plucky (1) git-ftp.1.gz

Provided by: git-ftp_1.6.0+dfsg-1_all bug

NAME

       Git-ftp - Git powered FTP client written as shell script.

SYNOPSIS

       git-ftp <action> [<options>] [<url>]

DESCRIPTION

       Git-ftp is an FTP client using Git (http://git-scm.org) to determine which local files to upload or which
       files to delete on the remote host.

       It  saves  the  deployed state by uploading the SHA1 hash in the .git-ftp.log file.  There is no need for
       Git to be installed on the remote host.

       Even if you play with different branches, git-ftp knows which files are different and handles only  those
       files.  That saves time and bandwidth.

ACTIONS

       init   Uploads  all  git-tracked non-ignored files to the remote server and creates the .git-ftp.log file
              containing the SHA1 of the latest commit.

       catchup
              Creates or updates the .git-ftp.log file on the remote host.  It assumes  that  you  uploaded  all
              other files already.  You might have done that with another program.

       push   Uploads  files  that  have changed and deletes files that have been deleted since the last upload.
              If you are using GIT LFS, this uploads LFS link files, not large files (stored on LFS server).  To
              upload  the  LFS  tracked  files,  run  git  lfs  pull before git ftp push: LFS link files will be
              replaced with large files so they can be uploaded.

       download (EXPERIMENTAL)
              Downloads changes from the remote host into your working tree.  This  feature  needs  lftp  to  be
              installed  and  does  not use any power of Git.  WARNING: It can delete local untracked files that
              are not listed in your .git-ftp-ignore file.

       pull (EXPERIMENTAL)
              Downloads changes from the remote host into a separate commit and merges that  into  your  current
              branch.   If you just want to download the files without a merge, consider download.  This feature
              needs lftp to be installed.

       snapshot (EXPERIMENTAL)
              Downloads files into a new Git repository.  Takes an  additional  argument  as  local  destination
              directory.    Example:  `git-ftp  snapshot  ftp://example.com/public_html  projects/example`  This
              feature needs lftp to be installed.

       show   Downloads last uploaded SHA1 from log and hooks `git show`.

       log    Downloads last uploaded SHA1 from log and hooks `git log`.

       add-scope <scope>
              Creates a new scope (e.g. dev, production, testing,  foobar).   This  is  a  wrapper  action  over
              git-config.  See SCOPES section for more information.

       remove-scope <scope>
              Remove a scope.

       help   Shows a help screen.

OPTIONS

       -u [username], --user [username]
              FTP login name.  If no argument is given, local user will be taken.

       -p [password], --passwd [password]
              FTP password.  See -P for interactive password prompt.  (note)

       -P, --ask-passwd
              Ask for FTP password interactively.

       -k [[account]@[host]], --keychain [[account]@[host]]
              FTP password from KeyChain (macOS only).

       -a, --all
              Uploads all files of current Git checkout.

       -c, --commit
              Sets SHA1 hash of last deployed commit by option.

       -A, --active
              Uses  FTP  active mode.  This works only if you have either no firewall and a direct connection to
              the server or an FTP aware firewall.  If you don’t know what it means, you probably won’t need it.

       -b [branch], --branch [branch]
              Push a specific branch

       -s [scope], --scope [scope]
              Using a scope (e.g. dev, production, testing, foobar).  See SCOPE and DEFAULTS  section  for  more
              information.

       -l, --lock
              Enable remote locking.

       -D, --dry-run
              Does not upload or delete anything, but tries to get the .git-ftp.log file from remote host.

       -f, --force
              Does not ask any questions, it just does.

       -n, --silent
              Be silent.

       -h, --help
              Prints some usage information.

       -v, --verbose
              Be verbose.

       -vv    Be as verbose as possible.  Useful for debug information.

       --remote-root
              Specifies the remote root directory to deploy to.  The remote path in the URL is ignored.

       --syncroot
              Specifies a local directory to sync from as if it were the git project root path.

       --key  SSH private key file name for SFTP.

       --pubkey
              SSH public key file name.  Used with –key option.

