gitolite/doc/hook-propagation.mkd
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hook propagation in gitolite

Advanced users need to know how hooks propagate, and when. They also need to know where to place their hooks, and since there appear to be two places to put them, what takes precedence. I'll try and set out the logic here.

In this document:

hooks used by gitolite

Gitolite uses only 2 hooks. All repos have an update hook, without which there is no write-level access control (per-branch permissions). The special gitolite-admin repo has a special post-update hook, which is required to do its, umm, special things, like running the "compile" script, etc.

In addition there is a "sentinel file" -- an empty file called "gitolite-hooked". We'll see later what this does.

The final objective of all this is that each repo's hooks/ directory should get all the hooks that it is meant to get.

where do I (the admin) put the hooks?

In general, all hooks go into the hooks/common directory. Only the special post-update hook meant for the admin repo goes into hooks/gitolite-admin.

Now we'll discuss the locations of these hooks/common and hooks/gitolite-admin directories. This depends on which install method you used.

(Please refer to doc/1-INSTALL.mkd for what these "methods" are).

the "from-client" method

Let's get this out of the way first, because it is simple: if you're using the "from-client" method, there's only one place: the hooks directory in your gitolite clone on the client side. This is where you run src/gl-easy-install from. Nothing else in this section is relevant to this method; skip to the next section ("when do hooks propagate") if you installed using the "from-client" method.

the other 3 methods

the GL_PACKAGE_HOOKS directory

You might recall that the "root", and "non-root" methods run a command called gl-system-install, the third argument of which is some directory of your choice (like maybe /usr/share/gitolite/hooks). Even though it is not necessary to know this, internally this becomes the value of the $GL_PACKAGE_HOOKS variable, so in this document we will refer to that variable instead of the location (because you might choose any location you like for it).

The "package" method also has the same property, except that the packager has already decided what that location is, and the package creation/install process does the equivalent of gl-system-install.

So now we know there's a location called $GL_PACKAGE_HOOKS where you can place your hooks.

the $HOME/.gitolite directory

You might also recall that, in these three methods, each hosting user has to run gl-setup. This sets up, among other things, $HOME/.gitolite directory, which also contains a hooks/ directory.

So now there are two places you can put your hooks, apparently.

why two places?

Just think of the "package" and "root" methods for now, even if you're using the "non-root" method.

In these two methods, it is reasonable to assume that the entire site (or server) has certain policies that they want to implement using hooks. They want to enforce these hooks on each hosting user. These hooks go into $GL_PACKAGE_HOOKS.

Each hosting user then has the discretion to add his own hooks (modulo name clashes, which may necessitate hook chaining, etc., like we already do for the hooks that gitolite cares about). He adds these hooks to his $HOME/.gitolite/hooks directory.

When hooks propagate, the ones in $GL_PACKAGE_HOOKS override/overwrite the ones in $HOME/.gitolite/hooks. Otherwise it wouldn't make sense; you wouldn't be able to enforce site-wide hooks.

[NOTE: due to a minor quirk, the site-wide hooks in $GL_PACKAGE_HOOKS also get copied to $HOME/.gitolite/hooks when you "install". I need to fix and thoroughly test this later; for now, just ignore the extra files you see in there; they're harmless/redundant (TODO)]

special case: the "non-root" method

This method was created later, just piggy-backing on everything that already existed to cater to the "package" and "root" methods. In this method, the $GL_PACKAGE_HOOKS is as accessible or under your control as $HOME/.gitolite, so it doesn't matter where you put your hooks. I strongly suggest putting them in $GL_PACKAGE_HOOKS and ignoring $HOME/.gitolite completely.

when do hooks propagate?

First: realise that gitolite wants to make sure that all the hooks in your hooks/common directory get copied (symlinked, actually) to every repo that gets created. Not doing so is generally a security risk; because the primary purpose of gitolite is access control, people generally want hooks to run.

Here's how/when hooks are created/propagated:

  1. anytime you do an install, gitolite trawls through all existing repos (using the unix find command) and force-links all the hooks in all the repos so they all get the latest and greatest hooks.

  2. anytime you do a "compile" (meaning push changes to the admin repo), gitolite looks through all the repos named in the config. It first checks if the repo exists, creating it if needed. It then looks for a sentinel file called "gitolite-hooked" (an empty file in the hooks directory). If it doesn't find it, it will assume that hooks need to be propagated.

    This is because people often copy a repo from elsewhere, add it to the config, and expect things to work. Without this step, those repos don't get the hooks, which is bad -- the access control would have failed silently!

  3. anytime a new repo is created, the same force-linking of hooks happens. The 3 places a new repo is created are:

    • the "compile" case mentioned above, where the admin added a normal repo to the config and pushed

    • the wildrepos case, where you have "C" permissions and the repo does not already exist

    • the fork command in contrib/adc. In this case the hooks are explicitly copied from the source repo using the cp command, not using the code internal to gitolite.

For people who do not want certain hooks to run for certain repos, one simple solution that will work right now is to check the value of $GL_REPO at the start of the hook, and exit 0 based on what it contains/matches.