- Introduction
- Installation
- Running Tasks
- Multiple Servers
- Parallel Execution
- Task Macros
- Notifications
- Updating Envoy
Laravel Envoy provides a clean, minimal syntax for defining common tasks you run on your remote servers. Using a Blade style syntax, you can easily setup tasks for deployment, Artisan commands, and more.
Note: Envoy requires PHP version 5.4 or greater, and only runs on Mac / Linux operating systems.
First, install Envoy using the Composer global
command:
composer global require "laravel/envoy=~1.0"
Make sure to place the ~/.composer/vendor/bin
directory in your PATH so the envoy
executable is found when you run the envoy
command in your terminal.
Next, create an Envoy.blade.php
file in the root of your project. Here's an example to get you started:
@servers(['web' => '192.168.1.1'])
@task('foo', ['on' => 'web'])
ls -la
@endtask
As you can see, an array of @servers
is defined at the top of the file. You can reference these servers in the on
option of your task declarations. Within your @task
declarations you should place the Bash code that will be run on your server when the task is executed.
The init
command may be used to easily create a stub Envoy file:
envoy init [email protected]
To run a task, use the run
command of your Envoy installation:
envoy run foo
If needed, you may pass variables into the Envoy file using command line switches:
envoy run deploy --branch=master
You may use the options via the Blade syntax you are used to:
@servers(['web' => '192.168.1.1'])
@task('deploy', ['on' => 'web'])
cd site
git pull origin {{ $branch }}
php artisan migrate
@endtask
You may use the @setup
directive to declare variables and do general PHP work inside the Envoy file:
@setup
$now = new DateTime();
$environment = isset($env) ? $env : "testing";
@endsetup
You may also use @include
to include any PHP files:
@include('vendor/autoload.php');
You may easily run a task across multiple servers. Simply list the servers in the task declaration:
@servers(['web-1' => '192.168.1.1', 'web-2' => '192.168.1.2'])
@task('deploy', ['on' => ['web-1', 'web-2']])
cd site
git pull origin {{ $branch }}
php artisan migrate
@endtask
By default, the task will be executed on each server serially. Meaning, the task will finish running on the first server before proceeding to execute on the next server.
If you would like to run a task across multiple servers in parallel, simply add the parallel
option to your task declaration:
@servers(['web-1' => '192.168.1.1', 'web-2' => '192.168.1.2'])
@task('deploy', ['on' => ['web-1', 'web-2'], 'parallel' => true])
cd site
git pull origin {{ $branch }}
php artisan migrate
@endtask
Macros allow you to define a set of tasks to be run in sequence using a single command. For instance:
@servers(['web' => '192.168.1.1'])
@macro('deploy')
foo
bar
@endmacro
@task('foo')
echo "HELLO"
@endtask
@task('bar')
echo "WORLD"
@endtask
The deploy
macro can now be run via a single, simple command:
envoy run deploy
After running a task, you may send a notification to your team's HipChat room using the simple @hipchat
directive:
@servers(['web' => '192.168.1.1'])
@task('foo', ['on' => 'web'])
ls -la
@endtask
@after
@hipchat('token', 'room', 'Envoy')
@endafter
You can also specify a custom message to the hipchat room. Any variables declared in @setup
or included with @include
will be available for use in the message:
@after
@hipchat('token', 'room', 'Envoy', "$task ran on [$environment]")
@endafter
This is an amazingly simple way to keep your team notified of the tasks being run on the server.
The following syntax may be used to send a notification to Slack:
@after
@slack('team', 'token', 'channel')
@endafter
To update Envoy, simply use Composer:
composer global update