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How can I determine if the org that I'm currently connected to is a scratch org?


Apex email extension points - How to replace Messaging.sendEmail or change it's behaviourHow can a Sandbox spin unwanted on a prerelease pod and how to undo it?Workaround for SELECT * (SELECT all) in sfdx force:data:tree:export SOQLCan .forceignore be used to not pull profiles that only exist in the scratch org?Salesforce DX: How to pre-populate scratch orgs with custom objects?Salesforcef DX: How to create a scratch org that opens in Classic by default?Where & how to find out what can be automized on SFDX scratch org creationError creating Scratch Org - The Streaming request failed to handshakeHow to delete Scratch Org user from deleted scratch?Scratch org: how to retrieve metadata













4















When I'm within a Salesforce org, how can I tell if that org is a Scratch Org or not?



Ideally this would be via Apex, but it could be an API call if required.



This would be useful information for the creator of a managed package who may not otherwise know what type of org is running the code.




I've had a couple of thoughts on how this might be achieved:



  1. Check if the pod/instance that Scratch orgs are created on are separate from the general population of sandbox orgs. I suspect that scratch orgs have dedicated hardware. E.g. a new scratch org I just created is on p0/CS31.

  2. Look for describe Metadata that is unique to only scratch orgs.









share|improve this question
























  • Full disclosure, this question has been discussed in the GoodDaySir slack channel. For posterity, it would be useful to have a solution listed in the open. gooddaysir.slack.com/messages/C3BJMEH3J/convo/…

    – Daniel Ballinger
    22 mins ago












  • Can you see the relevant ActiveScratchOrg or ScratchOrgInfo from within one?

    – Adrian Larson
    21 mins ago












  • @AdrianLarson Those are in the DevHub, aren't they? I don't think they would be reachable from the Scratch org itself in isolation.

    – Daniel Ballinger
    16 mins ago















4















When I'm within a Salesforce org, how can I tell if that org is a Scratch Org or not?



Ideally this would be via Apex, but it could be an API call if required.



This would be useful information for the creator of a managed package who may not otherwise know what type of org is running the code.




I've had a couple of thoughts on how this might be achieved:



  1. Check if the pod/instance that Scratch orgs are created on are separate from the general population of sandbox orgs. I suspect that scratch orgs have dedicated hardware. E.g. a new scratch org I just created is on p0/CS31.

  2. Look for describe Metadata that is unique to only scratch orgs.









share|improve this question
























  • Full disclosure, this question has been discussed in the GoodDaySir slack channel. For posterity, it would be useful to have a solution listed in the open. gooddaysir.slack.com/messages/C3BJMEH3J/convo/…

    – Daniel Ballinger
    22 mins ago












  • Can you see the relevant ActiveScratchOrg or ScratchOrgInfo from within one?

    – Adrian Larson
    21 mins ago












  • @AdrianLarson Those are in the DevHub, aren't they? I don't think they would be reachable from the Scratch org itself in isolation.

    – Daniel Ballinger
    16 mins ago













4












4








4








When I'm within a Salesforce org, how can I tell if that org is a Scratch Org or not?



Ideally this would be via Apex, but it could be an API call if required.



This would be useful information for the creator of a managed package who may not otherwise know what type of org is running the code.




I've had a couple of thoughts on how this might be achieved:



  1. Check if the pod/instance that Scratch orgs are created on are separate from the general population of sandbox orgs. I suspect that scratch orgs have dedicated hardware. E.g. a new scratch org I just created is on p0/CS31.

  2. Look for describe Metadata that is unique to only scratch orgs.









share|improve this question
















When I'm within a Salesforce org, how can I tell if that org is a Scratch Org or not?



Ideally this would be via Apex, but it could be an API call if required.



This would be useful information for the creator of a managed package who may not otherwise know what type of org is running the code.




I've had a couple of thoughts on how this might be achieved:



  1. Check if the pod/instance that Scratch orgs are created on are separate from the general population of sandbox orgs. I suspect that scratch orgs have dedicated hardware. E.g. a new scratch org I just created is on p0/CS31.

  2. Look for describe Metadata that is unique to only scratch orgs.






apex scratch-org






share|improve this question















share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited 17 mins ago







Daniel Ballinger

















asked 37 mins ago









Daniel BallingerDaniel Ballinger

74.3k15154405




74.3k15154405












  • Full disclosure, this question has been discussed in the GoodDaySir slack channel. For posterity, it would be useful to have a solution listed in the open. gooddaysir.slack.com/messages/C3BJMEH3J/convo/…

    – Daniel Ballinger
    22 mins ago












  • Can you see the relevant ActiveScratchOrg or ScratchOrgInfo from within one?

    – Adrian Larson
    21 mins ago












  • @AdrianLarson Those are in the DevHub, aren't they? I don't think they would be reachable from the Scratch org itself in isolation.

