284 lines
11 KiB
Plaintext
284 lines
11 KiB
Plaintext
# example conf file for gitolite
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# ----------------------------------------------------------------------------
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# overall syntax:
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# - everything is space-separated; no commas, semicolons, etc (except in
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# the description string for gitweb)
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# - comments in the normal shell-ish style; no surprises there
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# - there are NO continuation lines of any kind
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# - user/repo names as simple as possible; they must start with an
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# alphanumeric, but after that they can also contain ".", "_", "-".
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# - usernames can optionally be followed by an "@" and a domainname
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# containing at least one "." (this allows you to use an email
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# address as someone's username)
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# - reponames can contain "/" characters (this allows you to
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# put your repos in a tree-structure for convenience)
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# objectives, over and above gitosis:
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# - simpler syntax
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# - easier gitweb/daemon control
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# - specify who can push a branch/tag
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# - specify who can rewind a branch/rewrite a tag
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# ----------------------------------------------------------------------------
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# GROUPS
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# ------
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# syntax:
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# @groupname = [one or more names]
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# groups let you club (user or group) names together for convenience
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# * a group is like a #define in C except that it can *accumulate* values
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# * the config file is parsed in a single-pass, so later *additions* to a
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# group name cannot affect earlier *uses* of it
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# The following examples should illustrate all this:
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# you can have a group of people...
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@staff = sitaram some_dev another-dev
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# ...or a group of repos
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@oss_repos = gitolite linux git perl rakudo entrans vkc
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# even sliced and diced differently
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@admins = sitaram admin2
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# notice that sitaram is in 2 groups (staff and admins)
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# if you repeat a group name in another definition line, the
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# new ones get added to the old ones (they accumulate)
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@staff = au.thor
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# so now "@staff" expands to all 4 names
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# groups can include other groups, and the included group will
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# be expanded to whatever value it currently has
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@interns = indy james
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@staff = bob @interns
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# "@staff" expands to 7 names now
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@interns = han
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# "@interns" now has 3 names in it, but note that this does
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# not change @staff
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# REPO AND BRANCH PERMISSIONS
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# ---------------------------
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# syntax:
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# start line:
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# repo [one or more repos and/or repo groups]
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# followed by one or more permissions lines:
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# (R|RW|RW+) [zero or more refexes] = [one or more users]
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# there are 3 types of permissions: R, RW, and RW+. The "+" means permission
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# to "rewind" (force push a non-fast forward to) a branch
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# how permissions are matched:
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# - user, repo, and access (W or +) are known. For that combination, if
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# any of the refexes match the refname being updated, the push succeeds.
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# If none of them match, it fails
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# what's a refex? a regex to match against the ref being updated (get it?)
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# BASIC PERMISSIONS (repo level only; apply to all branches/tags in repo)
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# most important rule of all -- specify who can make changes
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# to *this* file take effect
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repo gitolite-admin
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RW+ = @admins
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# "@all" is a special, predefined, group name of all users
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# (everyone who has a pubkey in keydir)
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repo testing
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RW+ = @all
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# this repo is visible to staff but only sitaram can write to it
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repo gitolite
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R = @staff
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RW+ = sitaram
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# you can split up access rules for a repo as convenient
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# (notice that @oss_repos contains gitolite also)
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repo @oss_repos
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R = @all
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# set permissions to all already defined repos
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# (a repository is defined if it has permission rules
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# associated, empty "repo" stanza or "@group=..." line is
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# not enough). *Please* do see doc/3-faq-tips-etc.mkd for
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# some important notes on this feature
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repo @all
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RW+ = @admins
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# ADVANCED PERMISSIONS USING REFEXES
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# - refexes are specified in perl regex syntax
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# - refexes are matched without any anchoring, which means a refex like
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# "refs/tags/v[0-9]" matches anything *containing* that pattern. There
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# may be text before and after it (example: refs/tags/v4-r3p7), and it
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# will still match
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# - if no refex appears, the rule applies to all refs in that repo
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# - a refex is automatically prefixed by "refs/heads/" if it doesn't start
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# with "refs/" (so tags have to be explicitly named as
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# refs/tags/pattern)
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# here's the example from
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# Documentation/howto/update-hook-example.txt:
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# refs/heads/master junio
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# +refs/heads/pu junio
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# refs/heads/cogito$ pasky
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# refs/heads/bw/.* linus
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# refs/heads/tmp/.* .*
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# refs/tags/v[0-9].* junio
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# and here're the equivalent gitolite refexes
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repo git
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RW master = junio
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RW+ pu = junio
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RW cogito$ = pasky
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RW bw/ = linus
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RW tmp/ = @all
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RW refs/tags/v[0-9] = junio
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# DENY/EXCLUDE RULES
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# ***IMPORTANT NOTES ABOUT "DENY" RULES***:
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# - deny rules do NOT affect read access. They only apply to `W` and `+`.
