public
Description: Simple, Pythonic remote execution and deployment
Homepage: http://fabfile.org
Clone URL: git://github.com/bitprophet/fabric.git
fabric /
name age message
file .gitignore Mon Jun 30 16:15:09 -0700 2008 Let 'fab release' use a special 'release' direc... [karmazilla]
file AUTHORS Mon Jun 23 11:48:32 -0700 2008 AUTHORS file. [karmazilla]
file INSTALL Wed Feb 06 04:07:02 -0800 2008 Explicitly state the distutils in the INSTALL f... [karmazilla]
file LICENSE Fri Jan 04 11:35:54 -0800 2008 Closer to a useable product, plus LICENSE file ... [karmazilla]
file MANIFEST Wed Feb 06 04:08:36 -0800 2008 Put TODO in MANIFEST so end-users and peek it a... [karmazilla]
file README Sat Feb 16 05:58:52 -0800 2008 Spelling. [karmazilla]
file TODO Loading commit data...
directory doc/
file fabfile.py
file fabric.py
directory prototypes/
file scp.py Fri Feb 15 07:29:10 -0800 2008 Added scp.py by grant from James Bardin. [karmazilla]
file setup.py
directory test/ Tue Feb 12 15:55:56 -0800 2008 Revamped the CLI parsing and cut down the line ... [karmazilla]
README
FABRIC README.

Fabric is a simple pythonic remote deployment tool. 

It is designed to upload files to, and run shell commands on, a number of
servers in parallel or serially. These commands are grouped in tasks (regular
python functions) and specified in a 'fabfile'. 

It is a bit like a dumbed down Capistrano, except it's in Python, doesn't
expect you to be deploying Rails applications, and the 'put' command works. 

Unlike Capistrano, Fabric want's to stay small, light, easy to change and not
bound to any specific framework.

Once installed, you can run 'fab help' to learn more about how to use Fabric.