    – Daniel Ballinger
    16 mins ago

















  • Full disclosure, this question has been discussed in the GoodDaySir slack channel. For posterity, it would be useful to have a solution listed in the open. gooddaysir.slack.com/messages/C3BJMEH3J/convo/…

    – Daniel Ballinger
    22 mins ago












  • Can you see the relevant ActiveScratchOrg or ScratchOrgInfo from within one?

    – Adrian Larson
    21 mins ago












  • @AdrianLarson Those are in the DevHub, aren't they? I don't think they would be reachable from the Scratch org itself in isolation.

    – Daniel Ballinger
    16 mins ago
















Full disclosure, this question has been discussed in the GoodDaySir slack channel. For posterity, it would be useful to have a solution listed in the open. gooddaysir.slack.com/messages/C3BJMEH3J/convo/…

– Daniel Ballinger
22 mins ago






Full disclosure, this question has been discussed in the GoodDaySir slack channel. For posterity, it would be useful to have a solution listed in the open. gooddaysir.slack.com/messages/C3BJMEH3J/convo/…

– Daniel Ballinger
22 mins ago














Can you see the relevant ActiveScratchOrg or ScratchOrgInfo from within one?

– Adrian Larson
21 mins ago






Can you see the relevant ActiveScratchOrg or ScratchOrgInfo from within one?

– Adrian Larson
21 mins ago














@AdrianLarson Those are in the DevHub, aren't they? I don't think they would be reachable from the Scratch org itself in isolation.

– Daniel Ballinger
16 mins ago





@AdrianLarson Those are in the DevHub, aren't they? I don't think they would be reachable from the Scratch org itself in isolation.

– Daniel Ballinger
16 mins ago










1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes


















4














The SourceMember sObject is only present in scratch orgs. Its presence would be a sign that you are in a scratch org. The gotcha would be that it is only accessible via the Tooling API and not Apex alone.



https://developer.salesforce.com/docs/atlas.en-us.api_tooling.meta/api_tooling/tooling_api_objects_sourcemember.htm






share|improve this answer























  • This seems like a great solution and shouldn't be too difficult with an HTTP request from Apex. Especially since we don't need the Remote Site setting anymore.

    – Daniel Ballinger
    13 mins ago











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1 Answer
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1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes









active

oldest

votes






active

oldest

votes









4














The SourceMember sObject is only present in scratch orgs. Its presence would be a sign that you are in a scratch org. The gotcha would be that it is only accessible via the Tooling API and not Apex alone.



https://developer.salesforce.com/docs/atlas.en-us.api_tooling.meta/api_tooling/tooling_api_objects_sourcemember.htm






share|improve this answer























  • This seems like a great solution and shouldn't be too difficult with an HTTP request from Apex. Especially since we don't need the Remote Site setting anymore.

    – Daniel Ballinger
    13 mins ago















4














The SourceMember sObject is only present in scratch orgs. Its presence would be a sign that you are in a scratch org. The gotcha would be that it is only accessible via the Tooling API and not Apex alone.



https://developer.salesforce.com/docs/atlas.en-us.api_tooling.meta/api_tooling/tooling_api_objects_sourcemember.htm






share|improve this answer























  • This seems like a great solution and shouldn't be too difficult with an HTTP request from Apex. Especially since we don't need the Remote Site setting anymore.

    – Daniel Ballinger
    13 mins ago













4












4








4







The SourceMember sObject is only present in scratch orgs. Its presence would be a sign that you are in a scratch org. The gotcha would be that it is only accessible via the Tooling API and not Apex alone.



https://developer.salesforce.com/docs/atlas.en-us.api_tooling.meta/api_tooling/tooling_api_objects_sourcemember.htm






share|improve this answer













The SourceMember sObject is only present in scratch orgs. Its presence would be a sign that you are in a scratch org. The gotcha would be that it is only accessible via the Tooling API and not Apex alone.



https://developer.salesforce.com/docs/atlas.en-us.api_tooling.meta/api_tooling/tooling_api_objects_sourcemember.htm







share|improve this answer












share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer










answered 18 mins ago









HeberHeber

15317




15317












  • This seems like a great solution and shouldn't be too difficult with an HTTP request from Apex. Especially since we don't need the Remote Site setting anymore.

    – Daniel Ballinger
    13 mins ago

















  • This seems like a great solution and shouldn't be too difficult with an HTTP request from Apex. Especially since we don't need the Remote Site setting anymore.

    – Daniel Ballinger
    13 mins ago
















This seems like a great solution and shouldn't be too difficult with an HTTP request from Apex. Especially since we don't need the Remote Site setting anymore.

– Daniel Ballinger
13 mins ago





This seems like a great solution and shouldn't be too difficult with an HTTP request from Apex. Especially since we don't need the Remote Site setting anymore.

– Daniel Ballinger
13 mins ago

















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