popsu-d7/sites/all/modules/drush/examples/example.aliases.drushrc.php
Bachir Soussi Chiadmi 1bc61b12ad first import
2015-04-08 11:40:19 +02:00

211 lines
9.1 KiB
PHP

<?php
/**
* Example of valid statements for an alias file. Use this
* file as a guide to creating your own aliases.
*
* Aliases are commonly used to define short names for
* local or remote Drupal installations; however, an alias
* is really nothing more than a collection of options.
* A canonical alias named "dev" that points to a local
* Drupal site named "dev.mydrupalsite.com" looks like this:
*
* $aliases['dev'] = array(
* 'root' => '/path/to/drupal',
* 'uri' => 'dev.mydrupalsite.com',
* );
*
* With this alias definition, then the following commands
* are equivalent:
*
* $ drush @dev status
* $ drush --root=/path/to/drupal --uri=dev.mydrupalsite.com status
*
* Any option that can be placed on the drush commandline
* can also appear in an alias definition.
*
* There are several ways to create alias files.
*
* + Put each alias in a separate file called ALIASNAME.alias.drushrc.php
* + Put multiple aliases in a single file called aliases.drushrc.php
* + Put groups of aliases into files called GROUPNAME.aliases.drushrc.php
*
* Drush will search for aliases in any of these files using
* the alias search path. The following locations are examined
* for alias files:
*
* 1. In any path set in $options['alias-path'] in drushrc.php,
* or (equivalently) any path passed in via --alias-path=...
* on the command line.
* 2. If 'alias-path' is not set, then in one of the default
* locations:
* a. /etc/drush
* b. In the drush installation folder
* c. Inside the 'aliases' folder in the drush installation folder
* d. $HOME/.drush
* 3. Inside the sites folder of any bootstrapped Drupal site,
* or any local Drupal site indicated by an alias used as
* a parameter to a command
*
* Files stored in these locations can be used to create aliases
* to local and remote Drupal installations. These aliases can be
* used in place of a site specification on the command line, and
* may also be used in arguments to certain commands such as
* "drush rsync" and "drush sql-sync".
*
* Alias files that are named after the single alias they contain
* may use the syntax for the canoncial alias shown at the top of
* this file, or they may set values in $options, just
* like a drushrc.php configuration file:
*
* $options['uri'] = 'dev.mydrupalsite.com',
* $options['root'] = '/path/to/drupal';
*
* When alias files use this form, then the name of the alias
* is taken from the first part of the alias filename.
*
* Alias groups (aliases stored together in files called
* GROUPNAME.aliases.drushrc.php, as mentioned above) also
* create an implicit namespace that is named after the group
* name.
*
* For example:
*
* # File: mysite.aliases.drushrc.php
* $aliases['dev'] = array(
* 'root' => '/path/to/drupal',
* 'uri' => 'dev.mydrupalsite.com',
* );
* $aliases['live'] = array(
* 'root' => '/other/path/to/drupal',
* 'uri' => 'mydrupalsite.com',
* );
*
* Then the following special aliases are defined:
*
* @mysite An alias named after the groupname
* may be used to reference all of the
* aliases in the group (e.g. drush @mydrupalsite status)
*
* @mysite.dev A copy of @dev
*
* @mysite.live A copy of @live
*
* Thus, aliases defined in an alias group file may be referred to
* either by their simple (short) name, or by thier full namespace-qualified
* name.
*
* To see an example alias definition for the current bootstrapped
* site, use the "site-alias" command with the built-in alias "@self":
*
* $ drush site-alias @self
*
* If you would like to see all of the Drupal sites at a specified
* root directory, use the built-in alias "@sites":
*
* $ drush -r /path/to/drupal site-alias @sites
*
* See 'drush help site-alias' for more options for displaying site
* aliases.
*
* Although most aliases will contain only a few options, a number
* of settings that are commonly used appear below:
*
* - 'uri': This should always be the same as the site's folder name
* in the 'sites' folder.
* - 'root': The Drupal root; must not be specified as a relative path.
* - 'remote-port': If the database is remote and 'db-url' contains
* a tunneled port number, put the actual database port number
* used on the remote machine in the 'remote-port' setting.
