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this is so the make-gh-pages (not part of gitolite) script can boldface the ones which have "# title"
431 lines
13 KiB
Markdown
431 lines
13 KiB
Markdown
## what is a "big-config"
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In this document:
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* <a href="#_when_why_do_we_need_it_">when/why do we need it?</a>
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* <a href="#_how_do_we_use_it_">how do we use it?</a>
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* <a href="#_access_rules_for_groups">access rules for groups</a>
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* <a href="#_access_rules_for_individual_repos_split_config_">access rules for individual repos (split config)</a>
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* <a href="#_other_optimisations">other optimisations</a>
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* <a href="#_disabling_various_defaults">disabling various defaults</a>
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* <a href="#_optimising_the_authkeys_file">optimising the authkeys file</a>
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* <a href="#_what_are_the_downsides_">what are the downsides?</a>
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* <a href="#_storing_usergroup_information_outside_gitolite_like_in_LDAP_">storing usergroup information outside gitolite (like in LDAP)</a>
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* <a href="#_why">why</a>
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* <a href="#_how">how</a>
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* <a href="#_implementation_notes">implementation notes</a>
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<a name="_when_why_do_we_need_it_"></a>
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### when/why do we need it?
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A "big config" is anything that has a few thousand users and a few thousand
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repos, resulting in a very large 'compiled' config file.
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To understand the problem, consider what happens if you have something like
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this in your gitolite conf file:
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@wbr = lynx firefox
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@devs = alice bob
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repo @wbr
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RW+ next = @devs
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RW master = @devs
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Without the 'big config' setting, gitolite internally translates this to:
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repo lynx firefox
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RW+ next = alice bob
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RW master = alice bob
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and then generates the actual config rules once for each user-repo-ref
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combination (there are 8 combinations above); the compiled config file looks
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somewhat like this:
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%repos = (
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'firefox' => {
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'R' => {
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'alice' => 1,
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'bob' => 1
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},
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'W' => {
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'alice' => 1,
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'bob' => 1
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},
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'alice' => [
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[
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0,
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'refs/heads/next',
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'RW+'
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],
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[
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4,
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'refs/heads/master',
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'RW'
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]
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],
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'bob' => [
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[
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1,
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'refs/heads/next',
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'RW+'
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],
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[
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5,
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'refs/heads/master',
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'RW'
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]
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]
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},
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'lynx' => {
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'R' => {
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'alice' => 1,
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'bob' => 1
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},
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'W' => {
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'alice' => 1,
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'bob' => 1
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},
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'alice' => [
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[
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2,
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'refs/heads/next',
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'RW+'
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],
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[
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6,
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'refs/heads/master',
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'RW'
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]
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],
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'bob' => [
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[
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3,
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'refs/heads/next',
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'RW+'
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],
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[
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7,
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'refs/heads/master',
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'RW'
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]
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]
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}
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);
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Phew!
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Of course, the output is the same whether you used groups (like `@wbr` and
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`@devs` in the example above) or listed the repos directly on the 'repo'
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lines.
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Anyway, you can imagine what that does when you have 10,000 users and 10,000
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repos. Let's just say it's not pretty :)
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<a name="_how_do_we_use_it_"></a>
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### how do we use it?
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Just set
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$GL_BIG_CONFIG = 1;
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in the `~/.gitolite.rc` file on the server (see next section for more
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variables). When you do that, and push this configuration, one of two things
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happens.
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<a name="_access_rules_for_groups"></a>
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#### access rules for groups
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If you used group names in the 'repo' lines (as in `repo @wbr`), then the
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compiled config looks like this:
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%repos = (
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'@wbr' => {
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'@devs' => [
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[
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0,
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'refs/heads/next',
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'RW+'
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],
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[
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1,
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'refs/heads/master',
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'RW'
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]
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],
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'R' => {
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'@devs' => 1
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},
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'W' => {
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'@devs' => 1
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}
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}
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);
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%groups = (
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'@devs' => {
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'alice' => 'master',
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'bob' => 'master'
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},
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'@wbr' => {
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'firefox' => 'master',
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'lynx' => 'master'
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}
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);
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That's a lot smaller, and allows orders of magintude more repos and groups to
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be supported.
