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A tool for simple deployments to a single server (for now) from common source control providers.

  • Github, Gitlab and Bitbucket support
  • Zero downtime deployments with rollbacks
  • Fine grained control of deployments using a repository based configuration file
  • Responsive UI - fully usable on any device
  • Shared and writable path support
  • Arbitrary hook support
  • Slack notifications
  • Simple user account management

Installation

deploy has a couple of requirements to run.

  • PHP 7.1.8+
  • Beanstalkd work queue (available as standard in most linux distributions)
  • A backend database supported by PDO and phinx
  • composer for deploy dependency installation

In addition it is strongly recommended that you use an RDBMS like MySQL, MariaDB or PostgreSQL to host the database. The default SQLite database is suitable for development but you will almost certainly run into database contention locks if you use it in production.

deploy includes a queue runner that does the heavy lifting. You can run this via cron if you want to but I recommend using supervisord (again available in most linux distributions in the standard package catalogue).

Once you have the required software installed on the host you can then get on with the installation.

Generating Provider Tokens

deploy currently supports the three main VCS providers - Github, Gitlab and Bitbucket. Not all have to be configured for deploy to work but you will need at least one!

NB: In the examples below we add each configuration variable to the providers section. Just in case its not clear, you should only have a single providers section and each set of credentials should be added below it. See the local.yaml.dist file as a reference.

Github Personal Access Token

To generate a personal access token, navigate to your Personal access tokens settings page. Generate a token with the repo scope enabled - no others are needed. Add the token to your deploy configuration in the providers section like this:

providers:
  github:
    token: thisismysuperlongtokensecret

Gitlab Personal Access Token

Visit the Personal Access Tokens page in your Gitlab account and generate a token with api scope. You can add an expiry date if you want to but don't forget to replace it when the time comes!! (I'd recommend not setting an expiry or setting a very long one). Then add your token to the providers section like this:

providers:
  gitlab:
    token: fancygitlabtokengoeshere

Bitbucket App Password

For Bitbucket support deploy currently uses an app password. This may change in future though. At the moment you can generate one by visiting Bitbucket Settings > Access Management | App Passwords. Once in there generate a new token with Repositories > Read scope. Then add your username and app password to your deploy configuration like this:

providers:
  bitbucket:
    username: myusername
    token: shineyapppasswordhere

Codebase setup

  • Create a database and database user in your chosen DBMS. deploy needs CREATE, DROP, ALTER, SELECT, INSERT, UPDATE, DELETE, INDEX permissions. For MariaDB / MySQL it's likely to be something like this:
CREATE DATABASE `deploy`;
CREATE USER `deploy`@`localhost` IDENTIFIED BY `verystrongpassword`;
GRANT CREATE, DROP, ALTER, SELECT, INSERT, UPDATE, DELETE, INDEX ON `deploy`.* TO `deploy`@`localhost`;
  • Clone this repository into an appropriate place on your server
git clone https://github.com/ronanchilvers/deploy.git deploy
cd deploy
  • Install dependencies
composer install
  • Create the local configuration. Instructions are provided within the file. See above for some guidance on generating tokens to use with the various VCS providers.
cp local.yaml.dist local.yaml
  • Run phinx database migrations
php vendor/bin/phinx migrate
  • Create a user.
php bin/console user:create "Fred Bloggs" [email protected]
  • Make sure the log and twig directories are writable by the web server. I'm assuming here that your web server runs as www-data group and that you've checked out the codebase with that group set.
chmod g+w var/log var/twig
  • You should now be able to navigate to the URL you've installed deploy under and login.

Queue worker setup

We assume here that you're using supervisord to run the queue worker. You'll find a sample supervisord program configuration file in the docs/ subdirectory. One point to note - in order to run correctly composer requires that either the HOME or COMPOSER_HOME environment variables are set. You can read more about it here.

  • Copy the sample config file into supervisor's program directory (usually something like /etc/supervisor/conf.d) or include the contents in supervisor's main configuration file.
  • Update the supervisor configuration appropriately for your environment.
  • Ask supervisor to update it's configuration
sudo supervisorctl update
  • You should now see the queue worker running under supervisor control
sudo supervisorctl status

Creating deployments

deploy organises deployments by project. Each project is deployed into its own directory in the filesystem. deploy maintains a set of deployments for a project, one of which can be the active one. You can control how many deployments are kept for each project using the deploy.yaml configuration file (see below for details).

Creating a project is simply a matter of clicking 'Add Project' in the navigation bar at the top, filling in the details and clicking 'Save'. You will then be show the project view. To deploy the project, click the 'Deploy' button at the top right, choose the branch or tag you want to deploy and then click the red 'Deploy Now' button. The 'Output' tab below will show you the progess of the deployment steps.