* - 'remote-host': The fully-qualified domain name of the remote system
* hosting the Drupal instance. The remote-host option must be
* omitted for local sites, as this option controls whether or not
* rsync parameters are for local or remote machines.
* - 'remote-user': The username to log in as when using ssh or rsync.
* - 'ssh-options': If the target requires special options, such as a non-
* standard port, alternative identity file, or alternative
* authentication method, ssh- options can contain a string of extra
* options that are used with the ssh command, eg "-p 100"
* - 'parent': The name of a parent alias (e.g. '@server') to use as a basis
* for this alias. Any value of the parent will appear in the child
* unless overridden by an item with the same name in the child.
* Multiple inheritance is possible; name multiple parents in the
* 'parent' item separated by commas (e.g. '@server,@devsite').
* - 'db-url': The Drupal 6 database connection string from settings.php.
* For remote databases accessed via an ssh tunnel, set the port
* number to the tunneled port as it is accessed on the local machine.
* If 'db-url' is not provided, then drush will automatically look it
* up, either from settings.php on the local machine, or via backend invoke
* if the target alias specifies a remote server.
* - 'databases': Like 'db-url', but contains the full Drupal 7 databases
* record. Drush will look up the 'databases' record if it is not specified.
* - 'path-aliases': An array of aliases for common rsync targets.
* Relative aliases are always taken from the Drupal root.
* '%drush-script': The path to the 'drush' script, or to 'drush.php' or
* 'drush.bat', as desired. This is used by backend invoke when drush
* runs a drush command. The default is 'drush' on remote machines, or
* the full path to drush.php on the local machine.
* '%drush': A read-only property: points to the folder that the drush script
* is stored in.
* '%dump-dir': Path to directory that "drush sql-sync" should use to store
* sql-dump files. Helpful filenames are auto-generated.
* '%dump': Path to the file that "drush sql-sync" should use to store sql-dump file.
* '%files': Path to 'files' directory. This will be looked up if not specified.
* '%root': A reference to the Drupal root defined in the 'root' item
* in the site alias record.
* - 'command-specific': These options will only be set if the alias
* is used with the specified command. In the example below, the option
* `--no-cache` will be selected whenever the @stage alias
* is used in any of the following ways:
* drush @stage sql-sync @self @live
* drush sql-sync @stage @live
* drush sql-sync @live @stage
* In case of conflicting options, command-specific options in targets
* (source and destination) take precedence over command-specific options
* in the bootstrapped site, and command-specific options in a destination
* alias will take precedence over those in a source alias.
* - 'source-command-specific' and 'target-command-specific': Behaves exactly
* like the 'command-specific' option, but is applied only if the alias
* is used as the source or target, respectively, of an rsync or sql-sync
* command. In the example below, `--skip-tables-list=comments` whenever
* the alias @live is the target of an sql-sync command, but comments will
* be included if @live is the source for the sql-sync command.
* Some examples appear below. Remove the leading hash signs to enable.
*/
#$aliases['stage'] = array(
# 'uri' => 'stage.mydrupalsite.com',
# 'root' => '/path/to/remote/drupal/root',
# 'db-url' => 'pgsql://username:password@dbhost.com:port/databasename',
# 'remote-host' => 'mystagingserver.myisp.com',
# 'remote-user' => 'publisher',
# 'path-aliases' => array(
# '%drush' => '/path/to/drush',
# '%drush-script' => '/path/to/drush/drush',
# '%dump-dir' => '/path/to/dumps/',
# '%files' => 'sites/mydrupalsite.com/files',
# '%custom' => '/my/custom/path',
# ),
# 'command-specific' => array (
# 'sql-sync' => array (
# 'no-cache' => TRUE,
# ),
# ),
# );
#$aliases['dev'] = array(
# 'uri' => 'dev.mydrupalsite.com',
# 'root' => '/path/to/drupal/root',
# );
#$aliases['server'] = array(
# 'remote-host' => 'mystagingserver.myisp.com',
# 'remote-user' => 'publisher',
# );
#$aliases['live'] = array(
# 'parent' => '@server,@dev',
# 'uri' => 'mydrupalsite.com',
# 'target-command-specific' => array (
# 'sql-sync' => array (
# 'skip-tables-list' => 'comments',
# ),
# ),
# );