Roch
Roch

Reputation: 22051

Git Push into Production (FTP)

I would like to know if there is an easy way to push a GIT repository into production (on a FTP server) ? Thanks

Upvotes: 133

Views: 104000

Answers (15)

Sdembla
Sdembla

Reputation: 1707

I was struggling a lot to figure out this. I have figured out an easy way to get this done from various sources (git-ftpINSTALL, git-ftpUPLOAD, git-ftpIssue, git-ftpPUSH). You can read for reference but there is no need because I have mentioned step by step process below.

First thing first: Install git and curl using brew on MAC OS

brew install git
brew install curl --with-ssl --with-libssh2
brew install git-ftp

Run the following commands:

git clone https://github.com/git-ftp/git-ftp.git
cd git-ftp
git tag # see available tags
git checkout <tag> # checkout the latest tag by replacing <tag>
sudo make install

Updating using git

git pull
git tag # see available tags
git checkout <tag> # checkout the latest tag by replacing <tag>
sudo make install

Setup

git config git-ftp.url YourFtpServerName.Net
git config git-ftp.user FtpUserName
git config git-ftp.password YourPassword

Upload all files

git ftp init

Or if the files are already there

git ftp catchup

Work and deploy

echo "Hello StackOverflow" >> index.txt
git commit application/libraries/index.txt -m "I love StackOverflow"
git ftp push

If there is an error: pathspec 'index.txt' did not match any file(s) known to git. It means the file hasn't been staged yet, so add the file and then try commit.

git add application/libraries/index.txt
git commit application/libraries/index.txt -m "I love StackOverflow"

Hope this helps.

Upvotes: 0

Tim Henigan
Tim Henigan

Reputation: 62208

Some tools recently added to the Git wiki:

git-ftp by René Moser is a simple shell script for doing FTP the Git way. Use git-ftp.sh to upload only the Git tracked files to a FTP server, which have changed since the last upload. This saves time and bandwidth. Even if you play with different branches, git-ftp.sh knows which files are different. No ordinary FTP client can do that.

git-ftp by Edward Z. Yang is a simple script written in python for uploading files in a Git repository via FTP, only transferring new files and removing old files.

Upvotes: 162

bramchi
bramchi

Reputation: 810

Check out https://gitftp-deploy.com/ if you're on MacOS and you like GUIs.

It is a nice little application that uses Git to track changes and upload only the changed files with FTP.

Especially handy if you don't like paying monthly fees for dozens of smaller projects with small teams.

Upvotes: 0

Joel Meza Baca
Joel Meza Baca

Reputation: 676

You could use Deployhq.com it works like a charm, the only thing you need to do is to set up your repository and FTP account.

They currently the following version control systems:

Git, Subversion, Mercurial.

With repository hosted

  • GitHub
  • Bitbucket
  • GitLab
  • Codebase

enter image description here

Upvotes: 5

Dave Thompson
Dave Thompson

Reputation: 635

https://www.deployhq.com/

Free for one project and it works very very well.

Upvotes: 2

Dave Thompson
Dave Thompson

Reputation: 635

You can try FTPloy ...

https://ftploy.com

"Push changes to GitHub or Bitbucket."

"Deploy Changes automatically to your server"

You have one free project to try it out with. I am currently using for a small php website and it works quite well. A few bugs on the site but its an active project so at least they are working on it.

Upvotes: 0

Christopher King
Christopher King

Reputation: 10951

You can always try to mount the ftp to a local directory using http://linuxconfig.org/mount-remote-ftp-directory-host-locally-into-linux-filesystem.

Then you can use it the same way as this.

Upvotes: 0

Simon E.
Simon E.

Reputation: 58530

I've found PHPloy a great tool for sending your Git commits to remote servers over FTP. It works from the command-line and is written in PHP (and even detects changes in submodules).

https://github.com/banago/PHPloy

git commit ...
phploy -s staging
phploy -s production

Done!

(Disclaimer: after using it for a while I've now contributed some code patches and improvements, making it Windows-compatible.)

Upvotes: 12

Geri Borb&#225;s
Geri Borb&#225;s

Reputation: 16628

If you prefer GUI, use SourceTree, you can easily setup a Custom Action that uses git-ftp mentioned above. A brief description on setup (for Mac) at Push a Git repository to an FTP

enter image description here

Upvotes: 14

Rob Sawyer
Rob Sawyer

Reputation: 2193

If you're on a mac and have Transmit, I'd recommend the following git-tranmit script (https://gist.github.com/379750). It uses DockSend to send only the last updated files. If you're not familiar with DockSend, check out http://www.panic.com/blog/2010/11/15-secrets-of-transmit/.

Setup:

  1. cp git-transit /usr/sbin/.
  2. cd /usr/sbin
  3. chmod +x git-transmit
  4. Setup drop send for your live app
  5. Run git-transmit in your git repository.

Upvotes: 10

Marco Antonio
Marco Antonio

Reputation: 339

This is a script in PHP to upload almost automatically the git-diff to a FTP server:

http://code.google.com/p/upload-git-diff-with-ftp/

Upvotes: 4

dodgy_coder
dodgy_coder

Reputation: 13053

There's a Ruby script here - Ruby git-deploy via FTP or SSH which uploads only the changed files in the git repo via FTP or SSH.

As mentioned in another answer, here is the Python git-ftp.py script which does a similar thing.

And here is the shell script version of git-ftp.

There is also a Ruby gem project called git-deploy which lets you setup a custom deploy via a git remote using the git push command, in the same way as the Heroku and Azure services. For this one you may need to write custom methods to deploy via FTP and I think it assumes you have SSH access to your production server.

Upvotes: 1

sblundy
sblundy

Reputation: 61434

That's not what git is for, strictly speaking. However, if your source is something that doesn't need compiling or processing, say a website consisting entirely of html and javascript files and the like, you could have a clone of the repo on your webserver and use git pull from the server to keep it up-to-date. Note, I would config your webserver to hide the git directory and such. And that's just the beginning of the security concerns.

If you have any sort of compiling or processing, you should start looking at Ant, Maven, BuildR, SBT, etc.

Upvotes: 5

d11wtq
d11wtq

Reputation: 35318

Add it as a remote, then you can push to it, however simply pushing code isn't enough, it needs to be merged with the working tree. The easiest way is to go the other way round, have a working tree on the server and fetch and merge into that.

Upvotes: 0

Justin Ethier
Justin Ethier

Reputation: 134247

If you are putting code into production, I recommend using an "installer" such as an RPM package to install your code. That way it will be version stamped and you will be able to leverage the installer package to support updates to the production code. Git is not really designed to support production installations, it is intended to track changes to the code itself.

In any event, with an .RPM (or EXE or whatever) built, you can just FTP it to the production system and install it like any other package.

Upvotes: 0

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