#!/usr/bin/perl # ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- # ssh mode # - started by sshd # - one optional flag, "-s", for "shell allowed" people # - one argument, the "user" name # - one env var, SSH_ORIGINAL_COMMAND, containing the command # - command typically: git-(receive|upload)-pack 'reponame(.git)?' # - special gitolite commands: info, expand, (get|set)(perms|desc) # - special non-gitolite commands: rsync, svnserve, htpasswd # - other commands: anything in $GL_ADC_PATH if defined (see rc file) # # (smart) http mode # - started by apache (httpd) # - no arguments # - REQUEST_URI contains verb and repo, REMOTE_USER contains username # - REQUEST_URI looks like /path/reponame.git/(info/refs\?service=)?git-(receive|upload)-pack # - no special processing commands currently handled # ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- use strict; use warnings; # ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- # find the rc file, then pull the libraries in # ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- # this (gl-auth-command) is one of the two valid starting points for all of # gitolite for normal operations (the other being gl-time). All other # programs are invoked either from this, or from something else (typically # git-*-pack) in between). They thus get the benefit of the environment # variables that this code sets up. BEGIN { # find and set bin dir $0 =~ m|^(/)?(.*)/| and $ENV{GL_BINDIR} = ($1 || "$ENV{PWD}/") . $2; } # our libraries are either in the same place the scripts are, or, as with # RPM/DEB install, in some 'system' location that is already in perl's @INC # anyway use lib $ENV{GL_BINDIR}; use gitolite_rc; # this does a "do" of the rc file use gitolite_env; use gitolite; # ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- # start... # ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- # these two options are mutually exclusive. And this program is not supposed # to be called manually anyway my $shell_allowed = (@ARGV and $ARGV[0] eq '-s' and shift); my $program = (@ARGV and $ARGV[0] eq '-e' and shift); # setup the environment for the kids so they don't need to embark on the # voyage of self-discovery above ;-) [environment also means things like # nice, umask, etc., not just the environment *variables*] setup_environment(); # if one of the other programs is being invoked (see doc/hacking.mkd), exec it exec(@ARGV) if $program; # ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- # set up GL_USER and (if reqd) SSH_ORIGINAL_COMMAND and SSH_CONNECTION # ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- my $user; if ($ENV{REQUEST_URI}) { die "fallback to DAV not supported\n" if $ENV{REQUEST_METHOD} eq 'PROPFIND'; # fake out SSH_ORIGINAL_COMMAND and SSH_CONNECTION when called via http, # so the rest of the code stays the same (except the exec at the end). simulate_ssh_connection(); $ENV{REMOTE_USER} ||= $GL_HTTP_ANON_USER; # see doc/http-backend.mkd $user = $ENV{GL_USER} = $ENV{REMOTE_USER}; } else { # no (more) arguments given in ssh mode? default user is $USER # (fedorahosted works like this, and it is harmless for others) @ARGV = ($ENV{USER}) unless @ARGV; $user = $ENV{GL_USER} = shift; } # ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- # SSH_ORIGINAL_COMMAND # ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- # no SSH_ORIGINAL_COMMAND given: shell out or default to 'info' unless ($ENV{SSH_ORIGINAL_COMMAND}) { shell_out() if $shell_allowed; # doesn't return ('exec's out) $ENV{SSH_ORIGINAL_COMMAND} = 'info'; } # admin defined commands; please see doc/admin-defined-commands.mkd if ($GL_ADC_PATH and -d $GL_ADC_PATH) { try_adc(); # if it succeeds, this also 'exec's out } # get/set perms/desc for wild repos; also the 'expand' command my $CUSTOM_COMMANDS=qr/^\s*(expand|(get|set)(perms|desc))\b/; # note that all the subs called here chdir somewhere else and do not come # back; they all blithely take advantage of the fact that processing custom # commands is sort of a dead end for normal (git) processing if ($ENV{SSH_ORIGINAL_COMMAND} =~ $CUSTOM_COMMANDS) { die "wildrepos disabled, sorry\n" unless $GL_WILDREPOS; run_custom_command($user); exit 0; } # non-git commands: if the command does NOT fit the pattern of a normal git # command, send it off somewhere else... # side notes on detecting a normal git command: the pattern we check allows # old style as well as new style ("git-subcommand arg" or "git subcommand # arg"). Currently, this is how git sends across the command (including the # single quotes): # git-receive-pack 'reponame.git' my ($verb, $repo) = ($ENV{SSH_ORIGINAL_COMMAND} =~ /^\s*(git\s+\S+|\S+)\s+'\/?(.*?)(?:\.git)?'/); unless ( $verb and ( $verb eq 'git-init' or $verb =~ $R_COMMANDS or $verb =~ $W_COMMANDS ) and $repo and $repo =~ $REPONAME_PATT ) { special_cmd ($shell_allowed); exit 0; } # some final sanity checks die "$repo ends with a slash; I don't like that\n" if $repo =~ /\/$/; die "$repo has two consecutive periods; I don't like that\n" if $repo =~ /\.\./; # save the reponame; too many things need this $ENV{GL_REPO}=$repo; # ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- # the real git commands (git-receive-pack, etc...) # ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- # we know the user and repo; we just need to know what perm he's trying for # (aa == attempted access; setting this makes some later logic simpler) my $aa = ($verb =~ $R_COMMANDS ? 'R' : 'W'); # writes may get redirected under certain conditions if ( $GL_HOSTNAME and $aa eq 'W' and mirror_mode($repo) =~ /^slave of (\S+)/ ) { my $master = $1; die "$ABRT $GL_HOSTNAME not the master, please push to $master\n" unless mirror_redirectOK($repo, $GL_HOSTNAME); print STDERR "$GL_HOSTNAME ==== $user ($repo) ===> $master\n"; exec("ssh", $master, "USER=$user", "SOC=$ENV{SSH_ORIGINAL_COMMAND}"); } # first level permissions check my ($perm, $creator, $wild); if ( $GL_ALL_READ_ALL and $verb =~ $R_COMMANDS and -d "$REPO_BASE/$repo.git") { $perm = 'R'; } else { ($perm, $creator, $wild) = repo_rights($repo); } # it was missing, and you have create perms, so create it new_wild_repo($repo, $user) if ($perm =~ /C/); die "$aa access for $repo DENIED to $user (Or there may be no repository at the given path. Did you spell it correctly?)\n" unless $perm =~ /$aa/; # check if repo is write-enabled check_repo_write_enabled($repo) if $aa eq 'W'; # run the pre-git hook if present (do this last, just before actually handing # off to git). Force its output to go to STDERR so the git client does not # get confused, in case the code in the pre-git hook forgot. To make it # simple for the script, send in $aa (which will be 'R' or 'W') so now they # have all three: GL_USER and GL_REPO in the env, and $aa as arg-1. if (-x "$REPO_BASE/$repo.git/hooks/gl-pre-git") { system("cd $REPO_BASE/$repo.git; hooks/gl-pre-git $aa >&2"); die "gl-pre-git hook failed ($?)\n" if $?; } # ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- # over to git now # ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- if ($ENV{REQUEST_URI}) { log_it($ENV{REQUEST_URI}); exec $ENV{GIT_HTTP_BACKEND}; # the GIT_HTTP_BACKEND env var should be set either by the rc file, or as # a SetEnv in the apache config somewhere } log_it(); $repo = "'$REPO_BASE/$repo.git'"; exec("git", "shell", "-c", "$verb $repo") unless $verb eq 'git-init';