$ENV{GL_REPO_BASE_ABS} is meant to point to the same directory as
$REPO_BASE, except it is meant to be passed to hooks, ADCs and other
child programs. And since you can't be sure where the child program
starts in, this became an absolute path.
Gradually, however, I started using it wherever I needed an absolute
path (mostly in code that jumps around various directories to do stuff).
Which is silly, because there's no reason $REPO_BASE cannot also be made
an absolute, even if the rc file has a relative path.
So that's what I did now: made $REPO_BASE absolute very early on, and
then systematically changed all uses of the longer form to the shorter
form when appropriate. And so the only thing we now use the longer one
for is to pass to child programs.
(Implementation note: The actual change is not very big, but while I was
about it I decided to make the test suite able to test with an absolute
REPO_BASE also, which is why the commit seems so large.)
----
This all started with a complaint from Damien Regad. He had an
extremely odd setup where his bashrc changed PWD to something other than
$HOME before anything else ran. This caused those two variables to
beceom inconsistent, and he had a 1-line fix he wanted me to apply.
I generally don't like making special fixes for for non-standard setups,
and anyway all he had to do was set the full path to REPO_BASE in the rc
file to get around this. Which is what I told him and he very politely
left it at that.
However, this did get me thinking, and I soon realised I was needlessly
conflating "relative versus absolute" with "able to be passed to child
programs". Fixing that solved his problem also, as a side-effect.
So I guess this is all thanks to Damien!
Technically this does not add any new information, but I'm hoping it
will help the folks just won't read what's on the screen otherwise.
The main impetus this time is git 1.7.4, which is strict about
user.email and user.name and rejects commits when those config variables
are not set. As a result, the number of times gl-easy-install hits a
fatal error and bombs out without completing its job, has increased
drastically.
The code that sets %projlist doesn't even run if GL_NO_DAEMON_NO_GITWEB
is set, so it doesn't make sense to then *use* that (empty) variable and
effectively wipe out the projects.list file.
Thanks to m0 for asking...
(suggested by cmyers and ryan_c on #gitolite)
Between wrap_print(), which now takes a list, and the new slurp(),
pretty much everything to do with 'cat' or 'echo' has been converted to
pure perl.
----
Personally, I consider these changes to be somewhat gratuitous, because
none of these had a security *or* a performance concern. But since the
amount of new perl code was not too high (just the slurp() function,
really), I figure it's not a big deal to do it.
with warns now being logged, it's nice to make sure that anything that
could even vaguely be considered someone playing with the system, *or*
is otherwise noteworthy, be emitted as a 'warn' instead of as a 'print
STDERR'. Similarly stuff that is clearly a syntactic warning or typo
should come from 'print STDERR', instead of from a 'warn'.
ryan-c on #gitolite (ryan.castellucci@gmail.com) found that if a user
types in
ssh git@server `echo -e "\033[2J"`
or eqvt, he can get raw ASCII control characters into gitolite's log
file. Then if a gitolite admin 'cat's the log file (instead of using a
pager, or uses a pager in raw mode like 'less -r'), those control
characters hit his screen and do stuff.
While clearing the screen etc is probably harmless and I would not have
bothered, we know that the old vt100 would allow the keyboard to be
remapped by the server sending control codes, and we're not really sure
which of the currently in use terminals emulate this.
And finally, I found somewhere that "PuTTY allows the server to send
control codes that let it take over the mouse". Scary...
(...of course, I hate putty/plink so I was sorely tempted to leave this
as is to punish people who use it <grin> but not really; I'd joke about
it but won't actually *do* it!)
Earlier, it wasn't as critical for gl-setup to be run with the full
path; the BINDIR deduction used to happen in almost every program. Now
it's a lot more important.
Apparently I never noticed that "/bin/bash -l gl-setup" does not set $0
to the correct, fq path. Adding a "-c" does, however...
[thanks to Jeff from the KDE team for finding this]
This shaves 3 seconds off of KDE's config compile time :-)
Yes, I know wrap_print has that extra print statement, but otherwise it
was lying around not earning its keep so I gave it a little side job :-)
you might wonder why these are different from all the other variables in
the rc file... it's just that I never thought people would want to
change these!
- allow a mob username to be defined; all unauthenticated access will
look to gitolite like this user (if you setup apache also properly)
- update doc with more details (some repeat stuff from `man
git-http-backend` but it's probably worth having everything in one
place
Fedora's config has over 11,000 repositories and the compiled config
file is over 20 MB in size. Although negligible on a server class
machine, on my laptop just parsing this file takes a good 2.5 seconds.
Even if you use GL_ALL_READ_ALL (see a couple of commits before this
one) to remove the overhead for 'read's, that's still a pretty big
overhead for writes. And GL_ALL_READ_ALL is not really a solution for
most people anyway.
With this commit, using GL_BIG_CONFIG adds another optimisation; see
doc/big-config.mkd for details (look for the word "split config" to find
the section that talks about it).