You can also deploy your project using a webhook. When you have added a project, on the project view, click the cog icon next to the 'Deploy' button to edit the project. At the bottom of the page is a 'Webhook Deployments' section which shows the unique URL for triggering a project deployment. You can call this URL in a commit hook or from your CI pipeline as a post-build hook so that the project is deployed automatically.

Controlling deployments

deploy can be customised per project by using directives in a file named deploy.yaml placed in the root of the project working copy. Using this file you can assign paths that should be writable (folders only), define shared paths (files or folders), assign hooks to run before or after specific stages, define specific paths that should be removed when deploying (files or folders) and several other things.

Directives

  • notify - This directive controls notifications when deploying code. Currently only slack is implemented but support is planned for other services.
notify:
  slack:
    webhook: https://hooks.slack.com/services/12345679/ABCDE/FGHIJK
  • composer - This directive allows you to control the behaviour of the composer dependency manager, assuming that it is used in your project. If deploy doesn't find a composer.json file in the root of your working copy, composer support is disabled and this directive has no effect.
    • command - Define the command composer will install dependencies with. The default is install --no-interaction --prefer-dist --no-dev --optimize-autoloader
composer:
  command: install --no-dev -o
  • shared - Define shared folders or files. These are locations that persist between deployments, for example a cache directory or configuration file. The files and folders subkeys can be used to define a list or files or folders that should be shared. Paths are always relative to the root of the deployment working copy.
shared:
  files:
    - config.php
    - .env
  folders:
    - var/cache
    - var/uploads
  • writables - Define writable folders. These locations will be configured to be writable by the using a chmod command. The default mode for writable folders is '0770' (user and group readable / writable). Note it is possible for a folder to be both shared and writable.
writables:
  paths:
    - var/cache
    - var/uploads

NB: Changing the writable mode used cannot be done via deploy.yaml but can be done in your local.yaml file with the following keys. Note that using '0777' is never recommended - if you need it, you should take that as a sign that your permission structure is wrong.

build:
  chmod:
    writable_folder: '0770'
  • clear_paths - Define a list of files or folders that should be removed on deployment. This action happens right before activation (switching the new deployment live) and therefore its safe to delete files like composer.json / composer.lock / package.json, etc (unless you have a hook that needs them of course - see below). You can also remove the deploy.yaml file if you want to - its not required to be on disk.
clear_paths:
  paths:
    - README.md
    - package.json
    - composer.json
    - composer.lock
    - deploy.yaml

Hooks

deploy supports running arbitrary hooks before and after each deployment action. You can specify any CLI command and it will run using the permissions of the user your queue worker runs as via supervisor. The deployment actions are:

  • create_workspace
  • checkout
  • composer
  • shared
  • writables
  • clear_paths
  • activate
  • finalise
  • cleanup

You can define before or after hooks for any of these actions by adding a new list to your deploy.yaml file. For example:

composer:
  after:
    - /usr/bin/php scripts/post_dependency_script.php
    - /bin/bash scripts/my_bash_script.sh arg1 arg2
activate:
  before:
    - /usr/bin/php vendor/bin/phinx migrate
shared:
  after:
    - /usr/bin/php scripts/make_sure_shared_files_are_populated.php

Obviously the above configuration is made up to illustrate the point - you can run anything you need to make your deployment work. The activate.before hook shows an example of running the phinx database migrations tool to automatically update the database schema prior to activation.

Example deploy.yaml

---
notify:
  slack:
    webhook: https://hooks.slack.com/services/12345679/ABCDE/FGHIJK
composer:
  install: install --no-dev -o
  after:
    - /usr/bin/php scripts/myscript.php
shared:
  files:
    - ".env.config.ini"
  folders:
    - var/log
    - var/cache
    - var/db
writables:
  paths:
    - var/log
    - var/cache
clear_paths:
  paths:
    - README.md
    - package.json
    - deploy.yaml
  after:
    - /usr/bin/php vendor/bin/phinx migrate

Roadmap (sort of!)

Things to do

  • Unit tests!

Things that are done

  • Bitbucket support
  • Ability to trigger a deployment using a webhook
  • Implement re-activation rather than deployment for old releases (change of symlink)
  • Block deployments for a project when one is queued or in progress
  • Better user account support
  • User accounts
  • Hooks
  • Notifications
  • Ability to deploy a specific branch
  • Associate deployments with users
  • Make sure project keys are unique

Things to think about

  • Show git history since the current active deployment
  • Environment variable support
  • Ability to keep specific releases
  • Allow different / extended defaults for specific frameworks
  • Multi-server support

Useful notes (for development)