About this user

Jonathan Shea jonshea.com

« Newer Snippets
Older Snippets »
2 total  XML / RSS feed 

Bash script to perform initial import of a rails project

This is still a work in progress. The objective is to script the entire initial svn hassle that needs to be done with a rails project. The first import, then the first checkout, and then dealing with all the files that need to be ignored. Based heavily on:

http://wiki.rubyonrails.org/rails/pages/HowtoUseRailsWithSubversion

In the future I may add capistrano setup and such.

This worked the last time I tried it, but I don't expect it to work the next time.

#!/bin/bash
set -v                         # verbose output

## USAGE: configure the following variables, and execute in your rails root, ie the directory with
## config/ and app/
## NOTE: This script assumes that your directory of your rails root has the same name as both your 
## application, and your svn repo.
##
## This script also assumes that it's ok to make a backup in the parent directory of your
## rails root.

username="jonshea"               # CHANGE ME!!!!!!!
svn_url="http://jonshea.com/svn/" # CHANGE ME!!!!!

## This is still a work in progress. The objective is to script the entire initial svn hassle that 
## needs to be done with a rails project. The first import, then the first checkout, and then 
## dealing with all the files that need to be ignored. Based heavily on: 
##
## http://wiki.rubyonrails.org/rails/pages/HowtoUseRailsWithSubversion
##
## It designed only for freshly created applications, that haven't really be changed at all from the
## original generation script

app_dir=`pwd`
app_name=`basename $app_dir`
svn_url_to_your_repository=${svn_url}${app_name} # Assumes your repo has the same name as your app
echo $app_name
echo $svn_url_to_your_repository

## Do the initial import
svn import . ${svn_url_to_your_repository}/trunk -m "First Import" --username $username



cd ..                           # Back out a directory from the root

## We're going to make a backup of your app. If one is already there, then remove it.
test -d ./pre_svn_backup_$app_name || rm -rf pre_svn_backup_$app_name
mkdir ../pre_svn_backup_$app_name
mv -f $app_dir ./pre_svn_backup_${app_name} # Move the rails app to the backup dir.

mkdir $app_dir # recreate the application directory
cd $app_dir
svn checkout ${svn_url_to_your_repository}/trunk . # Check out the subversion repo to the app directory

## This section cleans up the svn repo, so that you're not versioning things that shouldn't be versioned.
svn remove log/*
svn commit -m 'removing all log files from subversion'
svn propset svn:ignore "*.log" log/
svn update log/
svn commit -m 'Ignoring all files in /log/ ending in .log'

svn remove tmp/
svn commit -m 'removing the temp directory from subversion'
svn propset svn:ignore "*" tmp/
svn update tmp/
svn commit -m 'Ignore the whole tmp/ directory, might not work on subdirectories?'

svn move config/database.yml config/database.example
svn commit -m 'Moving database.yml to database.example to provide a template for anyone who checks out the code'
svn propset svn:ignore "database.yml" config/
svn update config/
svn commit -m 'Ignoring database.yml'

svn move public/dispatch.rb public/dispatch.rb.example
cp public/dispatch.rb.example public/dispatch.rb
svn move public/dispatch.cgi public/dispatch.cgi.example
cp public/dispatch.cgi.example public/dispatch.cgi
svn move public/dispatch.fcgi public/dispatch.fcgi.example
cp public/dispatch.fcgi.example public/dispatch.fcgi
svn commit -m 'Moving dispatch.(star) to dispatch.(star).example to provide a template.'

svn propedit svn:ignore public/ dispatch.rb
svn propedit svn:ignore public/ dispatch.cgi
svn propedit svn:ignore public/ dispatch.fcgi
svn update public/
svn commit -m 'Ignoring dispatch.* files'

svn propedit svn:ignore db/ *.sqlite
svn propedit svn:ignore db/ *.sqlite3
svn commit -m 'Ignore database files'




#cap --apply-to $app_dir $app_name
#svn add config/deploy.rb     
#svn add lib/tasks/capistrano.rake

exit 0

Bash script to export ssh public key to a remote server

This isn't a brilliant script, but it sure can be a time saver. When I add a public key by hand I end up doing a lot more commands.

#!/bin/bash

## USAGE: add_to_server.sh remote_server

## This script will add your ssh dsa public key to remote_server's authorized_keys list, 
## assuming that everything is in it's default location

set -v                                 # verbose output
username="USERNAME"              # CHANGE ME!!!!
remote_server=$1              # assigns the first commandline argument to $remote_server


## Pipe the public key to ssh, then remotely touch the file to make sure it will be there, and concat to the end of it.
## Might work without the touch?
cat ~/.ssh/id_dsa.pub | ssh ${username}@${remote_server} "touch ~/.ssh/authorized_keys && cat - >> ~/.ssh/authorized_keys"

exit 0
« Newer Snippets
Older Snippets »
2 total  XML / RSS feed