gitolite/doc/extras/nagp.mkd

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2012-03-16 02:54:47 +01:00
# not a gitolite problem
These are issues I do not want to be emailed about. That does not mean you
cannot get help -- in all cases, you're welcome to ask on [irc or the mailing
list][contact]. Irc especially has people with much more patience than I
have, God bless them...
## specific clients, or specific server OSs
These are things I can not support. That does not mean they will not work
with gitolite -- on the contrary, lots of people are using them.
But I personally don't use them, and I won't use them, and in my admittedly
limited experience they have given me good reason to stay well away.
Please ask for help on the [mailing list or IRC][contact]. Please do not
email me directly.
* putty/plink
* jgit/Eclipse
* Mac OS client or server
* windows as a server
* ...probably some more I forgot; will update this list as I remember...
## ssh
The *superstar* of the "not a gitolite problem" category is actually ssh.
Surprised? It is so common that it has [its own document][auth] to tell
you why it is *not* a gitolite problem, while [another one][ssh] tries to
help you anyway!
Everything I know is in that latter link. Please email me about ssh ONLY if
you find something wrong or missing in those documents.
## git
Example 1: when a first `git push` to a new repo fails, it is not because of
gitolite, it is because you need to say `git push origin master` or something.
This is a git issue.
There are several such examples. Gitolite is designed to look like just
another bare repo server to a client (except requiring public keys -- no
passwords allowed). It is *completely transparent* when there is no
authorisation failure (i.e., when the access is allowed, the remote client has
no way of knowing gitolite was even installed!)
Even "on disk", apart from reserving the `update` hook for itself, gitolite
does nothing to your bare repos unless you tell it to (for example, adding
'gitweb.owner' and such to the config file).
BEFORE you think gitolite is a problem, try the same thing with a normal bare
repo. In most cases you can play with it just by doing something like this:
mkdir /tmp/throwaway
cd /tmp/throwaway
git clone --mirror <some repo you have a URL for> bare.git
git clone bare.git worktree
cd worktree
<...try stuff>
----
In addition, the original nagp has more funny stuff...