They don't mention a twinkle that many task runners seem keen to omit: how do you handle things where there are human steps involved and not everything is automated? How do you track what has worked and what is still left to do if things go sidesways?
I built baker (https://github.com/coezbek/baker) for this some time ago (pre-LLM mostly). It uses markdown with embedded bash and ruby commands to give you a checklist which is run both automated for commands or with human in the loop for things which aren't automated (like login to some admin panel and generate that key, copy it here).
The checklist gets checked off both by human actions (you confirm that you did it) and automated e.g. success bash command runs. So you keep a markdown artifact on where you are in your project and can continue later.
You can wrap commands to run via SSH (of course clunkier than what scotty here does, but you can select a port for SSH).
> It lets you define deploy scripts and other remote tasks
Ok.
> run them from your terminal and watch every step as it happens
> and watch every step as it happens
Yes, this is usually how scripts work.
> When everything finishes, you get a summary table with timing for each step.
> If a task fails, its output is shown and execution stops right there so you can investigate.
Yes, I write my larger scripts to do such things...
> Writing plain bash instead of Blade
Yes, probably a good idea.
Call me crazy (you're crazy!) but I'm not seeing the point.
It also (criminally for an SSH tool) appears for now to only work when the server uses the SSH default port 22:
https://github.com/spatie/scotty/issues/1
Literally would be one of the first things I would have tested personally!
This is where I stopped reading:
> Scotty was built with the help of AI
So it sounds like my heuristic worked. =)
I made something similar years ago, a long one-liner.
tar cpf - provision/ | ssh ubuntu@192.168.1.99 "tar xpf - -C /tmp && cd /tmp/provision && bash /tmp/provision/bootstrap.sh && rm -rf /tmp/provision"
Heres is the full use:
https://gist.github.com/mariocesar/8e674ec40dad6b94114d2a44d...I named "Ansible for the Frugal"
Ansible only exists because of an influx of people who don't know how to do this.
Many years ago I wrote my own "cloud instance bootstrapper" that would pull a tar off of S3 based on EC2 instance tags / metadata, untar it, then run a script. I never got into Ansible and I hated having to rebuild AMIs for minor changes.
The most obvious question, I know, but... why not just use plain Bash?
Or something like Ansible? Which is battle tested, provides idempotency for most things, and has a large library of tasks it knows how to do.
I've been writing my own "task runner" which seems to have some of the same features. I'd say some pros: A nice view of that has run (what has failed, etc.) - which otherwise could be drowned-out by stderr and stdout. Timing information for each "task". Can organize nested tasks. Save all in a structured log.
It's in the title: "a beautiful"
It looks nicer.
I use good old GNU Make.
Just use (the good parts of) Ansible
Feels like Ansible does the same thing, just with nicer output
Feels like Ansible has more in the pros column than just nicer output, imo
I founded and developed a similar concept many years back of a web-based SSH dashboard and management console (Commando.io; which I sold). Now a days I use Semaphore UI [1] which uses Ansible playbooks under the hood in my homelab. Pretty happy with it, though setup and configuration did take a bit to get up and running.
[1] https://github.com/semaphoreui/semaphore
alias bones='scotty doctor'