Hi all. Mac & XAMPP localhost Git for repos (hosted on Beanstalk - also useful for managing access and deployments for remote dev teams without needing to grant them server access) Beanstalk automated deployments to staging server/s Beanstalk manual deployment to live servers ssh and mysqldump / mysql to export & import dbs (managed as part of repo source code - could use post commit hooks for this but haven;t taken the time to set this up yet) backup_migrate Drupal module to export and import dbs for drupal sites
Have used Pantheon for their automated dev > staging > live Drupal workflow but most projects I work on don't need a dedicated staging server post launch. Regards, Paul Bennett MoveForward - Web Development for Design Companies http://www.moveforward.co.nz 06 308 9722 027 255 8495 On Mon, Oct 29, 2012 at 10:07 AM, David Neilsen <[email protected]>wrote: > Hi, > > We run a similar setup. > > I also run Windows on my dev machine, my colleagues develop on Linux and > Mac. > > When ever we need to show a client or a PM some work, we push it to a > staging (test) server, so there is no issue in keep all websites running > locally. > > We host our Git repositories on an internal server, as its generally > faster and more secure and Github. And also use Git to deploy to staging > and live servers. > > We have developed a few scripts to recursively run Git commands over a set > of directories as our website are generally made up of many repositories. > We also are starting to use Composer for external libraries. > > We try to make our database changes in incremental SQL files, and commit a > combined SQL file for each environment. This way when doing a deployment we > can run a diff on the combined SQL file to see what migrations need to be > run. We also use Toad for MySQL for double checking the our schemas are > synced. > > When I need to sync content back from from another server I typically use > mysqldump piped through ssh which is as simple as 1 command. > > David Neilsen | 07 834 3366 | PANmedia ® > > > > On Mon, Oct 29, 2012 at 9:52 AM, Harvey Kane <[email protected]>wrote: > >> Hi Everyone, >> >> I was wanting to start a discussion on how people manage their dev/test >> servers. I'm thinking of changing a few things that I do and thought it >> would be worth canvasing for ideas first. >> >> So I'll get the ball rolling. >> >> Firstly I like to develop on my local Windows PC - it's just faster and >> easier for chucking files around. So I use wampserver + a paid no-ip >> account so I have a domain that points to this server. This means project >> managers can look at the site while I'm working on it (via >> clientname.mydomain.com) and WAMP is handy in that it lets you run >> different versions of PHP/MySQL side by side. >> >> Once the job is ready to show to the client, it goes to a different dev >> server on a properly hosted linux box. Git to transfer the files, database >> is imported manually. I won't always do this, but it's useful where the >> client is likely to take weeks or months to upload content and approve the >> work etc. The problem with WAMP is that all the dev sites go down if I >> switch php/MySQL versions for a day to work on another project, which >> happens quite a bit. >> >> When we go live, we use git to transfer the files to production server >> and again move the database + content file uploads manually. Command line >> git on the production server is great. I find it very handy for making >> little 2 minute tweaks to the live site and then pushing them back onto the >> dev server. For larger ongoing changes, I'll do those on the local >> wampserver. >> >> I use github for managing the git repos which works well, but the 50 repo >> limit is going to hit sooner or later (I don't know how pricing works after >> 50 repos) so I'm giving thought to self-hosting this. Would welcome any >> comments on that. >> >> One thing which is a constant struggle is developing on a dev site with >> an outdated database / content files. You can ask for approval just on the >> new feature you developed, but the client always comments on product images >> missing, or a page having the wrong content etc. I'd be interested to know >> how others work around this - perhaps a scripted way of pulling the >> database + user files down from production to dev? >> >> Anyway, interested to hear what other people use, and the pros and cons >> etc. >> >> Harvey. >> >> -- >> Harvey Kane >> >> Phone: >> - Auckland: +64 9 950 4133 >> - Wanaka: +64 3 746 8133 >> - Mobile: +64 21 811 951 >> >> Email: [email protected] >> If you need to contact me urgently, please read my email policy >> www.ragepank.com/email/ >> >> -- >> NZ PHP Users Group: >> http://groups.google.com/**group/nzphpug<http://groups.google.com/group/nzphpug> >> To post, send email to [email protected] >> To unsubscribe, send email to >> nzphpug+unsubscribe@**googlegroups.com<nzphpug%[email protected]> >> > > -- > NZ PHP Users Group: http://groups.google.com/group/nzphpug > To post, send email to [email protected] > To unsubscribe, send email to > [email protected] > -- NZ PHP Users Group: http://groups.google.com/group/nzphpug To post, send email to [email protected] To unsubscribe, send email to [email protected]