----
Implementation notes:
- the check for GL_NO_CREATE_REPOS has moved *into* the loop (which it
completely bypassed earlier) so that write_1_compiled_conf can be
called on each item
Fedora (for example) runs like this:
* each user has his own userid and login
* his/her ~/.ssh/authkeys file (containing only his/her key) has a
"command=" clause invoking just "gl-auth-command"
* trusted users have "gl-auth-command -s" meaning they can get a shell if
they want to
As a result, there is no specific $HOME where you can look for
.gitolite.rc. Hence this patch
----
Side note: in addition, Fedora may have one or more of the following
characteristics (writing them here for convenience; they're not directly
relevant to this patch):
* actual git repos are under "git" (or some such), and include the chmod g+s
(git init --shared) unix perms tricks for shared access
* but since they're coming through gl-auth, branch-level acls are in effect
* the gitolite config file is generated from some database and compiled (all
via cron)
* they keydir/ is empty; in fact they probably don't use the admin repo at
all, AFAIK
For sample code see new file contrib/adc/get-rights-and-owner.in-perl.
Despite the name, you can use similar code in a hook also -- comments in
that file will tell you how.
implementation notes:
- check_access now takes an optional last arg "dry_run", which is also
passes through to check_ref
- check_ref returns a "DENIED by ..." instead of die-ing if dry_run is
passed in
- as a side effect, cli_repo_rights is now just a stub calling
check_access (we kept it hanging around for backward compat -- too
much adc pain for too many people if we change it now)
perm categories (like READERS and WRITERS, or whatever you put in your
$GL_WILDREPOS_PERM_CATS) are *supposed* to "have no pubkeys"; don't warn
about them
thanks to Joe Schaefer at the ASF for catching it. Note that this new
pattern *may* be too restrictive -- if you're using this feature and
have a problem with the new pattern please email me.
See email to gitolite mailing list around this date (2010-11-28) for
more details.
They don't work if someone calls the script for example
su - gitolite -c gl-setup <key>
from a directory where "gitolite" user does not have permissions (e.g.
0700), then 'cd $od' fails and we stay in gitolite's $HOME.
[commit message changed by committer; author was more polite ;-)]
(we quietly do not document the 'able' adc, which is now the most
"official" adc in the sense that it has a new test, t64-write-able!)
other notes: fix bug in 'able' (not setting $loc)
- openssh 5.6 doesn't like "ssh user@host" with no command following
it, because they changed the rules for pty allocation failure.
I'm calling this a BSD compat change because BSD hit it first, but
really, the "ssh -T" will eventually be needed by Linuxes also, as
they start upgrading to openssh 5.6
- FreeBSD (and I presume the other BSDs also) *require* a "-t"
argument to mktemp (thanks to matias for finding this).
Note that on FreeBSD, -t is a prefix (the X's are taken literally,
and the real random stuff gets appended to the prefix), while on
Linux, it is a template (the X's are converted to random
characters). Thus, on BSD you will get names like
/tmp/tmp.XXXXXXXXXX.1BAEGkHm, whereas on Linux you'll get
/tmp/tmp.Aq7vbdNpGp or something.
Use case: group information is generated from an external system and
because of synchronization or authorization restrictions some groups
can be empty.
Signed-off-by: Teemu Matilainen <teemu.matilainen@reaktor.fi>
THE COMPILED CONFIG FILE FORMAT CHANGES WITH THIS VERSION. PLEASE DO
NOT MIX VERSIONS OR DOWNGRADE. Upgrading using normal gitolite upgrade
means should be fine, though.
Originally, we only allowed "R" and "RW" as categories of users supplied
to the `setperms` command. These map respectively to "READERS" and
"WRITERS" in the access rules.
Now:
- we prefer READERS instead of R and WRITERS instead of RW
- we allow the admin to define other categories as she wishes
(example: MANAGERS, TESTERS, etc). These do not have abbreviations,
however, so they must be supplied in full.
PLEASE, *PLEASE*, read the section in doc/wildcard-repositories.mkd for
more info. This is a VERY powerful feature and if you're not careful
you could mess up the ACLs nicely.
Backward compat note: you can continue to use the "R" and "RW"
categories when running the "setperms" command, and gitolite will
internally convert them to READERS and WRITERS categories.
----
implementation notes:
- new RC var called GL_WILDREPOS_PERM_CATS that is a space-sep list of
the allowed categories in a gl-perms file; defaults to "R RW" if not
specified
- wild_repo_rights no longer returns $c, $r, $wC, where $r = $user if
"R $user", $r = '@all' if "R @all", and similarly with $w and "RW".
Instead it returns $c and a new hash that effectively gives the same
info, but expanded to include any other valid categories (listed in
GL_WILDREPOS_PERM_CATS)
- consequently, the arguments that parse_acl takes also change the
same way
- (side note: R and RW are quietly converted to READERS and WRITERS;
however, new categories that you define yourself do not have
abbreviations)
- setperms validates perms to make sure only allowed categories are
used; however even if someone changed them behind the scenes,
wild_repo_rights will also check. This is necessary in case the
admin tightened up GL_WILDREPOS_PERM_CATS after someone had already
setperms-d his repos.
- as a bonus, we eliminate all the post-Dumper shenanigans, at least
for READERS and WRITERS. Those two now look, to the compile script,
just like any other usernames.
This was a very old quirk/oddity. Doing
R = @all alice
would fail, but you could still do
R = @all
R = alice
Now we fixed it so it's consistent.
----
This also fixed a curious bug that no one ever caught:
@all = u1 u2 # yes -- there was no check on redefining @all
repo foo
R = @all u3 # now would not fail because of defining @all
would have given only those 3 users R access to foo, not really @all
users! This was because the previous failure message was an artifact of
not finding an expansion for @all, not a genuine "why are you saying
@all and then specifying some user explicitly" warning!