This seems really weird to me… Capistrano seems to trip itself up on
my server’s message/banner. It’s not long or anything, pretty normal,
I’d say…
Also: It looks like it’s making a seperate connection for each
command? Is that normal?
Here’s some relevant output:
[myserver.com] executing command
** [out :: myserver.com] Linux myserver.com 2.6.9 #1 SMP Wed Jul 19
16:24:18 MSD 2006 i686 GNU/Linux
command finished
- executing “rm -rf /home/user/releases/20060829203808/log
/home/user/releases/20060829203808/public/system &&\n ln -nfs
/home/user/shared/log /home/user/releases/20060829203808/log &&\n
ln -nfs /home/user/shared/system
/home/user/releases/20060829203808/public/system”
servers: [“myserver.com”]
[myserver.com] executing command
** [out :: myserver.com] Linux myserver.com 2.6.9 #1 SMP Wed Jul 19
16:24:18 MSD 2006 i686 GNU/Linux
command finished - executing task symlink
- executing “ls -x1 /home/user/releases”
servers: [“myserver.com”]
[myserver.com] executing command
command finished - executing “ln -nfs /home/user/releases/myserver.com
/home/user/current”
servers: [“myserver.com”]
[myserver.com] executing command
** [out :: myserver.com] Linux myserver.com 2.6.9 #1 SMP Wed Jul 19
16:24:18 MSD 2006 i686 GNU/Linux
command finished
It looks to me like five lines up should read “ln -nfs
/home/user/releases/20060829030808”. Why use ls to capture the date at
all?
– Josh