# installing gitolite [Update 2009-11-18: easy install now works from msysgit also!] This document tells you how to install gitolite. After the install is done, you may want to see the [admin document][admin] for adding users, repos, etc. [admin]: http://github.com/sitaramc/gitolite/blob/pu/doc/2-admin.mkd There's an easy install script that requires bash (**strongly** recommended), but if you have no bash or you're on one of the legacy Unixes there's a slightly more manual process. Both are explained here. In this document: * easy install * typical example run * advantages over the older install methods * disadvantages * manual install * upgrades * other notes * next steps * appendix: server and client requirements ---- ### easy install There is an easy install script that makes installing very easy for the common case. **This script will setup everything on the server, but you have to run it on your workstation, NOT on the server!** Assumptions/pre-requisites: * you have a server to host gitolite * git is installed on that server (and so is perl) * you have a userid on that server * you have ssh-pubkey (**password-less**) login to that userid * if you have only password access, run `ssh-keygen -t rsa` to create a new keypair if needed, then run `ssh-copy-id user@host`. If you do not have `ssh-copy-id`, read doc/3-faq-tips-etc.mkd and look for `ssh-copy-id` in that file for instructions * you have a clone or an archive of gitolite somewhere on your workstation * if you don't have one, just run `git clone git://github.com/sitaramc/gitolite` Once you have all this, just `cd` to that clone and run `src/gl-easy-install` and follow the prompts! (Running it without any arguments shows you usage plus other useful info). #### typical example run A typical run for me is: src/gl-easy-install -q git my.git.server sitaram `-q` stands for "quiet" mode -- very minimal output, no verbose descriptions of what it is going to do, and no pauses unless absolutely needed. However, if you're doing this for the first time or you appreciate knowing what it is actually doing, I suggest you skip the `-q`. #### advantages over the older install methods * all ssh problems reduced to **just one pre-requisite**: enable ssh pubkey (password-less) access to the server from your workstation first * the script takes care of all the server side work * when done: * you get two different pubkeys (the original one for command line access as before, plus a new one, created by the script, for gitolite access) * you can admin gitolite by commit+push a "gitolite-admin" repo, just like gitosis (i.e., full "push to admin" power!) #### disadvantages * need a recent bash ### manual install If you don't have bash, it's not very complicated to do it manually. Just open the file `src/gl-easy-install` in a nice, syntax coloring, text editor, and follow the instructions marked "MANUAL" :-) ### upgrades Upgrading gitolite is easy. To upgrade, pull the latest "master" (or other) branch in your gitolite repo clone, then run the same exact command you ran to do the install, except you can leave out the last argument. And you might want to add a `-q` to speed things up :-) Note that this only upgrades the software. Unlike earlier versions, it does **not** touch the `conf/gitolite.conf` file or the contents of `keydir` in any way. I decided that it is not possible to **safely** let an upgrade do something meaningful with them -- fiddling with existing config files (as opposed to merely creating one which did not exist) is best left to a human. ### other notes * if you run `src/gl-easy-install` without the `-q` option, you will be given a chance to edit `~/.gitolite.rc`. You can change any options (such as paths, for instance), but be sure to keep the perl syntax -- you *don't* have to know perl to do so, it's fairly easy to guess in this limited case. ### next steps The last message produced by the easy install script should tell you how to add users, repos, etc., and you will find more details in the [admin][admin] document. ### appendix: server and client requirements There are 3 machines *potentially* involved in installing and administering gitolite. #### server This is where gitolite is eventually installed. You need a *normal* userid (typically "git" but can be anything) on this machine; root access is *not* needed, but it has to be some sort of Unix (not Windows). You need the following software on it: * git * can be in a non-PATH location if you are unable to install it normally; see the `$GIT_PATH` variable in the "rc" file * perl * default install is fine; no special modules are needed * (a normal install of git also requires/installs perl, so you probably have it already) * openssh server * (I guess any ssh server that can understand the `authorized_keys` file format should work) #### install workstation Installing or upgrading the gitolite software itself is best done by running the easy-install program from a gitolite clone. This script is heavily dependent on bash, so you need a machine with a bash shell. Even the bash that comes with msysgit is fine, if you don't have a Linux box handy. If you have neither Linux nor Windows+msysgit, you still have a few alternatives: * use a different userid on the same server (assuming it has bash) * use the same userid on the same server (same assumption) * manually simulate the script directly on the server (doable, but tedious) #### admin workstation(s) When you install gitolite, it creates a repository called "gitolite-admin" and gives you permissions on it. Administering gitolite (adding repos/users, assigning permissions, etc) is done by cloning this repo, making changes to a file called `conf/gitolite.conf`, adding users' pubkeys to `keydir/`, and pushing the changes back to the server. Which means all this can be done from *any* machine. You'll normally do it from the same machine you used to install gitolite, but it doesn't have to be the same one, as long as your pubkey has been added and permissions given to allow you to push to the gitolite-admin repo.