And, if you did do as Jamis suggested, does your capfile include the "load
deploy.rb" line ?
- Lee

2009/3/12 Jamis Buck <[email protected]>

>
> Did you run 'capify' on your project directory?
>
>  capify .
>
> (note the '.', which means 'current directory').
>
> - Jamis
>
> On 3/11/09 5:40 PM, Josh Rachner wrote:
> > I actually meant to put cap deploy:update, sorry about that. I got it to
> > the point now where it says "the task 'deploy:update' does not exist." I
> > have the deploy.rb in my config dir. That is the correct place for it
> > right?
> >
> > If all my gems are in /usr/lib/ruby/gems/1.8/gems, then I just include
> > that in my path right?
> >
> > On Wed, Mar 11, 2009 at 6:36 PM, Sarah Mei <[email protected]
> > <mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:
> >
> >
> >     Could it be as easy as moving the semicolon?
> >
> >     cap deploy:update
> >
> >     On Wed, Mar 11, 2009 at 4:13 PM, [email protected]
> >     <mailto:[email protected]>
> >     <[email protected] <mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:
> >     >
> >     > I get this eror when I run the cmd cap:deploy update
> >     >
> >     > bash: cap:deploy: command not found
> >     >
> >     > The gem is installed, the path is in my .bashrc file, and I even
> >     > copied and pasted the gem into my vendor/plugins folder (not sure
> if
> >     > that matters). I have had a lot of problems with installing gems in
> >     > the past 8 months and so I was wondering if maybe I need a require
> >     > 'ruby_gems' somewhere. I usually have to result in copying the gem
> >     > into my project. If someone has any ideas that would be great. I
> can
> >     > do a cap -h, so it is installed on my system. I am on Ubuntu 8.04
> >     > Hardy
> >
> >
> >
> >
> > >
>
>
> >
>

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