--- layout: "docs" page_title: "Vagrant Push" sidebar_current: "push" description: |- Vagrant Push is a revolutionary feature that allows users to push the code in their Vagrant environment to a remote location. --- # Vagrant Push As of version 1.7, Vagrant is capable of deploying or "pushing" application code in the same directory as your Vagrantfile to a remote such as an FTP server or [HashiCorp's Atlas][Atlas]. Pushes are defined in an application's `Vagrantfile` and are invoked using the `vagrant push` subcommand. Much like other components of Vagrant, each Vagrant Push plugin has its own configuration options. Please consult the documentation for your Vagrant Push plugin for more information. Here is an example Vagrant Push configuration section in a `Vagrantfile`: ```ruby config.push.define "ftp" do |push| push.host = "ftp.company.com" push.username = "..." # ... end ``` When the application is ready to be deployed to the FTP server, just run a single command: ```shell $ vagrant push ``` Much like [Vagrant Providers][], Vagrant Push also supports multiple backend declarations. Consider the common scenario of a staging and QA environment: ```ruby config.push.define "staging", strategy: "ftp" do |push| # ... end config.push.define "qa", strategy: "ftp" do |push| # ... end ``` In this scenario, the user must pass the name of the Vagrant Push to the subcommand: ```shell $ vagrant push staging ``` Vagrant Push is the easiest way to deploy your application. You can read more in the documentation links on the sidebar. [Atlas]: https://atlas.hashicorp.com/ "HashiCorp's Atlas Service" [Vagrant Providers]: /docs/providers/ "Vagrant Providers"