Wordmove
Wordmove is a command line tool that lets you automatically mirror local WordPress installations and DB data back and forth from your local development machine to one or more remote servers.
Wordmove has also a neat hook system which enables you to run arbitrary commands before and after push/pull actions. Local and remote commands are both supported (remote ones only on SSH protocol).
FTP support development has been discontinued, thus not all features are granted when using this protocol.
Installation
Wordmove is developed in ruby and packaged and distributed as a gem.
To install:
gem install wordmove
And to update:
gem update wordmove
You can read more about ruby gems ecosystem on the official site https://rubygems.org/.
Peer dependencies
Wordmove acts as automation glue between tools you already have and love. These are its peer dependencies which you need to have installed and executable through your system $PATH:
Program | Mandatory? |
---|---|
rsync | Yes for SSH protocol |
mysql | Yes |
mysqldump | Yes |
wp-cli | Yes by default, but configurable |
lftp | Yes, for FTP protocol |
Wordmove also expect that the remote server will have the following commands: gzip
, nice
, mysql
, rsync
. All of these should be always present by default on any WordPress hosting.
Usage
> wordmove help
Commands:
wordmove --version, -v # Print the version
wordmove doctor # Do some local configuration and environment checks
wordmove help [TASK] # Describe available tasks or one specific task
wordmove init # Generates a brand new movefile.yml
wordmove list # List all environments and vhosts
wordmove pull # Pulls WP data from remote host to the local machine
wordmove push # Pushes WP data from local machine to remote host
Move inside the WordPress folder and use wordmove init
to generate a new movefile.yml
and edit it with your settings. Read the next paragraph for more info.
See the wiki article: Usage and flags explained for more info.
Multistage
You can define multiple remote environments in your movefile.yml
, such as production, staging, etc. Every first level key in the YAML other than the defaults and mandatory global
and local
will be interpreted as a remote environment.
Use -e
with pull
or push
to run the command on the specified environment.
For example: wordmove push -e staging -d
will push your local database to the staging environment.
We warmly recommend to read the wiki article: Multiple environments explained
movefile.yml
You can configure Wordmove creating a movefile.yml
. That's a YAML file with local and remote host(s) infos:
global:
sql_adapter: wpcli
local:
vhost: http://vhost.local
wordpress_path: /home/john/sites/your_site # use an absolute path here
database:
name: database_name
user: user
password: password
host: localhost
# paths: # you can customize wordpress internal paths
# wp_content: wp-content
# uploads: wp-content/uploads
# plugins: wp-content/plugins
# themes: wp-content/themes
# languages: wp-content/languages
production:
vhost: http://example.com
wordpress_path: /var/www/your_site # use an absolute path here
database:
name: database_name
user: user
password: password
host: host
# port: 3308 # Use just in case you have exotic server config
# mysqldump_options: --max_allowed_packet=50MB # Only available if using SSH
# mysql_options: --protocol=TCP # Only available if using SSH
exclude:
- '.git/'
- '.gitignore'
- 'node_modules/'
- 'bin/'
- 'tmp/*'
- 'Gemfile*'
- 'Movefile'
- 'movefile'
- 'movefile.yml'
- 'movefile.yaml'
- 'wp-config.php'
- 'wp-content/*.sql.gz'
- '*.orig'
ssh:
host: host
user: user
# hooks: # Remote hooks won't work with FTP
# push:
# before:
# - command: 'echo "do something"'
# where: local
# raise: false # raise is true by default
# after:
# - command: 'echo "do something"'
# where: remote
# pull:
# before:
# - command: 'echo "do something"'
# where: local
# raise: false
# after:
# - command: 'echo "do something"'
# where: remote
We warmly recommend to read the wiki articles
to understand more about supported configurations.
Environment Variables
Wordmove allows the use of environment variables in your movefiles. This is useful in order to protect sensitive variables and credentials, as well as make it easy to share movefiles between your team.
Environment variables are written using the ERB tags syntax:
"<%= ENV['YOUR_SECRET_NAME'] %>"
Variables set up
Environment variables can be set up using two methods:
Using the shell:
# bash
export PROD_DB_USER="username" PROD_DB_PASS="password"
# fish
set --export --global PROD_DB_USER "username"; set --export --global PROD_DB_PASS "password"
Using a .env
file:
Wordmove supports the dotenv module.
Simply create a .env
file next to your movefile structured as follows:
PROD_DB_USER="username"
PROD_DB_PASS="password"
Wordmove will take care of loading the file and making the environment variables ready to be used in your configuration file.
You may also use .env.{environmentname}
, but this is discouraged.
Use them in your movefile.yml
Using the ERB syntax described above, write your movefile as follows:
production:
database:
user: "<%= ENV['PROD_DB_USER'] %>"
password: "<%= ENV['PROD_DB_PASS'] %>"
System variables
You can use system variables to configure your movefile.
For example:
local:
vhost: "http://wordpress-site.localhost"
wordpress_path: "<%= ENV['HOME'] %>/[wordpress directory path]/"
# wordpress_path will be substituted with /home/user_name/[wordpress directory path]
Supports
OS
OS X and Linux are fully supported.
See the Windows (un)support disclaimer
Docker
We have a docker image bringing the latest Wordmove's version with autobuild on new releases.
SSH
- You need
rsync
on your machine; as far as we know it's already installed on OS X and Linux. - To use your SSH public key for authentication, just delete the
production.ssh.password
field in yourmovefile.yml
. Easy peasy. - writing the password inside
movefile.yml
was and is somewhat supported, but we discourage this practice in favor of password-less authentication with pub key. Read here for old informations.
FTP and SFTP
- You need to install
lftp
on your machine. See community wiki article: Install lftp on OSX yosemite). - Use the relative FTP path as
production.wordpress_path
- Use the absolute FTP path as
production.wordpress_absolute_path
(you may need to recover this from the__FILE__
magic constant - if you want to specify a passive FTP connection add to the YAML config a
production.ftp.passive
flag and set it totrue
.
FTP support development is discontinued, but it's always there.
Sice version 3.2.0 SFTP is fully supported, with same functionalities as FTP, through production.ftp.scheme
configuration. More information found in the wiki.
Notes
Mirroring
Push and pull actions on files will perform a mirror operation. Please, keep in mind that to mirror means to transfer new/updated files and remove files from destination if not present in source.
This means that if you have files/directories on your remotes which you must preserve, you must exclude those in your movefile.yml, or they will be deleted.
How the heck you are able to sync the DB via FTP?
We're glad you asked! We basically upload via FTP a PHP script that performs the various
import/export operations. This script then gets executed via HTTP. Don't worry
too much about security though: the script is deleted just after the usage,
and can only be executed by wordmove
, as each time it requires a pre-shared
one-time-password to be run.
Yanked versions
Wordmove 1.3.1
has been removed from rubygems
due to a bug with FTP deploying system. If you are
using this version, please update soon (gem update wordmove
).
Need more tools?
Visit Wordpress Tools.
Credits
- The dump script is the
MYSQL-dump
PHP package by David Grudl - The import script used is the BigDump library
Contribute
Please, read the contributor guide.
Feel free to open a discussion issue about contribution if you need more info.
Author
made with ❤️ and ☕️ by weLaika