336 lines
13 KiB
Markdown
336 lines
13 KiB
Markdown
# installing gitolite
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[Update 2009-11-18: easy install now works from msysgit also!]
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Gitolite is somewhat unusual as far as "server" software goes -- every userid
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on the system is a potential "gitolite host" and can install his own version
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if he chooses to.
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This document tells you how to install gitolite. After the install is done,
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you may want to see the [admin document][admin] for adding users, repos, etc.
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**Please note** that gitolite depends heavily on proper ssh setup and pubkey
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based access. Sadly, most people don't know ssh as well as they think they
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do. To make matters worse, ssh problems in gitolite don't always look like
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ssh problems. Please read about [ssh troubleshooting][doc6] if you have *any*
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kind of trouble installing gitolite!
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[admin]: http://github.com/sitaramc/gitolite/blob/pu/doc/2-admin.mkd
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[doc6]: http://github.com/sitaramc/gitolite/blob/pu/doc/6-ssh-troubleshooting.mkd
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In this document:
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* install methods
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* user install
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* typical example run
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* advantages over the older install methods
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* disadvantages
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* upgrades
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* other notes
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* system install / user setup
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* next steps
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* appendix A: server and client requirements for user install
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* server
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* install workstation
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* admin workstation(s)
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* appendix B: uninstalling gitolite
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* appendix C: NOTE TO PACKAGE MAINTAINERS
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----
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### install methods
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There are 2 ways to install gitolite: The **user-install** mode was the
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traditional way, and is used when *any* of the following is true:
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* you don't have root on your "server" (some types of hosting setups, many
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corporate paranoia setups ;-)
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* your server distro does not have gitolite in its package repositories
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* your server distro's package repositories have an old version of gitolite
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* you want to stay current with the latest gitolite versions
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* your server is not Linux (maybe AIX, or Solaris, etc.)
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The "user install" section describes this method.
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The **system-install followed by user-setup** mode is used when you (or
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someone who has root) has installed an RPM or DEB of gitolite and you intend
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to use that version.
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The "system install / user setup" section describes this method.
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----
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### user install
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There is an easy install script that makes installing very easy for the common
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case. **This script will setup everything on the server, but you have to run
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it on your workstation, NOT on the server!**
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Assumptions/pre-requisites:
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* you have a server to host gitolite
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* git is installed on that server (and so is perl)
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* you have a userid on that server
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* you have ssh-pubkey (**password-less**) login to that userid
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* if you have only password access, run `ssh-keygen -t rsa` to create a
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new keypair if needed, then run `ssh-copy-id user@host`. If you do
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not have `ssh-copy-id`, read doc/3-faq-tips-etc.mkd and look for
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`ssh-copy-id` in that file for instructions
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* you have a clone or an archive of gitolite somewhere on your workstation
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* if you don't have one, just run `git clone git://github.com/sitaramc/gitolite`
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* your workstation has bash (even msysgit bash will do)
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Once you have all this, just `cd` to that clone and run `src/gl-easy-install`
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and follow the prompts! (Running it without any arguments shows you usage
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plus other useful info).
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#### typical example run
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A typical run for me is:
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src/gl-easy-install -q git my.git.server sitaram
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`-q` stands for "quiet" mode -- very minimal output, no verbose descriptions
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of what it is going to do, and no pauses unless absolutely needed. However,
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if you're doing this for the first time or you appreciate knowing what it is
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actually doing, I suggest you skip the `-q`.
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#### advantages over the older install methods
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* all ssh problems reduced to **just one pre-requisite**: enable ssh pubkey
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(password-less) access to the server from your workstation first
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* the script takes care of all the server side work
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* when done:
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* you get two different pubkeys (the original one for command line
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access as before, plus a new one, created by the script, for gitolite
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access)
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* you can admin gitolite by commit+push a "gitolite-admin" repo, just
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like gitosis (i.e., full "push to admin" power!)
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#### disadvantages
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* need a recent bash
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#### upgrades
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Upgrading gitolite is easy.
