ubuntu"
group "ubuntu"
repository "https://github.com/me/myapplication.git" // Real address removed
path rails_app_path
revision "master"
rails do
bundler true
precompile_assets true
bundler_deployment true
end
end
I noticed that the bundle_options was recently added, https://github.com/opscode-cookbooks/application_ruby/commit/e7719170a661a957796e8e5d58ba8f4ecd937487 however I am unable to track down if this is causing the issue. I have included
depends "application"
depends "application_ruby"
in my metadata.rb and made sure all my dependencies are installed so I am unsure what I am doing wrong at this point.
According to documentation bundle_options is an attribute of the rails resource, not a resource itself.
The only correct way of using it is INSIDE the "rails" block, so you got the message because you either used it as :
an attribute of the application resource (but outside of the "rails" block)
standalone resource (outside of any resource).
Message you mentioned is being displayed when nonexistent resource is being referenced. e.g. if you had tried to execute following code on your system:
nonexistent_resource "failure gonna happen" do
some_attribute "whatever_value"
end
you would've got a message
NameError: Cannot find a resource for nonexistent_resource on Ubuntu version 12.04
I ran into this problem today as well. It appears the problem is that commit e771917 forgot to add the necessary getter for the bundle_option. Someone filed a PR to fix it (https://github.com/poise/application_ruby/pull/44), but it has not yet been merged. I can confirm that when I made that change locally, this error went away. The forked branch in the PR is located at https://github.com/mauriciosilva/application_ruby/tree/bundle_options_fix.
I know the slug compiler removes the .git directory when creating a heroku slug, but is there any way to configure Heroku so that I can access the currently running git commit number from within my scripts?
I'd like to be able to have a small link on my sinatra app (run within Heroku) which says "running version e72fb274a0" (or something similar). How can I retrieve this, or force the slug compiler to add it to an environment variable?
PROGRESS:
I reckon the best way to do this is to make a custom buildpack which writes the git commit version number to the heroku slug before the .git directory is deleted.
I've tried to do this (see my fork of the ruby buildpack) but the line I've added – line 23 – doesn't seem to be doing the job. Heroku sees & uses the new buildpack, but doesn't seem to write the file to the slug.
Anyone have any idea why my custom buildpack isn't working as expected?
Thanks,
JP
A couple of options...
SOURCE_VERSION environment variable (build-time)
Since 1st April 2015, there's a SOURCE_VERSION environment variable available to builds running on Heroku. For git-pushed builds, this is the git commit SHA-1 of the source being built:
https://devcenter.heroku.com/changelog-items/630
(thanks to #srtech for pointing that out!)
An example of me using that variable in a build - if you look at the HTML served by the deployed app, you'll see the commit id is coming though in an HTML comment near the very bottom: https://gu-who.herokuapp.com/
/etc/heroku/dyno metadata file (run-time)
Heroku have beta functionality to write out a /etc/heroku/dyno metadata file onto your running dyno. If you email support you can probably get added to the beta. Here's a place where Heroku themselves are using it:
https://github.com/heroku/fix/blob/6c8ab7a/lib/heroku_dyno_metadata.rb
The contents look like this:
{
"dyno":{
"physical_id":"161bfad9-9e83-40b7-b385-78305db2f168",
"size":1,
"name":"run.7145"
},
"app":{
"id":null
},
"release":{
"id":50,
"commit":"2c3a0b24069af49b3de35b8e8c26765c1dba9ff0",
"description":null
}
}
..so release.commit is the field you're after. I used to use this method until the SOURCE_VERSION variable became available.
In 2018 this is what you want:
https://devcenter.heroku.com/articles/dyno-metadata
heroku labs:enable runtime-dyno-metadata -a <app name>
You can run a script before deploy that store this information (maybe on a YAML)
using these a = `ls` (note that is not ' "apostrophe" sign is ` "inverse accute" sign)
the a variable will have the result of this bash command,so you can do
git = `git log`
and then find the information you want it and store it.
So you will be able to retrieve it later.
Did this helped ?
I have a Sinatra app that is located here https://github.com/trivektor/Backbone-Hangman. The first time I push it to Heroku, everything worked fine. However, on the second push my application crashed. The only thing that I changed was CSS. Checking the logs, I found the message
Unexpected error while processing request: can't convert nil into String
Does anyone know why this is happening? Thanks.
Sometime the lack of a closing } can cause this. Check those in all your css files and prescompile assets for production.
RAILS_ENV=production bundle exec rake assets:precompileHere is some more details
I was getting the same error in a Sinatra app this week. Looking at the git repo provided by this questions author, I saw this commit. It fixed the issue I was having.
I had this issue using sinatra-activerecord. Updating my database and rebooting the environment did the trick for me:
rake db:migrate