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#
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# - when using deny rules, the order of your rules starts to matter, where
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# earlier it did not. The first matching rule applies, where "matching" is
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# defined as either permitting the operation you're attempting (`W` or `+`),
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# which results in success, or a "deny" (`-`), which results in failure.
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# (As before, a fallthrough also results in failure).
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#
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# - do not use `@all` when your config has any deny rules; it won't work as
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# you probably expect it to!
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# in the example above, you cannot easily say "anyone can write any tag,
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# except version tags can only be written by junio". The following might look
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# like it works but it doesn't:
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# RW refs/tags/v[0-9] = junio
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# RW refs/tags/ = junio linus pasky @others
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# if you use "deny" rules, however, you can do this (a "deny" rule just uses
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# "-" instead of "R" or "RW" or "RW+" in the permission field)
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RW refs/tags/v[0-9] = junio
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- refs/tags/v[0-9] = linus pasky @others
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RW refs/tags/ = junio linus pasky @others
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# FILE/DIR NAME BASED RESTRICTIONS
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# --------------------------------
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# Here's a hopefully self-explanatory example. Assume the project has the
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# following contents at the top level: a README, a "doc/" directory, and an
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# "src/" directory.
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repo foo
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RW+ = lead_dev # rule 1
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RW = dev1 dev2 dev3 dev4 # rule 2
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RW NAME/ = lead_dev # rule 3
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RW NAME/doc/ = dev1 dev2 # rule 4
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RW NAME/src/ = dev1 dev2 dev3 dev4 # rule 5
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# Notes
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# - the "NAME/" is part of the syntax; think of it as a keyword if you like
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# - file/dir NAME-based restrictions are *in addition* to normal (branch-name
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# based) restrictions; they are not a *replacement* for them. This is why
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# rule #2 (or something like it, maybe with a more specific branch-name) is
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# needed; without it, dev1/2/3/4 cannot push any branches.
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# - if a repo has *any* NAME/ rules, then NAME-based restrictions are checked
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# for *all* users. This is why rule 3 is needed, even though we don't
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# actually have any NAME-based restrictions on lead_dev. Notice the pattern
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# on rule 3.
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# - *each* file touched by the commits being pushed is checked against those
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# rules. So, lead_dev can push changes to any files, dev1/2 can push
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# changes to files in "doc/" and "src/" (but not the top level README), and
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# dev3/4 can only push changes to files in "src/".
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# GITWEB AND DAEMON STUFF
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# -----------------------
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# No specific syntax for gitweb and daemon access; just make the repo readable
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# ("R" access) to the special users "gitweb" and "daemon"
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# make "@oss_repos" (all 7 of them!) accessible via git daemon
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repo @oss_repos
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R = daemon
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# make the two *large* repos accessible via gitweb
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repo linux perl
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R = gitweb
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# REPO OWNER/DESCRIPTION LINE FOR GITWEB
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# syntax, one of:
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# reponame = "some description string in double quotes"
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# reponame "owner name" = "some description string in double quotes"
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# note: setting a description also gives gitweb access; you do not have to
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# give gitweb access as described above if you're specifying a description
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gitolite "Sitaram Chamarty" = "fast, secure, access control for git in a corporate environment"
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# REPO SPECIFIC GITCONFIG
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# -----------------------
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# (Thanks to teemu dot matilainen at iki dot fi)
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# this should be specified within a "repo" stanza
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# syntax:
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# config sectionname.keyname = [optional value_string]
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# example usage: if you placed a hook in src/hooks that requires configuration
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# information that is specific to each repo, you could do this:
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repo gitolite
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config hooks.mailinglist = gitolite-commits@example.tld
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config hooks.emailprefix = "[gitolite] "
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config foo.bar = ""
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config foo.baz =
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# This does either a plain "git config section.key value" (for the first 3
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# examples above) or "git config --unset-all section.key" (for the last
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# example). Other forms (--add, the value_regex, etc) are not supported.
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# INCLUDE SOME OTHER FILE
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# -----------------------
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include "foo.conf"
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# this includes the contents of $GL_ADMINDIR/conf/foo.conf here
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# Notes:
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# - the include statement is not allowed inside delegated fragments for
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# security reasons.
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# - you can also use an absolute path if you like, although in the interests
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# of cloning the admin-repo sanely you should avoid doing this!
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# EXTERNAL COMMAND HELPERS -- RSYNC
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# ---------------------------------
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# If $RSYNC_BASE is non-empty, the following config entries come into play
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# (otherwise they are ignored):
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# a "fake" git repository to collect rsync rules. Gitolite does not
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# auto-create any repo whose name starts with EXTCMD/
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repo EXTCMD/rsync
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# grant permissions to files/dirs within the $RSYNC_BASE tree. A leading
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# NAME/ is required as a prefix; the actual path starts after that. Matching
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# follows the same rules as elsewhere in gitolite.
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RW NAME/ = sitaram
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RW NAME/foo/ = user1
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R NAME/bar/ = user2
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# just to remind you that these are perl regexes, not shell globs
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RW NAME/baz/.*/*.c = user3
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