I have a project, where I'm forced to use ftp as a means of deploying the files to the live server.
I'm developing on linux, so I hacked together a bash script that makes a backup of the ftp server's contents,
deletes all the files on the ftp, and uploads all the fresh files from the mercurial repository.
(and taking care of user uploaded files and folders, and making post-deploy changes, etc)
It's working well, but the project is starting to get big enough to make the deployment process too long.
I'd like to modify the script to look up which files have changed, and only deploy the modified files. (the backup is fine atm as it is)
I'm using mercurial as a VCS, so my idea is to somehow request the changed files between two revisions from it, iterate over the changed files,
and upload each modified file, and delete each removed file.
I can use hg log -vr rev1:rev2, and from the output, I can carve out the changed files with grep/sed/etc.
Two problems:
I have heard the horror stories that parsing the output of ls leads to insanity, so my guess is that the same applies to here,
if I try to parse the output of hg log, the variables will undergo word-splitting, and all kinds of transformations.
hg log doesn't tell me a file is modified/added/deleted. Differentiating between modified and deleted files would be the least.
So, what would be the correct way to do this? I'm using yafc as an ftp client, in case it's needed, but willing to switch.