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How to set target hosts in Fabric file

I want to use Fabric to deploy my web app code to development, staging and production servers. My fabfile:

def deploy_2_dev():   deploy('dev')  def deploy_2_staging():   deploy('staging')  def deploy_2_prod():   deploy('prod')  def deploy(server):   print 'env.hosts:', env.hosts   env.hosts = [server]   print 'env.hosts:', env.hosts 

Sample output:

host:folder user$ fab deploy_2_dev env.hosts: [] env.hosts: ['dev'] No hosts found. Please specify (single) host string for connection: 

When I create a set_hosts() task as shown in the Fabric docs, env.hosts is set properly. However, this is not a viable option, neither is a decorator. Passing hosts on the command line would ultimately result in some kind of shell script that calls the fabfile, I would prefer having one single tool do the job properly.

It says in the Fabric docs that 'env.hosts is simply a Python list object'. From my observations, this is simply not true.

Can anyone explain what is going on here ? How can I set the host to deploy to ?

like image 508
ssc Avatar asked Feb 24 '10 14:02

ssc


1 Answers

I do this by declaring an actual function for each environment. For example:

def test():     env.user = 'testuser'     env.hosts = ['test.server.com']  def prod():     env.user = 'produser'     env.hosts = ['prod.server.com']  def deploy():     ... 

Using the above functions, I would type the following to deploy to my test environment:

fab test deploy 

...and the following to deploy to production:

fab prod deploy 

The nice thing about doing it this way is that the test and prod functions can be used before any fab function, not just deploy. It is incredibly useful.

like image 143
Zac Avatar answered Sep 20 '22 14:09

Zac