+1 for Capistrano, it saves so much time ...
But if you need something else even more lightweight ... Vlad the
Deployer (yes, that is the name, no typo) ...
http://www.infoq.com/news/2007/08/vlad-the-deployer
:-)
On Aug 21, 2007, at 12:41 PM, Rob Marscher wrote:
On Aug 20, 2007, at 3:59 PM, Cliff Hirsch wrote:
But...it's still an update and conflicts would be a bear to
deal with in a production environment
You should check out Capistrano some time. It pulls down the whole
app from subversion into a new directory. It then symlinks the
current webroot to the new directory pulled from subversion. You
also keep files - like things users have uploaded - in a separate
directory and symlink to that from your docroot too. That way
they're outside of the app directories.
What I like about this approach is that all the files still exist
from the previous working state and if anything is wrong, you just
switch the docroot symlink to point to the old directory - very
quick recovery.
Capistrano is a ruby app the allows automated scripting and
parallel updates on multiple servers at the same. Worth looking
into before rolling out your own custom shell scripts.
http://manuals.rubyonrails.com/read/chapter/97#page256
http://www.capify.org/getting-started/basics
http://www.simplisticcomplexity.com/2006/8/16/automated-php-
deployment-with-capistrano
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