/PHPloy

PHPloy - Incremental Git FTP deployment tool that supports submodules, multiple servers and rollbacks.

Primary LanguagePHP

PHPloy

Version 2.0.0

PHPloy is a incremental Git FTP deployment tool. By keeping track of the state of the remote server(s) it deploys only the files that were committed since the last deployment. PHPloy supports submodules, sub-submodules, deploying to multiple servers and rollbacks.

Requirements

  • PHP 5.3+ command line interpreter (CLI)

Windows users can optionally download AnsiCon to enable the display of colors in the command prompt. Install it by running ansicon -i from a command prompt or "Run" window.

Usage

As any script, you can use PHPloy globally, from your bin directory or locally, from your project directory:

Using PHPloy locally (per project)

  1. Drop phploy into your project.
  2. Create the deploy.ini file.
  3. Run php phploy in terminal.

Using PHPloy globally in Linux

  1. Drop phploy into /usr/local/bin and make it executable by running sudo chmod +x phploy.
  2. Create the deploy.ini file inside your project folder.
  3. Run phploy in terminal.

Installing PHPloy globally in Windows

  1. Extract or clone the PHPloy files into a folder of your choice
  2. Ensure phploy.bat can find the path to php.exe by either:
    • Adding the path to php.exe to your system path
    • Manually adding the path inside phploy.bat
  3. Add the phploy folder to your system path
  4. Run phploy from the command prompt (from your repository folder)

Adding folders to your system path means that you can execute an application from any folder, and not have to specify the full path to it. To add folders to your system path:

  1. Press WINDOWS + PAUSE to open Control Panel > System screen
  2. Click "Advanced System Settings"
  3. Click "Environment Variables"
  4. Under "System variables" there should be a variable called "Path". Select this and click "Edit".
  5. Keep the existing paths there, add a semi-colon ; at the end and then type the location of the appropriate folder. Spaces are OK, and no quotes are required.
  6. Click OK

deploy.ini

The deploy.ini file hold your credentials and it must be in the root directory of your project. Use as many servers as you need and whichever configuration type you prefer.

; This is a sample deploy.ini file.
; You can specify as many servers as you need
; and use whichever configuration way you like.
; 
; NOTE: If you run phploy without specifying which server to deploy to, it will deploy to ALL servers by default
;
; NOTE: If a value in the ini file contains any non-alphanumeric characters it needs to be enclosed in double-quotes (").

[staging]
user = example
pass = password
host = staging-example.com
path = /path/to/installation
port = 21
passive = true

[production]
user = example
pass = password
host = production-example.com
path = /path/to/installation
port = 21
passive = true

[quickmode]
; If that seemed too long for you, you can use quickmode instead
staging = ftp://user:password@staging-example.com:21/path/to/installation
production = ftp://user:password@production-example.com:21/path/to/installation

Quickmode will not work if your username contains :, /, or if your password contains /. In these cases specify each item individually.

The first time it's executed, PHPloy will assume that your deployment server is empty, and will upload ALL the files of your project. If the remote server already has a copy of the files, you can specify which revision it is on using the --sync command (see below).

Multiple servers

PHPloy allows you to configure multiple servers in the deploy file and deploy to any of them with ease.

By default PHPloy will deploy to ALL specified servers. To specify one single server, run:

phploy -s servername

or:

phploy --server servername

servername stands for the name you have given to the server in the deploy.ini configuration file.

Rollbacks

Warning: the --rollback option does not currently update your submodules correctly. Until this is fixed, we recommend that you checkout the revision that you would like to deploy, update your submodules, and then run phploy.

PHPloy allows you to roll back to an earlier version when you need to. Rolling back is very easy.

To roll back to the previous commit, you just run:

phploy --rollback

To roll back to whatever commit you want to, you run:

phploy --rollback="commit-hash-goes-here"

When you run a rollback, the files in your working copy will revert temporarily to the version of the rollback you are deploying. When the deployment has finished, everything will go back as it was.

Note that there is not a short version of --rollback.

Listing changed files

PHPloy allows you to check out what are going to be uploaded/deleted before you actually push them. Just run:

phploy -l

Or:

phploy --list

Updating or "syncing" the remote revision

If you want to update the .revision file on the server to match your current local revision, run:

phploy --sync

If you want to set it to another previous commit revision, you just specify the revision like this:

phploy --sync="your-revision-hash-here"

How it works

PHPloy stores a file called .revision on your server. This file contains the hash of the commit that you have deployed to that server. When you run phploy, it downloads that file and compares the commit reference in it with the commit you are trying to deploy to find out which files to upload.

PHPloy also stores a .revision file for each submodule in your repository.

Contribute

If you've got any suggestions, questions, or anything else about PHPloy, you should create an issue here.

Credits

The people that have brought PHPloy to you are:

Version history

v2.0.0-beta4 (13 Aug 2014)

  • Feature: PHPloy version header more prominent - makes it easier to see where deployments started when scrolling back through long console output
  • Feature: Log deployment size and show on deploy completion
  • Bugfix: phploy would ignore any environments after quickmode
  • Bugfix: file upload counter sometimes incorrect
  • More informative error messages in several cases

v2.0.0-beta3 (26 May 2014)

  • Colored console output is now optional and disabled by default on Windows unless Ansicon is detected. (Colors can be disabled through the --no-colors command-line option.)
  • ANSI color functionality has been moved to a separate class, and is now also a separate project on Github

v2.0.0-beta2 (11 April 2014)

  • Added more ANSI colours to output
  • Added --debug option which provides much more verbose output
  • Added --help option which displays the readme.md file
  • Output now clearly indicates if it's running in --list mode
  • Upload process now displays number of files in the queue (eg. "1 of 52")
  • Internal: ANSI colours are now expressed through simple HTML-like tags such as , etc.
  • Internal: git & console commands are now run from a central function to reduce code repetition and potential bugs
  • Fictional: phploy now makes your coffee during a long deployment

v2.0.0-beta (April 2014)

  • Added support for Windows machines by:
    • removing incompatible UTF characters
    • added phploy.bat
  • Added some additional console output and reformatted some of the outputted strings for clarity
  • Added command-line option --skip-subsubmodules