# paths and configuration variables for gitolite # please read comments before editing # this file is meant to be pulled into a perl program using "do" or "require". # You do NOT need to know perl to edit the paths; it should be fairly # self-explanatory and easy to maintain perl syntax :-) # -------------------------------------- # Do not uncomment these values unless you know what you're doing # $GL_PACKAGE_CONF = ""; # $GL_PACKAGE_HOOKS = ""; # -------------------------------------- # -------------------------------------- # this is where the repos go. If you provide a relative path (not starting # with "/"), it's relative to your $HOME. You may want to put in something # like "/bigdisk" or whatever if your $HOME is too small for the repos, for # example $REPO_BASE="repositories"; # the default umask for repositories is 0077; change this if you run stuff # like gitweb and find it can't read the repos. Please note the syntax; the # leading 0 is required $REPO_UMASK = 0077; # gets you 'rwx------' # $REPO_UMASK = 0027; # gets you 'rwxr-x---' # $REPO_UMASK = 0022; # gets you 'rwxr-xr-x' # part of the setup of gitweb is a variable called $projects_list (please see # gitweb documentation for more on this). Set this to the same value: $PROJECTS_LIST = $ENV{HOME} . "/projects.list"; # -------------------------------------- # I see no reason anyone may want to change the gitolite admin directory, but # feel free to do so. However, please note that it *must* be an *absolute* # path (i.e., starting with a "/" character) # gitolite admin directory, files, etc $GL_ADMINDIR=$ENV{HOME} . "/.gitolite"; # -------------------------------------- # templates for location of the log files and format of their names # I prefer this template (note the %y and %m placeholders) # it produces files like `~/.gitolite/logs/gitolite-2009-09.log` $GL_LOGT="$GL_ADMINDIR/logs/gitolite-%y-%m.log"; # other choices are below, or you can make your own -- but PLEASE MAKE SURE # the directory exists and is writable; gitolite won't do that for you (unless # it is the default, which is "$GL_ADMINDIR/logs") # $GL_LOGT="$GL_ADMINDIR/logs/gitolite-%y-%m-%d.log"; # $GL_LOGT="$GL_ADMINDIR/logs/gitolite-%y.log"; # -------------------------------------- # Please DO NOT change these three paths $GL_CONF="$GL_ADMINDIR/conf/gitolite.conf"; $GL_KEYDIR="$GL_ADMINDIR/keydir"; $GL_CONF_COMPILED="$GL_ADMINDIR/conf/gitolite.conf-compiled.pm"; # -------------------------------------- # if git on your server is on a standard path (that is # ssh git@server git --version # works), leave this setting as is. Otherwise, choose one of the # alternatives, or write your own $GIT_PATH=""; # $GIT_PATH="/opt/bin/"; # -------------------------------------- # ---------------------------------------------------------------------- # BIG CONFIG SETTINGS # Please read doc/big-config.mkd for details $GL_BIG_CONFIG = 0; $GL_NO_DAEMON_NO_GITWEB = 0; $GL_NO_CREATE_REPOS = 0; $GL_NO_SETUP_AUTHKEYS = 0; # ---------------------------------------------------------------------- # SECURITY SENSITIVE SETTINGS # # Settings below this point may have security implications. That # usually means that I have not thought hard enough about all the # possible ways to crack security if these settings are enabled. # Please see details on each setting for specifics, if any. # ---------------------------------------------------------------------- # -------------------------------------- # ALLOW REPO ADMIN TO SET GITCONFIG KEYS # # Gitolite allows you to set git repo options using the "config" keyword; see # conf/example.conf for details and syntax. # # However, if you are in an installation where the repo admin does not (and # should not) have shell access to the server, then allowing him to set # arbitrary repo config options *may* be a security risk -- some config # settings may allow executing arbitrary commands. # # You have 3 choices. By default $GL_GITCONFIG_KEYS is left empty, which # completely disables this feature (meaning you cannot set git configs from # the repo config). $GL_GITCONFIG_KEYS = ""; # The second choice is to give it a space separated list of settings you # consider safe. (These are actually treated as a set of regular expression # patterns, and any one of them must match). For example: # $GL_GITCONFIG_KEYS = "core\.logAllRefUpdates core\..