       --insecure
              Don’t verify server’s certificate.

       --cacert <file>
              Use as CA certificate store.  Useful when a server has a self-signed certificate.

       --disable-epsv
              Tell  curl  to  disable  the  use of the EPSV command when doing passive FTP transfers.  Curl will
              normally always first attempt to use EPSV before PASV, but with this option, it will not try using
              EPSV.

       --no-commit
              Stop  while  merging  downloaded changes during the pull action.  A commit is made anyway, but the
              merge is interrupted.  If you just want to download the files you could also consider  the  action
              download.

       --changed-only
              During  the  ftp mirror operation during a pull command, consider only the files changed since the
              deployed commit.

       --no-verify
              Bypass the pre-ftp-push hook.  See HOOKS section.

       --enable-post-errors
              Fails if post-ftp-push raises an error.

       --auto-init
              Automatically run init action when running push action

       --version
              Prints version.

       -x [protocol://]host[:port], --proxy [protocol://]host[:port]
              Use the specified proxy.   This  option  is  passed  to  curl.   See  the  curl  manual  for  more
              information.

URL

       The scheme of an URL is what you would expect

              protocol://host.domain.tld:port/path

       Below a full featured URL to host.example.com on port 2121 to path mypath using protocol ftp:

              ftp://host.example.com:2121/mypath

       But, there is not just FTP.  Supported protocols are:

       ftp://...
              FTP (default if no protocol is set)

       sftp://...
              SFTP

       ftps://...
              FTPS

       ftpes://...
              FTP over explicit SSL (FTPES) protocol

EXAMPLES

   FIRST UPLOADS
       Upload your files to an FTP server the first time:

              $ git ftp init -u "john" -P "ftp://example.com/public_html"

       It  will  authenticate with the username john and ask for the password.  By default, it tries to transfer
       data in EPSV mode.  Depending on the network and server configuration, that may fail.  You can try to add
       the  --disable-epsv option to use the IPv4 passive FTP connection (PASV).  In rare circumstances, you can
       use --active for the original FTP transfer mode.  These options do not apply to SFTP.

       You are less likely to face connection problems with SFTP.  But be aware of  the  different  handling  of
       relative  and  absolute paths.  If the directory public_html is in the home directory on the server, then
       upload like this:

              $ git ftp init -u "john" --key "$HOME/.ssh/id_rsa" "sftp://example.com/~/public_html"

       Otherwise it will use an absolute path, for example:

              $ git ftp init -u "john" --key "$HOME/.ssh/id_rsa" "sftp://example.com/var/www"

       On some systems Git-ftp fails to verify the server’s fingerprint.  You can then use the --insecure option
       to skip the verification.  That will leave you vulnerable to man-in-the-middle attacks, but is still more
       secure than plain FTP.

       Git-ftp guesses the path of the public key file corresponding to your private key file.  If you just have
       a  private key, for example a .pem file, you need Git-ftp version 1.3.4 and Curl version 7.39.0 or newer.
       If you have an older version of Git-ftp or Curl, you can  create  the  public  key  with  the  ssh-keygen
       command:

              $ ssh-keygen -y -f key.pem > key.pem.pub

   RESET THE UPLOADED STATE
       Many  people already uploaded their files to the server.  If you want to mark the uploaded version as the
       same as your local branch:

              $ git ftp catchup

       This example omits options like --user, --password and url.  See DEFAULTS below to  learn  how  to  store
       your configuration so that you don’t need to repeat it.

       After  you  stored  the commit id of the uploaded commit via init or catchup, you can then upload any new
       commits:

              $ git ftp push

       If you discovered a bug in the last uploaded version and you want to go back by three commits:

              $ git checkout HEAD~3
              $ git ftp push

       Or maybe some files got changed on the server and you want to upload all changes  between  branch  master
       and branch develop:

              $ git checkout develop         # This is the version which is uploaded.
              $ git ftp push --commit master # Upload changes compared to master.

