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I m trying to use fabric module through simple python module

remoteExc.py

from fabric.api import *
def clone_repo(IPADDRESS,USER,fPath,git_url):
  env.hosts_string = IPADDRESS
  env.user = USER
  env.key_filename = fPath
  env.disable_known_hosts = 'True'
  run('git clone %s' % (git_url))

mainFile.py

from remoteExc import clone_repo
clone_repo(ipAddress,user,fPath,git_url)

When i execute it says

python mainfile.py

No hosts found. Please specify (single) host string for connection:

Please enlight me where i make a mistake

1 Answer 1

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Typo. env.host_string = IPADDRESS - you've got an env.hosts_string instead.

Also, generally you run fabric via fab - unless you're trying to do something fairly non-standard, be aware that running it via python probably isn't what you want to do. See the Fabric docs for a pretty good intro.

http://docs.fabfile.org/en/1.7/tutorial.html

3
  • Thanks man it is a typo, my requirement is executing the fabric commands from web interface.
    – naga4ce
    Aug 12, 2013 at 13:13
  • 1
    @naga4ce right so, a word of warning. I have actually used fabric as a library in this way, and ultimately the command-line-oriented nature of it always becomes an issue - the biggest reason being that env is global, it's not ever supposed to deal with multiple ongoing tasks, whereas web apps often do (read: multi-threading). Fabric is mighty convenient, tho. I guess I'd recommend having any code that talks to fabric run outside of the web app process, a-la celery, else you're tying yourself to a single-threaded, one-request-per-process deployment setup.
    – AdamKG
    Aug 12, 2013 at 13:19
  • Thank you so much for such insight. Will keep that in mind while developing.
    – naga4ce
    Aug 12, 2013 at 13:33

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