Upload a storefront cartridge to a Demandware WebDAV server from command line.
:; npm install -g bitbucket:demandware/dwupload
Instead of installing this as a global npm package, you can install it locally and access it as ./node_modules/.bin/dwupload
.
Note: this npm command above requires the lastest version of npm (or at least 2.x). If you do not have that, run npm install -g npm
first.
:; dwupload --hostname example.demandware.net --username admin --password password --cartridge app_storefront_core --code-version version1 # uploading a carridge
:; dwupload --file path/to/app.js --file path/to/style.css # uploading file(s) using configuration in `dw.json`
:; dwupload watch --cartridge app_storefront_controllers # watch for file changes and upload automatically
:; dwupload delete --file rootDir/path/to/file --root rootDir # delete a file, with root option
See --help
for more information.
Exclude patterns can be declared via the -x
or --exclude
flag. This work for both file and folder exclude patterns. For example:
*.swp
**/node_modules/**
Please note that the **
after the folder name is important. Without it, child directories of node_modules
would still be included.
Instead of passing command line options every single time, you can store your config options in a dw.json
file in the current working directory instead. For example:
{
"hostname": "example.demandware.net",
"username": "user",
"password": "password",
"cartridge": ["cartridgeA", "cartridgeB"],
"code-version": "version2"
}
Command line options will always override the options delcared in the config file.