distillery alternatives and similar packages
Based on the "Release Management" category.
Alternatively, view distillery alternatives based on common mentions on social networks and blogs.
-
heroku-buildpack-elixir
Heroku Buildpack for Elixir with nitro boost -
mix_docker
Put your Elixir app production release inside minimal docker image. -
ansible-elixir-stack
Ansible role to setup server with Elixir & Postgres to deploy apps -
bottler
Get your Elixir into proper recipients, and serve it nicely to final consumers -
renew
Mix task to create mix projects that builds into Docker containers. -
versioce
Version bumping and changelog generation for your mix project
TestGPT | Generating meaningful tests for busy devs
Do you think we are missing an alternative of distillery or a related project?
README
Distillery
About
Every alchemist requires good tools, and one of the greatest tools in the alchemist's disposal is the distillery. The purpose of the distillery is to take something and break it down to its component parts, reassembling it into something better, more powerful. That is exactly what this project does - it takes your Mix project and produces an Erlang/OTP release, a distilled form of your raw application's components; a single package which can be deployed anywhere, independently of an Erlang/Elixir installation. No dependencies, no hassle.
This is a pure-Elixir, dependency-free implementation of release generation for Elixir projects. It is currently a standalone package, but may be integrated into Mix at some point in the future.
Installation
Distillery requires Elixir 1.6 or greater. It works with Erlang 20+.
defp deps do
[{:distillery, "~> 2.1"}]
end
Just add as a mix dependency and use mix distillery.release
.
If you are new to releases or Distillery, please review the documentation, it is extensive and covers just about any question you may have!
Community/Questions/etc.
If you have questions or want to discuss Distillery, releases, or other deployment related topics, a good starting point is the Deployment section of ElixirForum, which can be found here.
I can often be found in IRC on freenode, in the #elixir-lang
channel, and there is
also an Elixir Slack channel as well, though I don't frequent that myself, there are
many people who can answer questions there.
Failing that, feel free to open an issue on the tracker with questions, and I'll do my best to get to it in a timely fashion!
License
MIT. See the LICENSE.md
in this repository for more details.
*Note that all licence references and agreements mentioned in the distillery README section above
are relevant to that project's source code only.