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Description: Remote multi-server automation tool. This repository is no longer being actively maintained. Please ask on the mailing list to find someone who has a well-maintained fork. Thanks!
Homepage: http://www.capify.org
Clone URL: git://github.com/jamis/capistrano.git
jamis (author)
Sun May 11 16:57:03 -0700 2008
commit  4df3ac3b34122870310820199b41e1ee362d8d3c
tree    588e04ab8f67cbf2684b56c2e4cef3509d23485c
parent  610cb337af9ac1eec76880d907d24c8c24e4b036
README
= Capistrano

Capistrano is a utility and framework for executing commands in parallel on multiple remote machines, via SSH. It uses a 
simple DSL (borrowed in part from Rake, http://rake.rubyforge.org/) that allows you to define _tasks_, which may be 
applied to machines in certain roles. It also supports tunneling connections via some gateway machine to allow 
operations to be performed behind VPN's and firewalls.

Capistrano was originally designed to simplify and automate deployment of web applications to distributed environments, 
and originally came bundled with a set of tasks designed for deploying Rails applications. The deployment tasks are now 
(as of Capistrano 2.0) opt-in and require clients to explicitly put
"load 'deploy'" in their recipes.

== Dependencies

* Net::SSH v2 (http://net-ssh.rubyforge.org)
* Net::SFTP v2 (http://net-ssh.rubyforge.org)
* Net::SCP v1 (http://net-ssh.rubyforge.org)
* Net::SSH::Gateway v1 (http://net-ssh.rubyforge.org)
* HighLine (http://highline.rubyforge.org)

If you want to run the tests, you'll also need to have the following dependencies installed:

* Mocha (http://mocha.rubyforge.org)

== Assumptions

Capistrano is "opinionated software", which means it has very firm ideas about how things ought to be done, and tries to 
force those ideas on you. Some of the assumptions behind these opinions are:

* You are using SSH to access the remote servers.
* You either have the same password to all target machines, or you have public keys in place to allow passwordless 
access to them.

Do not expect these assumptions to change.

== Usage

In general, you'll use Capistrano as follows:

* Create a recipe file ("capfile" or "Capfile").
* Use the +cap+ script to execute your recipe.

Use the +cap+ script as follows:

    cap sometask

By default, the script will look for a file called one of +capfile+ or +Capfile+. The +someaction+ text indicates which 
task to execute. You can do "cap -h" to see all the available options and "cap -T" to see all the available tasks.