Minimalistic SSH deployment.
Copy this one-liner and run it in your shell:
SHPT=/usr/local/bin/shipit && curl -o $SHPT https://raw.githubusercontent.com/sapegin/shipit/master/bin/shipit && chmod +x $SHPT && unset SHPTYou can use this command to update shipit too.
Note: Use sudo or replace /usr/local/bin/shipit to path somewhere inside your home directory.
shipit [option] <command>| Command | Aliases | Description |
|---|---|---|
<target> |
Execute target target on the remote host |
|
| list | ls | Print list of available targets |
| console | shell, ssh | Open an SSH session on remote host |
exec <cmd> |
run | Execute cmd on the remote host |
copy <file> |
cp | Copy files to the remote host |
| --version | -V | Print shipit version |
| --help | -h | Print help |
| Option | Description |
|---|---|
| -c, --config | Config file path (default: .shipit) |
| -r, --remote | Override remote host |
| -v, --verbose | Enable verbose mode for SSH |
Execute deploy target:
shipitExecute status target:
shipit statusShow a list of available targets:
shipit listExecute uptime command on the remote host:
shipit exec uptimeYou need to create .shipit file in your project’s directory.
Here is a typical config:
host='myhost'
path='sites/example.com'
[deploy:local]
git push origin master
[deploy]
git checkout master
git pull
npm install
grunt build
[status]
uptimeThe only required things are host and path parameters, and [deploy] or [deploy:local] target.
For non-standard port number and to specify which SSH key to use, edit your SSH config, ~/.ssh/config:
host example.com
IdentityFile ~/.ssh/keyfile
port 10022
user usernamehere
It’s the same host you use in ssh command. It could be string of format <username>@<ip>:<port> or just a name of ~/.ssh/config record.
Project path on remote host. shipit will cd to this directory before executing any command.
Target is just a bunch of shell command that will be executed on remote host via SSH. You can define as many targets as you want.
Note that you can’t use blank lines inside targets but you can use comments (#) and other things—it’s just a shell script.
If you append :local to a target name (like [name:local]) it will be executed on your local machine before remote target with the same name. You can define only local, only remote or both targets.
In case of any errors in local target remote target won’t be executed.
You can use these variables:
$SSH_HOST— your config’shostvalue,$SSH_PATH— your config’spathvalue.
host='myhost'
path='sites/example.com'
[deploy:local]
git push origin master
[deploy]
git checkout master
git pull
npm install
npm prune
npm run buildhost='myhost'
path='sites/example.com'
[deploy:local]
npm test
npm run build
rsync --archive --compress --force --delete public/ $SSH_HOST:$SSH_PATHThe changelog can be found on the Releases page.
This software has been developed with lots of coffee, buy me one more cup to keep it going.
Artem Sapegin and contributors.
MIT License, see the included License.md file.