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<a name="_access_rules_for_individual_repos_split_config_"></a>
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#### access rules for individual repos (split config)
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If, on the other hand, you had the repos listed individually, (as in `repo
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lynx firefox`), then the main config file would now look like this:
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%repos = ();
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%split_conf = (
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'firefox' => 1,
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'lynx' => 1
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);
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And each individual repo's configuration would go its own directory. For
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instance, `~/repositories/lynx.git/gl-conf` would look like this:
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%one_repo = (
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'lynx' => {
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'R' => {
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'alice' => 1,
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'bob' => 1
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},
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'W' => {
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'alice' => 1,
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'bob' => 1
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},
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'alice' => [
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[
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0,
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'refs/heads/next',
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'RW+'
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],
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[
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4,
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'refs/heads/master',
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'RW'
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]
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],
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'bob' => [
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[
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1,
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'refs/heads/next',
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'RW+'
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],
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[
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5,
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'refs/heads/master',
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'RW'
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]
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]
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}
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);
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That does not reduce the overall size of the repo config (because you did not
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group the repos), but the main repo config is now even smaller!
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<a name="_other_optimisations"></a>
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### other optimisations
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<a name="_disabling_various_defaults"></a>
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#### disabling various defaults
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The default RC file contains the following lines (we've already discussed the
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first one):
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$GL_BIG_CONFIG = 0;
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$GL_NO_DAEMON_NO_GITWEB = 0;
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$GL_NO_CREATE_REPOS = 0;
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$GL_NO_SETUP_AUTHKEYS = 0;
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`GL_NO_DAEMON_NO_GITWEB` is a very useful optimisation that you *must* enable
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if you *do* have a large number of repositories, and do *not* use gitolite's
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support for gitweb or git-daemon access (see "[this][gwd]" for details). This will save a
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lot of time when you push the gitolite-admin repo with changes. This variable
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also controls whether "git config" lines (such as `config hooks.emailprefix =
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"[gitolite]"`) will be processed or not.
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You should be a lot more careful with `GL_NO_CREATE_REPOS` and
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`GL_NO_SETUP_AUTHKEYS`. These are meant for installations where some backend
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system already exists that does all the actual repo creation, (including
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setting up the proper hooks -- very important for access control), and all the
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authentication setup (ssh auth keys), respectively.
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Summary: Please **leave those two variables alone** unless you're initials are
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"JK" ;-)
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<a name="_optimising_the_authkeys_file"></a>
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#### optimising the authkeys file
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Sshd does a linear scan of the `~/.ssh/authorized_keys` file when an incoming
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connection shows up. This means that keys found near the top get served
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faster than keys near the bottom. On my laptop, it takes about 2500 keys
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before I notice the delay; on a typical server it could be double that, so
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don't worry about all this unless your user-count is in that range.
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One way to deal with 5000+ keys is to use customised, database-backed ssh
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daemons, but many people are uncomfortable with taking non-standard versions
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of such a critical piece of the security infrastructure. In addition, most
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distributions do not make it painless to use them.
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So what do you do?
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The following trick uses the Pareto principle (a.k.a the "80-20 rule")
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to get an immediate boost in response for the most frequent or prolific
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developers. It can allow you to ignore the problem until the next big
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increase in your user counts!
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Here's how:
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* create subdirectories of keydir/ called 0, 1, (maybe 2, 3, etc., also),
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and 9.
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* in 0/, put in the pubkeys of the most frequent users
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* in 1/, add the next most important set of users, and so on for 2, 3, etc.
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* finally, put all the rest in 9/
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Make sure "9" contains at least 70-90% of the total number of pubkeys,
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otherwise this doesn't really help.
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You can easily determine who your top users are by runnning something like
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this (note the clever date command that always gets you last months log file!)
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cat .gitolite/logs/gitolite-`date +%Y-%m -d -30days`.log |
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cut -f2 | sort | uniq -c | sort -n -r
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<a name="_what_are_the_downsides_"></a>
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### what are the downsides?
