gitolite/doc/install.mkd
2012-04-08 08:13:31 +05:30

5.9 KiB

installing gitolite

NOTE: if you're migrating from g2, there are some settings that MUST be dealt with before running gitolite setup; please read the [g2 migration][g2migr] page and linked pages.

notes and naming conventions

Gitolite uses a single "real" (i.e., unix) user to provide secure access to git repos to any number of "virtual" users, without giving them a shell.

The real user used is called the hosting user. Typically this user is git, and that is what we will use throughout the documentation. However RPMs and DEBs create a user called gitolite for this, so adjust instructions and examples accordingly.

Notes:

  • Any unix user can be a hosting user.
  • Which also means you can have several hosting users on the same machine.
  • The URLs used will be of the form git@host:reponame (or its longer equivalent starting with ssh://). The .git at the end is optional. I recommend you leave it out, so your reponames are consistent with what the conf file uses.

#req requirements

your skills

  • If you're installing gitolite, you're a "system admin", like it or not. Ssh is therefore a necessary skill. Please take the time to learn at least enough to get passwordless access working.

  • You also need to be somewhat familiar with git itself. You cannot administer a whole bunch of git repositories if you don't know the basics of git.

  • Some familiarity with Unix and shells is probably required.

  • Regular expressions are a big part of gitolite in many places but familiarity is not necessary to do basic access control.

server

  • any Unix system with a posix compatible "sh".
  • git version 1.6.6 or later
  • perl 5.8.8 or later
  • openssh (almost any version). Optional if you're using the http backend (which is still a TODO item!)
  • a dedicated Unix userid to be the hosting user, usually "git" but it can be any user, even your own normal one. (If you're using an RPM/DEB the install probably created one called "gitolite").

Also see the [WARNINGS][] page for more on what gitolite expects on the server side.

client

  • openssh client
  • git 1.6.6 or later. Almost any git client will work, as long as it knows how to use ssh keys and send the right one along.

getting the software

git clone -b g3 git://github.com/sitaramc/gitolite

The -b g3' is needed until g3 becomes "master". Current estimates put this around June 2012, when the old gitolite (upto v2.x) will be retired and supported only for security issues.

the actual install

Gitolite has only one server side "command" now, much like git itself. This command is gitolite. You don't need to place it anywhere special; worst case you run it with the full path.

"Installation" consists of the following options:

  1. Keep the sources anywhere and use the full path to run the gitolite command.
  2. Keep the sources anywhere and symlink just the gitolite program to some directory on your $PATH.
  3. Copy the sources somewhere and use that path to run the gitolite command.

Option 2 is the best for general use.

There is a program called 'install' that helps you do these easily. Assuming your cloned the repo like this:

git clone -b g3 git://github.com/sitaramc/gitolite

you can run the 'install' command in 3 different ways:

# option 1
gitolite/install

# option 2
gitolite/install -ln
# defaults to $HOME/bin, or use a specific directory:
gitolite/install -ln /usr/local/bin

# option 3
gitolite/install -to /usr/local/gitolite/bin

Creating a symlink doesn't need a separate program but 'install' also runs git describe to create a VERSION file, which, trust me, is important!

Next step: run [setup][setup].

upgrading

  • Update your clone of the gitolite source.
  • Repeat the install command you used earlier (make sure you use the same arguments as before).
  • Run gitolite setup just in case the hooks changed.

packaging gitolite

  1. Put src/Gitolite in /usr/share/perl5/vendor_perl or some such place.

  2. Put the rest of src anywhere your distro policy allows. (Fedora keeps git's 150 executables in /usr/libexec/git-core, so maybe /usr/libexec/gitolite?)

  3. Symlink 'gitolite' to /usr/bin or something, similar to option 2.

Bottom line:

  • GL_BINDIR must point to a place that contains commands, VREF, and syntactic-sugar (so they must all be sibling directories).
  • The Gitolite directory can also be there, or it can be anywhere in perl's @INC path.

migrating

There are a lot of migration hints and notes; see links at the top of this document.

But here's the bottom line on migrating: nothing in any of the gitolite install/setup/etc will ever touch the data in any repository except the gitolite-admin repo. The only thing it will normally touch is the update hook.

So one fool-proof way of "migrating" from any older gitolite is this:

  1. Wipe out the old gitolite, but carefully

    • clone ~/repositories/gitolite-admin.git to someplace, then delete it (and only it, none of the other repos!) from ~/repositories
    • rename ~/.gitolite.rc to something else
    • move the ~/.gitolite/logsdirectory somewhere else, then delete~/.gitolite`
  2. Read about [presetting][rc-preset] the rc file; if you're using any variables listed as requiring preset, follow those instructions to create your new rc file.

  3. Install gitolite g3; see [quick install and setup][qi] or [install][] followed by [setup][].

  4. Make sure your gitolite-admin clone has the correct pubkey for the administrator in its keydir directory, then git push -f to the server to overwrite the "default" admin repo created by the install.

  5. Handle any errors, look for migration issues, etc., as described in the links at the top of this page.

    This also includes building up your new ~/.gitolite.rc file.

You're done.