208 lines
7.3 KiB
Markdown
208 lines
7.3 KiB
Markdown
# repositories named with wildcards
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***IMPORTANT NOTE***:
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This branch contains features that are likely to be much more brittle than the
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"master" branch. Creating repositories based on wild cards, giving
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"ownership" to the specific user who created it, allowing him/her to hand out
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R and RW permissions to other users to collaborate, all these are possible.
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And any of these could have a bug in it.
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"Brittle" also means some features in "master" may not work here. For
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example, you cannot specify gitconfig values for a wildcard repo; it only
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works for actual repos.
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There may be other such missing features. Sometimes it's just not possible to
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make it work. Or it may be cumbersome enough that unless there are *no*
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workarounds I may not have the time to code it right away.
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----
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In this document:
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* wildcard repos
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* wildcard repos with creater name in them
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* wildcard repos without creater name in them
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* side-note: line-anchored regexes
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* contrast with refexes
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* handing out rights to wildcard-matached repos
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* reporting
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* other issues and discussion
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This document is mostly "by example".
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----
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### Wildcard repos
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Which of these alternatives you choose depends on your needs, and the social
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aspects of your environment. The first one is a little more rigid, making it
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harder to make mistakes, and the second is more flexible and trusting.
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#### Wildcard repos with creater name in them
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Here's an example snippet:
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@prof = u1
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@TAs = u2 u3
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@students = u4 u5 u6
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repo assignments/CREATER/a[0-9][0-9]
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C = @students
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RW+ = CREATER
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RW = WRITERS @TAs
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R = READERS @prof
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For now, ignore the special usernames READERS and WRITERS, and just create a
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new repo, as user "u4" (a student):
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$ git clone git@server:assignments/u4/a12
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Initialized empty Git repository in /home/sitaram/t/a12/.git/
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Initialized empty Git repository in /home/gitolite/repositories/assignments/u4/a12.git/
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warning: You appear to have cloned an empty repository.
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Notice the *two* empty repo inits, and the order in which they occur ;-) Now
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make some changes and push, and after that, that specific repo
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(`assignments/u4/a12`) behaves as if the access control looked like this:
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# effective config
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repo assignments/u4/a12
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RW+ = u4
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RW = WRITERS @TAs
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R = READERS @prof
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#### Wildcard repos without creater name in them
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Here's how the same example would look if you did not want the CREATER's name
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to be part of the actual repo name.
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repo assignments/a[0-9][0-9]
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C = @students
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RW+ = CREATER
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RW = WRITERS @TAs
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R = READERS @prof
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We haven't changed anything except the repo name pattern. This means that the
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first student that creates, say, `assignments/a12` becomes the owner.
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Mistakes (such as claiming a12 instead of a13) need to be rectified by an
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admin logging on to the back end, though it's not too difficult.
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You could also repace the C line like this:
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C = @TAs
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and have a TA create the repos in advance.
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In either case, they could then use the `setperms` feature to specify which
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users are "READERS" and which are "WRITERS". See later for details.
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### Side-note: Line-anchored regexes
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A regex like
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repo assignments/S[0-9]+/A[0-9]+
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would match `assignments/S02/A37`. It will not match `assignments/S02/ABC`,
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or `assignments/S02/a37`, obviously.
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But you may be surprised to find that it does not match even
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`assignments/S02/A37/B99`. This is because internally, gitolite
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*line-anchors* the given regex; so that regex actually becomes
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`^assignments/S[0-9]+/A[0-9]+$` -- notice the line beginning and ending
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metacharacters.
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#### Contrast with refexes
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Just for interest, note that this is in contrast to the refexes for the normal
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"branch" permissions, as described in `conf/example.conf` and elsewhere.
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Those "refexes" are *not* anchored; a pattern like `refs/heads/master`
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actually matches `foo/refs/heads/master01/bar` as well, even if no one will
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actually push such a branch! You can anchor it if you really care, by using
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`master$` instead of `master`, but anchoring is *not* the default for
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refexes.]
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### Handing out rights to wildcard-matached repos
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In the examples above, we saw two special "user" names: READERS and WRITERS.
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The permissions they have are controlled by the config file, but ***who is
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part of this list*** is controlled by the person who created the repository.
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The use case is that, although our toy example has only 3 students, in reality
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there will be a few dozen, but each assignment will be worked on only by a
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handful from among those. This allows the creater to take ad hoc sets of
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users from among the actual users in the system, and place them into one of
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two categories (whose permissions are, in this example, R and RW
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respectively). In theory you could do the same thing by creating lots of
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little "assignment-NN" groups in the config file but that may be a little too
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cumbersome for non-secret environments.
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Create a small text file that contains the permissions you desire:
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$ cat > myperms
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R u5
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RW u6
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(hit ctrl-d here)
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...and use the new "setperms" command to set permissions for your repo:
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$ ssh git@server setperms assignments/u4/a12 < myperms
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New perms are:
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R u5
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RW u6
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'setperms' will helpfully print what the new permissions are but you can also
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use 'getperms' to check:
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$ ssh git@server getperms assignments/u4/a12
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R u5
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RW u6
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The following points are important:
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* note the syntax of the commands; it's not a "git" command,and there's no
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`:` like in a repo URL. The first space-separated word is R or RW, and
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the rest are simple usernames.
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* whoever you specify as "R" will match the special user READERS. "RW" will
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match WRITERS.
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### Reporting
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Remember the cool stuff you see when you just do `ssh git@server` (grep for
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"myrights" in `doc/3-faq-tips-etc.mkd` if you forgot, or go [here][mr]).
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[mr]: http://github.com/sitaramc/gitolite/blob/pu/doc/3-faq-tips-etc.mkd#myrights
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This still works, except the format is a little more compressed to accommodate
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a new column (at the start) for "C" permissions, which indicate that you are
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allowed to *create* repos matching that pattern.
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### Other issues and discussion
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* *what if the repo name being pushed matches more than one pattern*?
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I think it would be very hard to reason about access if we were to do
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something like combine all the access rights in all the matching patterns.
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No matter how you do it, and how carefully you document it, there'll be
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someone who is surprised by the result.
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And in security, that's a ***Bad Thing***.
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So we don't combine permissions. At runtime, we die if we find more than
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one match. Let 'em go holler at the admin for creating multiple matching
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repo patterns :-)
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This can make some repos inaccessible if the patterns changed *after* they
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were created. The administrator should be careful not to do this. Most
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of the time, it won't be difficult; the fixed prefix will usually be
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different anyway so there won't be overlaps.
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----
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Enjoy, and please use with care. This is pretty powerful stuff. As they say:
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if you break it, you get to keep both pieces :)
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[jwzq]: http://regex.info/blog/2006-09-15/247
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[av]: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Autovivification
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