Many shared hosting sites these days give shell access upoon request. For example, site5 does. Otherwise change to one which does.
Once you have shell access, you can unpack drush into a subdirectory, say ~/bin/drush (where ~ is your home directory where you log in, i.e. /home/mysite). Then the executable will be at ~/bin/drush/drush . Change to that directory and make sure it is executable
$ chmod u+x drush
then execute it:
"./drush".
If you see the familiar drush help file, dependencies will have been met, you are all set.
Add the following line to your .bashrc or .bash_profile file in your home directory:
alias drush=/home/mysite/bin/drush/drush
And you should be all set to go.
Victor Kane http://awebfactory.com.ar http://projectflowandtracker.com
On Tue, Apr 20, 2010 at 5:52 AM, Moses Elias (2) iom@netvision.net.ilwrote:
Please explain why not? After all we do have FTP access to our hosting providers. Many of us are small developers and this is of major importance to us and and should be emphasized to the drush team.
I don't see why certain commands such as downloading modules remotely shouldn't be possible through drush, while perhaps running other commands disabled if there are security related issues on those.
On 20/04/2010 09:51, Mohd Kamal Bin Mustafa wrote:
You need to have shell access (where you can execute command) to your hosting provider. Otherwise, I think you're out of luck.
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