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To upgrade, pull the latest "master" (or other) branch in your gitolite repo
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clone, then run the same exact command you ran to do the install, except you
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can leave out the last argument.
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And you might want to add a `-q` to speed things up :-)
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Note that this only upgrades the software. Unlike earlier versions, it does
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**not** touch the `conf/gitolite.conf` file or the contents of `keydir` in any
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way. I decided that it is not possible to **safely** let an upgrade do
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something meaningful with them -- fiddling with existing config files (as
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opposed to merely creating one which did not exist) is best left to a human.
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#### other notes
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* if you run `src/gl-easy-install` without the `-q` option, you will be
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given a chance to edit `~/.gitolite.rc`. You can change any options (such
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as paths, for instance), but be sure to keep the perl syntax -- you
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*don't* have to know perl to do so, it's fairly easy to guess in this
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limited case.
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### system install / user setup
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In this mode a system administrator installs gitolite using the server's
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distro package mechanism (yum install, apt-get install, etc).
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Once this is done, you as a user must run a command like this (unlike in the
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"user install" mode, this is done directly on the server):
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gl-setup yourname.pub
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where yourname.pub is a copy of a public key from your workstation. The first
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time you run this, it will create a "gitolite-admin" repo and populate it with
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the right configuration for whoever has the corresponding private key to
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clone and push it. In other words, that person is the administrator for this
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particular gitolite instance.
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If your system administrator upgrades gitolite itself, things will usually
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just work without any change; you should not have to do anything special.
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However, some new features may require additional settings in your
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`~/.gitolite.rc` file.
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Finally, in the rare case that you managed to lose your keys to the admin repo
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and want to supply a new pubkey, you can use this command to replace any such
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key. Could be useful in an emergency -- just get your new "yourname.pub" to
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the server and run the same command as above.
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**IMPORTANT**: there are two variables in the `~/.gitolite.rc` file:
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`$GL_PACKAGE_CONF` and `$GL_PACKAGE_HOOKS`. If you remove or change either of
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them, expect trouble :-)
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### next steps
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The last message produced by the easy install script should tell you how to
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add users, repos, etc., and you will find more details in the [admin][admin]
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document.
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<a name="server_reqs"></a>
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### appendix A: server and client requirements for user install
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There are 3 machines *potentially* involved in installing and administering
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gitolite.
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#### server
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This is where gitolite is eventually installed. You need a *normal* userid
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(typically "git" but can be anything) on this machine; root access is *not*
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needed, but it has to be some sort of Unix (not Windows).
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You need the following software on it:
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* git
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* can be in a non-PATH location if you are unable to install it
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normally; see the `$GIT_PATH` variable in the "rc" file
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* perl
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* default install is fine; no special modules are needed
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* (a normal install of git also requires/installs perl, so you probably
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have it already)
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* openssh server
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* (I guess any ssh server that can understand the `authorized_keys` file
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format should work)
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#### install workstation
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Installing or upgrading the gitolite software itself is best done by running
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the easy-install program from a gitolite clone.
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This script is heavily dependent on bash, so you need a machine with a bash
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shell. Even the bash that comes with msysgit is fine, if you don't have a
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Linux box handy.
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If you have neither Linux nor Windows+msysgit, you still have a few
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alternatives:
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* use a different userid on the same server (assuming it has bash)
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* use the same userid on the same server (same assumption)
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* manually simulate the script directly on the server (doable, but tedious)
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#### admin workstation(s)
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When you install gitolite, it creates a repository called "gitolite-admin" and
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gives you permissions on it.
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Administering gitolite (adding repos/users, assigning permissions, etc) is
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done by cloning this repo, making changes to a file called
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`conf/gitolite.conf`, adding users' pubkeys to `keydir/`, and pushing the
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changes back to the server.
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Which means all this can be done from *any* machine. You'll normally do it
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from the same machine you used to install gitolite, but it doesn't have to be
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the same one, as long as your pubkey has been added and permissions given to
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allow you to push to the gitolite-admin repo.
