gitolite/doc/repos.mkd
Sitaram Chamarty 4c5bb27739 pre-existing repo instructions were WRONG...
- fix them
  - but (at the cost of some efficiency) try to compensate if the admin
    did not follow those instructions, by running hook_1 anyway
2012-04-11 19:03:17 +05:30

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Markdown

# adding and removing repos
**NOTE**: this page describes how to add new repos. To bring already existing
repos into gitolite control, click [here][existing].
> ----
> *WARNING: Do NOT add new repos directly on the server. Clone the
> 'gitolite-admin' repo to your workstation, make changes to it, then add,
> commit, and push. When the push hits the server, the server "acts" upon
> your changes.*
> ----
Just as for [users][], all operations are in a clone of the gitolite-admin
repo.
To **add** a new repo, edit `conf/gitolite.conf` and add it, along with at
least one user with some permissions. Or add it to an existing repo line:
repo gitolite tsh gitpod
RW+ = sitaram
RW dev = alice bob
R = @all
The "repo" line can have any number of repo names or repo group names in it.
However, it can only be one line; this will not work
repo foo
repo bar # WRONG; 'foo' is now forgotten
RW = alice
If you have too many, use a group name:
@myrepos = foo
@myrepos = bar
repo @myrepos
RW = alice
Finally, you add, commit, and push this change. Gitolite will create a bare,
empty, repo on the server that is ready to be cloned.
**Removing** a repo is not so straightforward. You certainly must remove the
appropriate lines from the `conf/gitolite.conf` file, but gitolite will not
automatically delete the repo from the server. You have to log on to the
server and do the dirty deed yourself :-)
It is best to make the change in the conf file, push it, and *then* go to the
server and do what you need to.
**Renaming** a repo is also not automatic. Here's what you do (and the order
is important):
* go to the server and rename the repo at the Unix command line
* change the name in the conf/gitolite.conf file and add/commit/push.