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There are some downsides. The first one applies in all cases:
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* If you use the delegation feature, you can no longer define or extend
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@groups in a fragment, for security reasons. It will also not let you use
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any group other than the @fragname itself (specifically, groups which
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contained a subset of the allowed @fragname, which would work normally, do
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not work now).
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(If you didn't understand all that, you're probably not using delegation,
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so feel free to ignore it!)
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The following apply if individual ("split") conf files are written, which in
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turn only happens if you used repo names instead of group names on the `repo`
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lines:
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* the compile (gitolite-admin push) is now slower, because it potentially
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has to write a few thousand small files instead of one large one. Since
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the compile should be relatively infrequent compared to developer access,
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this is ok -- the main config file is parsed much faster now, so every hit
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to the server will benefit.
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* we can no longer distinguish 'repo not found on disk' from 'you dont have
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access'. They both now look like 'you dont have access'.
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<a name="_storing_usergroup_information_outside_gitolite_like_in_LDAP_"></a>
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### storing usergroup information outside gitolite (like in LDAP)
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[Please NOTE: this is all about *user* groups, not *repo* groups]
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[WARNING: the earlier method of doing this has been discontinued; please see
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the commit message for details]
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Gitolite now allows usergroup information to be stored outside its own config
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file. We'll see "why" first, then the "how".
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<a name="_why"></a>
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#### why
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Large sites often have LDAP servers that already contain user and group
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information, including group membership details. Such sites may prefer that
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gitolite just pick up that info instead of having to redundantly put it in
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gitolite's config file.
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Consider this example config for one repo:
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repo foo
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RW+ = @lead_devs
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RW = @devs
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R = @interns
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Normally, you would also need to specify:
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@lead_devs = dilbert alice
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@devs = wally
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@interns = ashok
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However, if the corporate LDAP server already tags these people correctly, and
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if there is some way of getting that information out **at run time**, that
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would be cool.
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<a name="_how"></a>
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#### how
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All you need is a script that, given a username, queries your LDAP or similar
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server, and returns a space-separated list of all the groups she is a member
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of. If an invalid user name is sent in, or the user is valid but is not part
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of any groups, it should print nothing.
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This script will probably be specific to your site. (See contrib/ldap for some
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example scripts that were contributed by the Nokia MeeGo team.)
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Then set the `$GL_GET_MEMBERSHIPS_PGM` variable in the rc file to the full
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path of this program, set `$GL_BIG_CONFIG` to 1, and that will be that.
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[gwd]: http://sitaramc.github.com/gitolite/doc/2-admin.html#gwd
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<a name="_implementation_notes"></a>
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### implementation notes
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To understand how big-config works (at least when you're using grouped repos),
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we'll first look at how it works without this setting. Think back to the
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example at the top, and assume 'alice' is accessing the 'lynx' repo. The
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various rights are governed by the following hash elements:
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# for the first level checks
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$repos{'lynx'}{'R'}{'alice'} = 1
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$repos{'lynx'}{'W'}{'alice'} = 1
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# for the second level checks
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$repos{'lynx'}{'alice'}{'refs/heads/master'} = 'RW';
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$repos{'lynx'}{'alice'}{'refs/heads/next'} = 'RW+';
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Those elements are explicitly specified in the compiled hash, as you can see
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(you don't need to know perl too much to read a hash; just make some educated
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guesses if needed!)
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Now look at the compiled hash produced when `GL_BIG_CONFIG` is set. In place
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of both 'firefox' and 'lynx' you have '@wbr', and similarly '@devs' for both
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'alice' and 'bob'. In addition, there is a group hash at the bottom that
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lists each group and its members.
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When 'alice' tries to access the 'lynx' repo, gitolite collects all the group
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names that these names belong to, so '@devs' is added to the list of 'user'
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names that 'alice' inherits permissions from, and '@wbr' is added to the list
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of 'repo' names that 'lynx' inherits from. This means that the final access
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inherits all permissions pertaining to the following combinations:
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alice, lynx
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alice, @wbr
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@devs, lynx
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@devs, @wbr
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(Actually there are 3 more... try and guess what they may be!)
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Anyway, all ACL rules for these combinations are clubbed together to make the
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composite set of rules that 'alice' accessing 'lynx' is subject to.
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