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Tomo is a friendly command-line tool for deploying Rails apps.

πŸ’» Rich command-line interface with built-in bash completions<br/> ☁️ Multi-environment and role-based multi-host support<br/> πŸ’Ž Everything you need to deploy a basic Rails app out of the box<br/> πŸ”Œ Easily extensible for polyglot projects (not just Rails!)<br/> πŸ“š Quality documentation<br/> πŸ”¬ Minimal dependencies<br/>

β†’ See how tomo compares to other Ruby deployment tools like Capistrano and Mina.


Quick start

Installation

Tomo is distributed as a ruby gem. To install:

$ gem install tomo

πŸ’‘ Protip: run tomo completion-script for instructions on setting up bash completions.

Configuring a project

Tomo is configured via a .tomo/config.rb file in your project. To get started, run tomo init to generate a configuration that works for a basic Rails app.

$ tomo init

An abbreviated version looks like this:

# .tomo/config.rb

plugin "git"
plugin "bundler"
plugin "rails"
# ...

host "user@hostname.or.ip.address"

set application: "my-rails-app"
set deploy_to: "/var/www/%{application}"
set git_url: "git@github.com:my-username/my-rails-app.git"
set git_branch: "main"
# ...

setup do
  run "git:clone"
  run "git:create_release"
  run "bundler:install"
  run "rails:db_schema_load"
  # ...
end

deploy do
  run "git:create_release"
  run "core:symlink_shared"
  run "core:write_release_json"
  run "bundler:install"
  run "rails:assets_precompile"
  run "rails:db_migrate"
  run "core:symlink_current"
  # ...
end

Next steps

β†’ The reference docs have a complete guide to tomo configuration.<br> β†’ Check out the Deploying Rails From Scratch tutorial for a step-by-step guide to using tomo with a real app.

Usage

Once your project is configured, you can:

  1. Run tomo setup to prepare the remote host for its first deploy.
  2. Run tomo deploy to deploy your app.
  3. Use tomo run to invoke one-off tasks, like launching a Rails console.

πŸ’‘ Protip: add -h or --help when running any of these commands to see detailed docs and examples.

tomo setup

tomo setup prepares the remote host for its first deploy by sequentially running the setup list of tasks specified in .tomo/config.rb. These tasks typically create directories, initialize data stores, install prerequisite tools, and perform other one-time actions that are necessary before a deploy can take place.

Out of the box, tomo will:

β†’ Here is the default list of tasks invoked by the setup command.<br> β†’ The tomo setup section of the reference docs explains supported command-line options.

tomo deploy

Whereas tomo setup is typically run once, you can use tomo deploy every time you want to deploy a new version of your app. The deploy command will sequentially run the deploy list of tasks specified in .tomo/config.rb. You can customize this list to meet the needs of your app. By default, tomo runs these tasks:

  1. Create a release (using the git:create_release task)
  2. Build the project (e.g. bundler:install, rails:assets_precompile)
  3. Migrate data to the meet the requirements of the new release (e.g. rails:db_migrate)
  4. Make the new release the "current" one (core:symlink_current)
  5. Restart the app to use the new current release (e.g. puma:restart)
  6. Perform any cleanup (e.g. bundler:clean)

πŸ’‘ Protip: you can abbreviate tomo commands, like tomo d for tomo deploy or tomo s for tomo setup.

β†’ Here is the default list of tasks invoked by the deploy command.<br> β†’ The tomo deploy section of the reference docs explains supported command-line options, like --dry-run.

tomo run [TASK]

Tomo can also run individual remote tasks on demand. You can use the tasks command to see the list of tasks tomo knows about.

$ tomo tasks

One of the built-in Rails tasks is rails:console, which brings up a fully-interactive Rails console over SSH.

$ tomo run rails:console

πŸ’‘ Protip: you can shorten this as tomo rails:console (the run command is implied).

β†’ The tomo run section of the reference docs explains supported command-line options and has more examples.

Extending tomo

Tomo has a powerful plugin system that lets you extend tomo by installing Ruby gems (e.g. tomo-plugin-sidekiq). You can also define plugins on the fly within your project by adding simple .rb files to .tomo/plugins/. These plugins can define tasks as plain ruby methods. For example:

# .tomo/plugins/my-plugin.rb

def hello
  remote.run "echo", "hello", settings[:application]
end

Load your plugin in config.rb like this:

# .tomo/config.rb

plugin "./plugins/my-plugin.rb"

And run it!

$ tomo run my-plugin:hello

β†’ The Writing Custom Tasks tutorial has an in-depth explanation of how plugins work.<br> β†’ The TaskLibrary API is tomo's DSL for building tasks.<br> β†’ The Publishing a Plugin tutorial explains how to package your plugin as a Ruby gem to share it with the community.

Tutorials

Blog posts

Reference documentation

FAQ

What does the unsupported option "accept-new" error mean?

By default, tomo uses the "accept-new" value for the StrictHostKeyChecking option, which is supported by OpenSSH 7.6 and newer. If you are using an older version, this will cause an error. As a workaround, you can override tomo's default behavior like this:

# Replace "accept-new" with something compatible with older versions of SSH
set ssh_strict_host_key_checking: true # or false

Can I deploy multiple apps to a single host?

Tomo relies on the host user's bash profile for various things, like setting environment variables and initializing rbenv and nodenv. This makes it impractical to deploy multiple apps to a single host using the same deploy user.

The solution is to create multiple users on the remote host, and then configure a different user for deploying each app. That way each user can have its own distinct environment variables and you can easily configure each app differently without risking conflicts. Refer to the tomo Rails tutorial for instructions on creating a deploy user.

E.g. app1 would be configured to deploy as:

host "app1@example.com"

And app2 would be configured to deploy as:

host "app2@example.com"

Next run tomo setup for both apps; this will set everything up for both users on the remote host (environment variables, rbenv, etc.). You can now deploy both apps to the same host, with the confidence that their configurations will be kept cleanly separated.

Does tomo support git submodules?

No, not out of the box. However, you can extend tomo with an additional task for submodules; see the solution in PR #220 suggested by @numbcoder.

Support

This project is a labor of love and I can only spend a few hours a week maintaining it, at most. If you'd like to help by submitting a pull request, or if you've discovered a bug that needs my attention, please let me know. Check out CONTRIBUTING.md to get started. Happy hacking! β€”Matt

License

The gem is available as open source under the terms of the MIT License.

Code of conduct

Everyone interacting in the Tomo project’s codebases, issue trackers, chat rooms and mailing lists is expected to follow the code of conduct.

Contribution guide

Interested in filing a bug report, feature request, or opening a PR? Excellent! Please read the short CONTRIBUTING.md guidelines before you dive in.