DEFAULTS

       Don’t repeat yourself.  Setting config defaults for git-ftp in .git/config

              $ git config git-ftp.<(url|user|password|syncroot|cacert|keychain|...)> <value>

       Everyone likes examples:

              $ git config git-ftp.user john
              $ git config git-ftp.url ftp.example.com
              $ git config git-ftp.password secr3t
              $ git config git-ftp.syncroot path/dir
              $ git config git-ftp.cacert caCertStore
              $ git config git-ftp.deployedsha1file mySHA1File
              $ git config git-ftp.insecure 1
              $ git config git-ftp.key ~/.ssh/id_rsa
              $ git config git-ftp.keychain user@example.com
              $ git config git-ftp.remote-root htdocs
              $ git config git-ftp.disable-epsv 1
              $ git config git-ftp.no-commit 1

       After setting those defaults, push to john@ftp.example.com is as simple as

              $ git ftp push

       If you run into issues with setting up your password please check this note.

SCOPES

       Need different config defaults per each system or environment?  Use the so called scope feature.

       Useful  if  you  use  multi  environment  development.   Like  a  development,  testing  and a production
       environment.

              $ git config git-ftp.<scope>.<(url|user|password|syncroot|cacert)> <value>

       So in the case below you would set a testing scope and a production scope.

       Here we set the params for the scope “testing”

              $ git config git-ftp.testing.url ftp.testing.com:8080/foobar-path
              $ git config git-ftp.testing.password simp3l

       Here we set the params for the scope “production”

              $ git config git-ftp.production.user manager
              $ git config git-ftp.production.url live.example.com
              $ git config git-ftp.production.password n0tThatSimp3l

       Pushing to scope testing alias john@ftp.testing.com:8080/foobar-path using password simp3l

              $ git ftp push -s testing

       Note: The SCOPE feature can be mixed with the DEFAULTS feature.  Because we didn’t set the user for  this
       scope, git-ftp uses john as user as set before in DEFAULTS.

       Pushing to scope production alias manager@live.example.com using password n0tThatSimp3l

              $ git ftp push -s production

       Hint:  If  your  scope name is identical with your branch name.  You can skip the scope argument, e.g. if
       your current branch is “production”:

              $ git ftp push -s

       You can also create scopes using the add-scope action.  All settings can be defined in the URL.  Here  we
       create the production scope using add-scope

              $ git ftp add-scope production ftp://manager:n0tThatSimp3l@live.example.com/foobar-path

       Deleting scopes is easy using the remove-scope action.

              $ git ftp remove-scope production

IGNORING FILES TO BE SYNCED

       Add  patterns  to  .git-ftp-ignore  and  all  matching  file  names  will  be  ignored.  The patterns are
       interpreted as shell glob patterns since version 1.1.0.  Before version 1.1.0, patterns were  interpreted
       as regular expressions.  Here are some glob pattern examples:

       Ignoring everything in a directory named config:

              config/*

       Ignoring all files having extension .txt:

              *.txt

       Ignoring a single file called foobar.txt:

              foobar.txt

       Ignoring Git related files:

              .gitignore
              */.gitignore      # ignore files in sub directories
              */.gitkeep
              .git-ftp-ignore
              .git-ftp-include
              .gitlab-ci.yml

SYNCING UNTRACKED FILES

       The  .git-ftp-include  file  specifies  intentionally untracked files that Git-ftp should upload.  If you
       have a file that should always be uploaded, add a line beginning with !  followed  by  the  file’s  name.
       For example, if you have a file called VERSION.txt then add the following line:

              !VERSION.txt

       If you have a file that should be uploaded whenever a tracked file changes, add a line beginning with the
       untracked file’s name followed by a colon and the tracked file’s name.  For example, if you  have  a  CSS
       file compiled from an SCSS file then add the following line:

              css/style.css:scss/style.scss

       If  you  have  multiple  source  files, you can add multiple lines for each of them.  Whenever one of the
       tracked files changes, the upload of the paired untracked file will be triggered.

              css/style.css:scss/style.scss
              css/style.css:scss/mixins.scss

       If a local untracked file is deleted, any change of a paired tracked file will trigger  the  deletion  of
       the remote file on the server.

