Logo Questions Linux Laravel Mysql Ubuntu Git Menu
 

Passing parameters to Capistrano

I'm looking into the possibility of using Capistrano as a generic deploy solution. By "generic", I mean not-rails. I'm not happy with the quality of the documentation I'm finding, though, granted, I'm not looking at the ones that presume you are deploying rails. So I'll just try to hack up something based on a few examples, but there are a couple of problems I'm facing right from the start.

My problem is that cap deploy doesn't have enough information to do anything. Importantly, it is missing the tag for the version I want to deploy, and this has to be passed on the command line.

The other problem is how I specify my git repository. Our git server is accessed by SSH on the user's account, but I don't know how to change deploy.rb to use the user's id as part of the scm URL.

So, how do I accomplish these things?

Example

I want to deploy the result of the first sprint of the second release. That's tagged in the git repository as r2s1. Also, let's say user "johndoe" gets the task of deploying the system. To access the repository, he has to use the URL [email protected]:app. So the remote URL for the repository depends on the user id.

The command lines to get the desired files would be these:

git clone [email protected]:app
cd app
git checkout r2s1
like image 829
Daniel C. Sobral Avatar asked Apr 18 '12 19:04

Daniel C. Sobral


3 Answers

Update: For Capistrano 3, see scieslak's answer below.


Has jarrad has said, capistrano-ash is a good basic set of helper modules to deploy other project types, though it's not required as at the end of the day. It's just a scripting language and most tasks are done with the system commands and end up becoming almost shell script like.

To pass in parameters, you can set the -s flag when running cap to give you a key value pair. First create a task like this.

desc "Parameter Testing"
task :parameter do
  puts "Parameter test #{branch} #{tag}"
end

Then start your task like so.

cap test:parameter -s branch=master -s tag=1.0.0

For the last part. I would recommend setting up passwordless access using ssh keys to your server. But if you want to take it from the current logged in user. You can do something like this.

desc "Parameter Testing"
task :parameter do
  system("whoami", user)
  puts "Parameter test #{user} #{branch} #{tag}"
end

UPDATE: Edited to work with the latest versions of Capistrano. The configuration array is no longer available.

Global Parameters: See comments Use set :branch, fetch(:branch, 'a-default-value') to use parameters globally. (And pass them with -S instead.)

like image 147
Jamie Sutherland Avatar answered Nov 14 '22 16:11

Jamie Sutherland


Update. Regarding passing parameters to Capistrano 3 task only.

I know this question is quite old but still pops up first on Google when searching for passing parameters to Capistrano task. Unfortunately, the fantastic answer provided by Jamie Sutherland is no longer valid with Capistrano 3. Before you waste your time trying it out except the results to be like below:

cap test:parameter -s branch=master 

outputs :

cap aborted!
OptionParser::AmbiguousOption: ambiguous option: -s
OptionParser::InvalidOption: invalid option: s

and

cap test:parameter -S branch=master 

outputs:

invalid option: -S

The valid answers for Capistrano 3 provided by @senz and Brad Dwyer you can find by clicking this gold link: Capistrano 3 pulling command line arguments

For completeness see the code below to find out about two option you have.

1st option:

You can iterate tasks with the key and value as you do with regular hashes:

desc "This task accepts optional parameters"

task :task_with_params, :first_param, :second_param do |task_name, parameter|
  run_locally do
    puts "Task name: #{task_name}"
    puts "First parameter: #{parameter[:first_param]}"
    puts "Second parameter: #{parameter[:second_param]}"
  end
end

Make sure there is no space between parameters when you call cap:

cap production task_with_params[one,two]

2nd option:

While you call any task, you can assign environmental variables and then call them from the code:

set :first_param, ENV['first_env'] || 'first default'
set :second_param, ENV['second_env'] || 'second default'

desc "This task accepts optional parameters"
task :task_with_env_params do
  run_locally do
    puts "First parameter: #{fetch(:first_param)}"
    puts "Second parameter: #{fetch(:second_param)}"
  end
end

To assign environmental variables, call cap like bellow:

cap production task_with_env_params first_env=one second_env=two

Hope that will save you some time.

like image 24
scieslak Avatar answered Nov 14 '22 18:11

scieslak


I'd suggest to use ENV variables.

Somethings like this (command):

$ GIT_REPO="[email protected]:app" GIT_BRANCH="r2s1" cap testing

Cap config:

#deploy.rb:
task :testing, :roles => :app do
  puts ENV['GIT_REPO']
  puts ENV['GIT_BRANCH']
end

And take a look at the https://github.com/capistrano/capistrano/wiki/2.x-Multistage-Extension, may be this approach will be useful for you as well.

like image 10
deadrunk Avatar answered Nov 14 '22 18:11

deadrunk