![]() Bitcoin is the only crypto-friendly payout option.9. They accept several cryptos, including Bitcoin, but mostly fiat-currency cashouts. Interested in learning more about Git? Check out my new Pluralsight course on Git for Visual Studio Developers! Post navigation Now every time I push to my remote repo, my site will get automatically deployed! And a few short seconds later, you will get a message letting you know that it was all successful: You will be prompted for your credentials that you configured earlier. So in my case, I will enter this URL in the remote repo textbox: then click on Publish. Clicking on the Unsynced Commits link shows you that your remote repository is not configured yet: Once your files a committed to your local Git repository, you can use the information provided by Azure to configure the remote repository. Then Right-click on your solution and select Commit, which will bring up the Commit tab in Team Explorer: Right-click on your solution and select “Add to Source Control” and select Git I selected an ASP.NET Empty Website, with a very simple default.html page:Ĭreate a local repo and commit your files Create your new Website locallyįrom Visual Studio 2013, create a new website: File –> New –> Website. Now time to create a website and deploy to Azure. Here you can see instructions on what you need to do to get your site deployed:īefore you can deploy, you’ll need to create credentials that will be used by Git: Back from the Azure portal, you can click on your newly-created site, and select “Deployments”. Then select Local Git Repository as your source:Īs of this moment, the list of sources is: Visual Studio Online, Local Git repository, GitHub, Dropbox, Bitbucket, CodePlex, or any externally accessible Git or Mercurial repository.Ĭlick on next, and the site is created. This will allow you to configure a database (if any) and specify your deployment source.Įnter your URL, Region, Database, and check the “Publish from Source Control” checkbox: Go to your Azure Portal, then click on the Websites, then click on New and select “Custom Create”. This is how you configure your deployments from your local Git repo using Visual Studio 2013: Create an Azure Website and Configure Git Deployment This allows you to push files to it from any other Git repo such as Visual Studio Online, TFS 2013, GitHub, and even a local repo. But Azure offers you other options which make our life a lot easier, one of them is by configuring your Azure hosted directory as a Git repository. Just like any other web hosts out there, you are able to FTP your files using your favorite FTP client. ![]() This is a great way to get your site hosted, especially if you already have an Azure account and you don’t need access to other Azure offerings such as Web Role, Worker Role, Table/Blob Storage, and more. The site doesn’t have to be ASP.NET, you can use HTML5/JavaScript, a static HTML page, PHP, Python, Classic ASP and others. Azure offers you the ability to host a website under your Azure account in minutes.
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