       All  paths are usually relative to the Git working directory.  When using the --syncroot option, paths of
       tracked files (right side of the colon) are relative to the set syncroot.  Example:

              # upload "html/style.css" triggered by html/style.scss
              # with syncroot "html"
              html/style.css:style.scss

       If your source file is outside the syncroot, prefix it with a / and define a path  relative  to  the  Git
       working directory.  For example:

              # upload "dist/style.css" with syncroot "dist"
              dist/style.css:/src/style.scss

       It  is  also  possible  to  upload  whole  directories.   For  example, if you use a package manager like
       composer, you can upload all vendor packages when the file composer.lock changes:

              vendor/:composer.lock

       But keep in mind that this will upload all files in the vendor folder, even those that are on the  server
       already.  And it will not delete files from that directory if local files are deleted.

DOWNLOADING FILES (EXPERIMENTAL)

       WARNING: It can delete local untracked files that are not listed in your .git-ftp-ignore file.

       You  can use git-ftp to download from the remote host into your repository.  You will need to install the
       lftp command line tool for that.

              git ftp download

       It uses lftp’s mirror command to download all files that are different  on  the  remote  host.   You  can
       inspect the changes with git-diff.  But if you have some local commits that have not been uploaded to the
       remote host, you may not compare to the right version.  You need to compare the downloaded files  to  the
       commit that was uploaded last.  This magic is done automatically by

              git ftp pull

       It does the following steps for you:

              git checkout <remote-commit>
              git ftp download
              git add --all
              git commit -m '[git-ftp] remotely untracked modifications'
              git ftp catchup
              git checkout <my-branch>
              git merge <new-remote-commit>

       If  you  want  to  inspect  the  downloaded changes before merging them into your current branch, add the
       option --no-commit.  It will stop during the merge at the end of the pull action.  You  can  inspect  the
       merge result first and can then decide to continue or abort.

              git ftp pull --no-commit
              # inspect the result and commit them
              git commit
              # or abort the merge
              git merge --abort

       If  you abort the merge, the downloaded changes will stay in an unreferenced commit until the Git garbage
       collector is run.  The commit id will be printed so that you can tag it or create a new branch.

HOOKS (EXPERIMENTAL)

       This feature is experimental. The interface may change.

       Git-ftp supports client-side hook scripts during the init and the push action.

       pre-ftp-push is called just before the upload to the server starts, but after the changeset of files  was
       generated.  It can be bypassed with the –no-verify option.

       The  hook  is  called  with four parameters.  The first is the used scope or the host name if no scope is
       used.  The second parameter is the destination URL.  The third is the local commit id which is  going  to
       be uploaded and the fourth is the remote commit id on the server which is going to be updated.

       The  standard  input  is a list of all filenames to sync.  Each file is preceeded by A or D followed by a
       space.  A means that this file is scheduled for upload, D means it’s scheduled for deletion.  All entries
       are  separated  by  the NUL byte.  This list is different to git diff, because it has been changed by the
       rules of the .git-ftp-include file and the .git-ftp-ignore file.

       Exiting with non-zero status from this script causes Git-ftp to abort and exit with status 9.

       An example script is:

              #!/bin/bash
              #
              # An example hook script to verify what is about to be uploaded.
              #
              # Called by "git ftp push" after it has checked the remote status, but before
              # anything has been pushed. If this script exits with a non-zero status nothing
              # will be pushed.
              #
              # This hook is called with the following parameters:
              #
              # $1 -- Scope name if set or host name of the remote
              # $2 -- URL to which the upload is being done
              # $3 -- Local commit id which is being uploaded
              # $4 -- Remote commit id which is on the server
              #
              # Information about the files which are being uploaded or deleted is supplied
              # as NUL separated entries to the standard input in the form:
              #
              #   <status> <path>
              #
              # The status is either A for upload or D for delete. The path contains the
              # path to the local file. It contains the syncroot if set.
              #
              # This sample shows how to prevent upload of files containing the word TODO.

              remote="$1"
              url="$2"
              local_sha="$3"
              remote_sha="$4"

              while read -r -d '' status file
              do
                  if [ "$status" = "A" ]
                  then
                      if grep 'TODO' "$file"; then
                          echo "TODO found in file $file, not uploading."
                          exit 1
                      fi
                  fi
              done

              exit 0

       post-ftp-push is called after the transfer has been finished.  The  standard  input  is  empty,  but  the
       parameters  are  the same as given to the pre-ftp-push hook.  This hook is not bypassed by the –no-verify
       option.  It is meant primarily for notification and its exit status does not have any effect.

