impress/deploy
Emi Matchu 65eaa031dd Speed up deploys with Ansible's pipelining option
The main bottleneck for us is still just uploading the full source code,
there might be some clever option I'm not using for that yet of like,
compression or something? But this change did take the process down
from like 5 minutes to 3 minutes, so, works for me!
2024-09-06 12:22:28 -07:00
..
files Upgrade to Ruby 3.3.4 in production 2024-08-31 12:49:50 -07:00
ansible.cfg Speed up deploys with Ansible's pipelining option 2024-09-06 12:22:28 -07:00
deploy.yml Upgrade to Ruby 3.3.4 in production 2024-08-31 12:49:50 -07:00
inventory.cfg Remove beta.impress.openneo.net from deploy setup 2023-10-25 15:22:50 -07:00
README Create setup.yml deploy script 2023-10-23 19:05:09 -07:00
setup.yml Upgrade to Ruby 3.3.4 in production 2024-08-31 12:49:50 -07:00

Dress to Impress is deployed to a VPS server. We use this Ansible Playbook to
automate the environment setup!

We expect to be deploying to Ubuntu 20.04 LTS, initially with nothing
installed. The user you deploy with should have sudoers access. That should be
all it takes!

First, run `yarn deploy:setup` in the app root, to run the `setup.yml`
playbook. This will prompt you for your root password, to set up system
dependencies. It should be safe to re-run this, including if you add a new
dependency to the playbook, because the steps are non-destructive and Ansible
will skip steps that are already satisfied.

Then, to deploy a new version of the app, run `yarn deploy`. This will build
the app from the code on your machine, then send the source and build output
to the remote machine, and switch it to be the new production version. Nice!

Note that the setup script references a file named `production.env`, which is
gitignored because it contains sensitive information, like database passwords.
You should create a `production.env` file in the local `deploy/files`
directory, to be copied to the remote server and used as its environment
variables.