If you use Git and you need to upload your files to an FTP server, Git-ftp can save you some time and bandwidth by uploading only those files that changed since the last upload.
It keeps track of the uploaded files by storing the commit id in a log file on the server. It uses Git to determine which local files have changed.
You can easily deploy another branch or go back in the Git history to upload an older version.
# Setup
git config git-ftp.url "ftp://ftp.example.net:21/public_html"
git config git-ftp.user "ftp-user"
git config git-ftp.password "secr3t"
# Upload all files
git ftp init
# Or if the files are already there
git ftp catchup
# Work and deploy
echo "new content" >> index.txt
git commit index.txt -m "Add new content"
git ftp push
# 1 file to sync:
# [1 of 1] Buffered for upload 'index.txt'.
# Uploading ...
# Last deployment changed to ded01b27e5c785fb251150805308d3d0f8117387.
If you encounter any problems, add the -v
or -vv
option to see more output.
The manual may answer some of your questions as well.
Read the manual for more options, features and examples.
See the installation instructions for your system.
Checkout the changelog.
Check git-ftp issues on GitHub for open issues.
Follow this project on twitter @gitftp.
Deploy with git-ftp and GitHub Actions
Deploy with git-ftp and Bitbucket Pipelines (video tutorial).
Don't hesitate to improve this tool.
Don't forget to add yourself to the AUTHORS file.
The core functionality is unit tested using shunit2.
You can find the tests in tests/
.
This application is licensed under GNU General Public License, Version 3.0