PASSWORDS

       If your password contains special characters you have to take it with care.  In most cases it is  a  good
       idea to quote passwords with single quotes:

              --passwd '#my$fancy!secret'

       Mostly --ask-passwd works even if --passwd does not work.  So maybe you can give this a try.

       If  your  password  starts  with  a  hyphen/dash  (-)  even  quoting  might  fail.   This  is  by  design
       (https://github.com/git-ftp/git-ftp/issues/468) and will not be fixed.  In this case you can use  one  of
       the other options to set your password: the defaults feature using git config, --ask-passwd or ~/.netrc.

       Quoting also works if a default is set with git config:

              $ git config git-ftp.password '#my$fancy!secret'

   NETRC
       In the backend, Git-ftp uses curl.  This means ~/.netrc could be used beside the other options of Git-ftp
       to authenticate.

              $ editor ~/.netrc
              machine ftp.example.com
              login john
              password SECRET

       With git-ftp the credentials stored in this file are used if no username is set.  For example, if you set
       up your .netrc file like this you can just call

              git ftp init ftp.example.com

       Of  course  this  can  be  combined with the defaults feature to set config defaults for other options as
       well.

   Keychain on macOS
       On macOS you can use the built in keychain to store and get your passwords.

       You can use this feature by using the option --keychain in your command:

              $ git ftp init --keychain account@host ftpes://host

       You can omit the value for this option.  Then git-ftp will guess the account and hostname from  user  and
       url.

       Or you can set a config for this, so you don’t need to repeat yourself (see defaults for details):

              $ git config git-ftp.keychain account@host

       You  can  omit  the  hostname here.  If there is no @ in the config value git-ftp will guess the hostname
       from url.

       If you run a command using the keychain feature, the system might ask you if git-ftp is allowed to access
       the  keychain entry.  If the keychain is locked you have to enter the keychain password (not the value of
       the entry), sometimes twice.

       If your password is not in your keychain yet it is recommended adding it using the following command:

              $ security add-internet-password -a account -r "ftp " -s host -w secr3t

       The options are: - -a: user account - -r: protocol; has to be exactly 4 characters long, so  if  you  use
       FTP it should be "ftp ", for FTPS and FTPES use ftps and for SSH with password auth you can use "ftp " as
       well.  - -s: your host name; includes subdomains but no paths - -w: password

       You can omit the option -r and everything will work fine, but the Keychain Access Utility will  not  show
       the server in the field “Where:”.  This is only shown if -r and -s are set both.
       If  you create a keychain entry with the Keychain Access Utility it creates a generic password and not an
       internet password.  Therefore, unfortunately, this will not work.

       Please not that the keychain entry can not be used for password protected private keys in SSH.

EXIT CODES

       There are a bunch of different error codes and their corresponding error messages that may appear  during
       bad conditions.  At the time of this writing, the exit codes are:

       1      Unknown error

       2      Wrong Usage

       3      Missing arguments

       4      Error while uploading

       5      Error while downloading

       6      Unknown protocol

       7      Remote locked

       8      Not a Git project

       9      The pre-ftp-push hook failed

       10     A local file operation like cd or mkdir failed

KNOWN ISSUES & BUGS

       The upstream BTS can be found at <https://github.com/git-ftp/git-ftp/issues>.

AUTHORS

       Git-ftp  was  started  by Rene Moser and is currently maintained by Maikel Linke.  Numerous contributions
       have come from GitHub users.  See the AUTHORS file for an incomplete list of contributors.