--- title: "Deploying Drupal with Fabric" description: How to use Fabric, a Python command line based library, to deploy your Drupal applications. meta: og: title: Deploying Drupal with Fabric description: "You've built your Drupal site, now learn how to deploy it with Fabric." type: website speakerdeck: id: 40d1eca4bd484afc86295924fff5dd41 ratio: "1.77777777777778" url: "https://speakerdeck.com/opdavies/deploying-drupal-and-anything-else-with-fabric" embed: '' events: - name: DrupalCamp Dublin 2017 location: Dublin, Ireland url: http://2017.drupal.ie date: 2017-10-20 time: "15:00 - 15:40" - name: Drupal Somerset location: Glastonbury, UK date: 2017-10-26 --- You’ve built your website, and now you just need to deploy it. There are various ways that this could be done - from (S)FTP, to SCP and rsync, to running commands like “git pull” and “composer install” directly on the server (not recommended). My favourite deployment tool of late is [Fabric][1] - a Python based command line tool for running commands locally as well as on remote servers. It’s language and framework agnostic, and unopinionated so you define the steps and workflow that you need - from a basic few-step deployment to a full Capistrano style zero-downtime deployment. This talk will cover some introduction to Fabric and how to write your own fabfiles, to then covering some examples and demos of different use case deployments for your Drupal project. [1]: http://www.fabfile.org