gitolite/doc/dev-notes.mkd
2012-03-24 18:22:11 +05:30

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# notes for developers
Gitolite has a huge bunch of existing features that gradually need to moved
over. Plus you may want to write your own programs to interact with it.
Hints for developers wishing to help migrate features over from g2 are
[here][dev-hints].
Here are some random notes on developing hooks, commands, triggers, and sugar
scripts.
## environment variables
In general, the following environment variables should always be available:
GL_BINDIR
GL_REPO_BASE
GL_ADMIN_BASE
Commands invoked by a remote client will also have `GL_USER` set. Hooks will
have `GL_REPO` also set.
## APIs
### the shell API
The following commands exist to help you write shell scripts that interact
easily with gitolite. Each of them responds to `h` so please run that for
more info.
* `gitolite access` to check access rights given repo, user, type of access
(R, W, ...) and refname (optional). Example use: src/commands/desc
* `gitolite creator` to get/check the creator of a repo. Example use:
src/commands/desc
* `gitolite git-config` to check gitolite options or git config variables
directly from gitolite's "compiled output, (i.e., without looking at the
actual `repo.git/config` file or using the `git config` command). Example
use: none yet
* `gitolite query-rc` to check the value of an RC variable. Example use:
src/commands/desc.
In addition, you can also look at the comments in src/Gitolite/Easy.pm (the
perl API module) for ideas.
### the perl API
...is implemented by Gitolite::Easy; see src/Gitolite/Easy.pm. This is a work
in progress; for example it does not yet have the equivalent of `gitolite
git-config`. I'll add it when I or someone else needs it.
## your own hooks
### anything but the update hook
If you want to add your own hook, it's easy as long as it's not the 'update'
hook. Just add it to `$HOME/.gitolite/hooks/common` and run `gitolite setup`.
The rest is between you and 'man githooks' :-)
### update hook
If you want to add additional `update` hook functionality, do this:
* write and test your update hook separately from gitolite
* now add the code to src/VREF. Let's say it is called "foo".
* to call your new update hook to all accesses for all repos, add this to
the end of your conf file:
repo @all
- VREF/foo = @all
As you probably guessed, you can now make your additional update hooks more
selective, applying them only to some repos / users / combinations.
Note: a normal update hook expects 3 arguments (ref, old SHA, new SHA). A
VREF will get those three, followed by at least 4 more. Your VREF should just
ignore the extra args.
## your own commands
You can add your own commands. You can run them on the server (example,
`gitolite access`). Then you can enable certain commands to be allowed to run
by a remote user by adding them to the "COMMANDS" hash of the [rc][] file.
Commands are standalone programs, in any language you like. They simply
receive the arguments you append. In addition, the env var `GL_USER` is
available if it is being run remotely. src/commands/desc is the best example
at present.
## your own trigger programs
Trigger programs are just commands whose names have been added to the
appropriate list in the [rc][] file. Triggers get specific arguments
depending on when they are called; see [here][triggers] for details.
You can write programs that are both manually runnable as well as callable by
trigger events, especially if they don't *need* any arguments.
Look in the distributed [rc][] file for example programs; at this point there
aren't many.
## your own "sugar"
Syntactic sugar helpers are NOT complete, standalone, programs. They must
include a perl sub called `sugar_script` that takes in a listref, and returns
a listref. The listrefs point to a list that contains the entire conf file
(with all [include][] processing already done). You create a new list with
contents modified as you like and return a ref to it.
There are a couple of examples in src/syntactic-sugar.