3.3 KiB
Hosts
To define a new host use host() function. Deployer keeps list of
all defined tasks in the Deployer::get()->hosts
collection.
host('example.org');
Each host contains own configuration key-value pairs. The host() call defines two important configs: alias and hostname.
- hostname - used then connecting to remote host.
- alias - used as a key in
Deployer::get()->hosts
collection.
task('test', function () {
writeln('The {{alias}} is {{hostname}}');
});
$ dep test
[example.org] The example.org is example.org
We can override hostname via set()
method:
host('example.org')
->set('hostname', 'example.cloud.google.com');
Now new hostname will be used for ssh connect, and host will be referred in Deployer via the alias.
$ dep test
[example.org] The example.org is example.cloud.google.com
Another important ssh connection parameter is remote_user
.
host('example.org')
->set('hostname', 'example.cloud.google.com');
->set('remote_user', 'deployer');
Now Deployer will be using something
like ssh deployer@example.cloud.google.com
for establishing connection.
Also, Deployer's Host
class has special setter methods (for better IDE
autocompletion).
host('example.org')
->setHostname('example.cloud.google.com');
->setRemoteUser('deployer');
:::info Config file
It is a good practice to keep connection parameters out of deploy.php
file, as
they can change depending on where are deploy executed. Only specify hostname
and remote_user
and other keep in ~/.ssh/config
:
Host *
IdentityFile ~/.ssh/id_rsa
:::
Host config
Method | Value |
---|---|
setHostname |
The hostname |
setRemoteUser |
The remote_user |
setPort |
The port |
setConfigFile |
For example, ~/.ssh/config . |
setIdentityFile |
For example, ~/.ssh/id_rsa . |
setForwardAgent |
Default: true . |
setSshMultiplexing |
Default: true . |
setShell |
Default: bash -ls . |
setDeployPath |
For example, ~/myapp . |
setLabels |
Key-value pairs for host selector. |
setSshArguments |
For example, ['-o UserKnownHostsFile=/dev/null'] |
Multiple hosts
You can pass multiple hosts to the host function:
host('example.org', 'deployer.org', ...)
->setRemoteUser('anton');
Host ranges
If you have a lot of hosts following similar patterns, you can describe them like this rather than listing each hostname:
host('www[01:50].example.org');
For numeric patterns, leading zeros can be included or removed, as desired. Ranges are inclusive.
You can also define alphabetic ranges:
host('db[a:f].example.org');
Localhost
A special function localhost() defines a special local host. Deployer will not connect to this host and will execute commands locally.
localhost(); // Alias and hostname will be "localhost".
localhost('ci'); // Alias is "ci", hostname is "localhost".
YAML Inventory
You can use import() function to keep host separately in, for example, inventory.yaml file.
import('inventory.yaml');
hosts:
example.org:
remote_user: deployer
deployer.org:
remote_user: deployer