*compression"; # allows repo admins to set one of those 3 config keys (yes, that second # pattern matches two settings from "man git-config", if you look) # # The third choice (which you may have guessed already if you're familiar with # regular expressions) is to allow anything and everything: # $GL_GITCONFIG_KEYS = ".*"; # NOTE that due to some quoting and interpolation issues I have not been able # to look at, a literal "." needs to be specified in this string as \\. (two # backslashes and a dot). So this is how you'd allow any keys in the "foo" # category: # $GL_GITCONFIG_KEYS = "foo\\..*"; # -------------------------------------- # EXTERNAL COMMAND HELPER -- HTPASSWD # security note: runs an external command (htpasswd) with specific arguments, # including a user-chosen "password". # if you want to enable the "htpasswd" command, give this the absolute path to # whatever file apache (etc) expect to find the passwords in. $HTPASSWD_FILE = ""; # Look in doc/3 ("easier to link gitweb authorisation with gitolite" section) # for more details on using this feature. # -------------------------------------- # EXTERNAL COMMAND HELPER -- RSYNC # security note: runs an external command (rsync) with specific arguments, all # presumably filled in correctly by the client-side rsync. # base path of all the files that are accessible via rsync. Must be an # absolute path. Leave it undefined or set to the empty string to disable the # rsync helper. $RSYNC_BASE = ""; # $RSYNC_BASE = "/home/git/up-down"; # $RSYNC_BASE = "/tmp/up-down"; # -------------------------------------- # EXTERNAL COMMAND HELPER -- SVNSERVE # security note: runs an external command (svnserve) with specific arguments, # as specified below. %u is substituted with the username. # This setting allows launching svnserve when requested by the ssh client. # This allows using the same SSH setup (hostname/username/public key) for both # SVN and git access. Leave it undefined or set to the empty string to disable # svnserve access. $SVNSERVE = ""; # $SVNSERVE = "/usr/bin/svnserve -r /var/svn/ -t --tunnel-user=%u"; # -------------------------------------- # ALLOW REPO CONFIG TO USE WILDCARDS # security note: this used to in a separate "wildrepos" branch. You can # create repositories based on wild cards, give "ownership" to the specific # user who created it, allow him/her to hand out R and RW permissions to other # users to collaborate, etc. This is powerful stuff, and I've made it as # secure as I can, but it hasn't had the kind of rigorous line-by-line # analysis that the old "master" branch had. # This has now been rolled into master, with all the functionality gated by # this variable. Set this to 1 if you want to enable the wildrepos features. # Please see doc/4-wildcard-repositories.mkd for details. $GL_WILDREPOS = 0; # -------------------------------------- # DEFAULT WILDCARD PERMISSIONS # If set, this value will be used as the default user-level permission rule of # new wildcard repositories. The user can change this value with the setperms command # as desired after repository creation; it is only a default. Note that @all can be # used here but is special; no other groups can be used in user-level permissions. # $GL_WILDREPOS_DEFPERMS = 'R = @all'; # -------------------------------------- # HOOK CHAINING # by default, the update hook in every repo chains to "update.secondary". # Similarly, the post-update hook in the admin repo chains to # "post-update.secondary". If you're fine with the defaults, there's no need # to do anything here. However, if you want to use different names or paths, # change these variables # $UPDATE_CHAINS_TO = "hooks/update.secondary"; # $ADMIN_POST_UPDATE_CHAINS_TO = "hooks/post-update.secondary"; # -------------------------------------- # ADMIN DEFINED COMMANDS # WARNING: Use this feature only if (a) you really really know what you're # doing or (b) you really don't care too much about security. Please read # doc/admin-defined-commands.mkd for details. # $GL_ADC_PATH = ""; # -------------------------------------- # per perl rules, this should be the last line in such a file: 1; # Local variables: # mode: perl # End: # vim: set syn=perl: