Here is a step-by-step on how to create a git repo on your web host that will allow direct pushes, set it up as a remote for your local repo, and push changes to it. Note that you need to have ssh access to your web host, and have git installed.
On your web host (ssh'd in):
# create an empty repo on your web host; note its path
mkdir site
cd site
git init
# configure it to allow pushes to the current checked-out branch
# without complaining (direct push)
git config receive.denyCurrentBranch ignore
Now with your local repo (run these git commands inside the repo):
# create the reference to the web host remote for pushing
# /path/to/the/repo is the path to the repo you made above on the web host:
# it will be an absolute path OR relative to your ssh chroot (depends on the host)
git remote add deploy ssh://your_user@your_host/path/to/the/repo
# finally, push your changes!
git push deploy master
Now, your changes have been pushed to the checked-out repo on the web host. However, they will not be reflected in the working dir (that is, your changes will not take effect immediately). This is because you have pushed directly to the active branch. To finish up, you need to either
- manually perform a
git checkout -f to update the working dir
- make a
git post-receive hook to do it automatically.
To have instant, automatic deployment with a post-receive hook check out this git site deployment howto.