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<a name="uninstall"></a>
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### appendix B: uninstalling gitolite
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Sometimes you might find gitolite is overkill -- you have only one user
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(yourself) pushing maybe. Or maybe gitolite is just not enough -- you want a
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web-based front end that users can use to manage their keys themselves, etc.,
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in which case you'd probably switch to [github][g1], [girocco][g2],
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[indefero][g3] or [gitorious][g4]. Either way, you'd like to uninstall
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gitolite.
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[g1]: http://github.com
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[g2]: http://repo.or.cz/w/girocco.git
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[g3]: http://www.indefero.net/
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[g4]: http://gitorious.com/
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Uninstalling gitolite is fairly easy. Just log on to the server and do the
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following (assuming `$REPO_BASE` in the rc file was left at its default of
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`~/repositories`; if not, adjust accordingly):
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* edit `~/.ssh/authorized_keys` and delete the `# gitolite start` and `#
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gitolite end` markers and all the lines between them. This will prevent
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any of your users from attempting a push while you are doing this.
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If you are the only user, and/or *need* one or more of those keys to
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continue to access this account (like if one of them is your laptop or
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your home desktop etc.) then instead of deleting the line you can just
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delete everything upto but not including the words "ssh-rsa" or "ssh-dss".
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* Now remove (or move aside or rename to something else if you're paranoid)
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the following files and directories.
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~/.gitolite
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~/.gitolite.rc
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~/repositories/gitolite-admin.git
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* Then remove all the `update` hooks that git installs on each repository.
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The easiest way is:
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find ~/repositories -wholename "*.git/hooks/update" | xargs rm -f
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but you can do it manually if you want to be careful.
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* Finally, any remote users that still have access must update their clone's
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remote URLs (edit `.git/config` in the repo) to prefix `repositories/`
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before the actual path used, in order for the remote to still work. This
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is because you'll now be accessing it through plain ssh, which means you
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have to give it the full path.
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### appendix C: NOTE TO PACKAGE MAINTAINERS
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Here's how you'd package gitolite. In the following description, location "X"
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can be, say, `/usr/share/gitolite/conf` or some such, and similarly location
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"Y" can be perhaps `/usr/share/gitolite/hooks`. It's upto your distro
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policies where they are.
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**Step 1**: Clone the gitolite repo and run the make command inside the clone
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git clone git://github.com/sitaramc/gitolite.git
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cd gitolite
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make pu.tar # or "make master.tar" or "make v1.2.tar" etc
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Then you explode the tar file in some temporary location.
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*Alternatively, you can `git checkout` the tag or branch you want, and run
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this command in the clone directly*:
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git describe --tags --long > conf/VERSION
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**Step 2**: Now make the following changes (no trailing slashes in the
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location values please):
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* `src/gl-setup` should have the following line:
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GL_PACKAGE_CONF="X"
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* `conf/example.gitolite.rc` should have the following lines:
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$GL_PACKAGE_CONF="X";
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$GL_PACKAGE_HOOKS="Y";
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* delete `src/gl-easy-install`; that script is meant for a totally different
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mode of installation and does *not* play well in this mode :-)
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**Step 3**: Move (or arrange to move) the files to their proper locations as
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given below:
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* everything in "src" goes somewhere on the PATH
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* everything in "conf" goes to location "X"
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* everything in "hooks" goes to location "Y"
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**Step 4**: There is no step 4. Unless you count telling your users to run
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`gl-setup` as a step :)
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On the initial install (urpmi, yum install, or apt-get install), you could
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also choose to setup a userid called "gitolite", and run "gl-setup" as that
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user; however I do not know how you would come up with the initial pubkey that
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is needed. Anyway, the point is that the "gitolite" user is no more special
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than any other in terms of hosting gitolite. Any user can host gitolite on
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his userid by just running "gl-setup".
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When you upgrade, just overwrite all the files; it'll all just work. In fact,
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other than the initial "gl-setup" run, the only time a gitolite hosting user
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has to actually do anything is to edit their own `~/.gitolite.rc` file if they
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want to enable or disable specific features.
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