582c1873e2
(and they replied saying "it's by design" so no expectation of a fix)
304 lines
11 KiB
Markdown
304 lines
11 KiB
Markdown
# F=wild repositories named with wildcards
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***IMPORTANT NOTE***:
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This feature may be somewhat "brittle" in terms of security. Creating
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repositories based on wild cards, giving "ownership" to the specific user who
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created it, allowing him/her to hand out permissions to other users to
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collaborate, all these are possible. And any of these could have a bug in it.
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I haven't found any yet, but that doesn't mean there aren't any.
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----
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This document is mostly "by example".
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----
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## quick introduction
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The wildrepos feature allows you to specify access control rules using regular
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expression patterns, so you can have many actual repos being served by a
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single set of rules in the config file. The regex pattern can also include
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the word `CREATOR` in it, allowing you to parametrise the name of the user
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creating the repo. The examples below will make this clearer.
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## rc file setting required
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This feature requires that you set `$GL_WILDREPOS` to "1" in `~/.gitolite.rc`
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on the server. Please search for that variable in `doc/gitolite.rc.mkd`
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for more information on this.
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## examples of wildcard repos
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As the introduction said, you can include the word `CREATOR` in the regex
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pattern, though it is not mandatory. We'll look at examples of both types of
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usage.
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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. Including the creator name in the pattern keeps
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users rigidly separated from each others repos, and is good for a largely
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autonomous collection of users with a high probability of repo name clashes.
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Omitting the creator name from the pattern puts the repos in a common
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namespace, and is suitable for environments where it is not very important to
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keep track of who actually created the repo (except for granting access), but
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needs more communication / co-operation among the users to avoid repo name
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clashes.
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### wildcard repos with creator 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/CREATOR/a[0-9][0-9]
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C = @students
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RW+ = CREATOR
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RW = WRITERS @TAs
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R = READERS @prof
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Note the "C" permission. This is a standalone "C", which gives the named
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users the right to *create a repo*. <font color="gray">This is not to be
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confused with the "RWC" or its variants described elsewhere, which are about
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*branches*, not *repos*.</font>
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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 ;-)
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### wildcard repos without creator name in them
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Here's how the same example would look if you did not want the CREATOR'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+ = CREATOR
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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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## F=wildregex valid regexes and how they are used
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### side-note: valid regexes
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Due to projects like `gtk+`, the `+` character is now considered a valid
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character for an *ordinary* repo. Therefore, a pattern like `foo/.+` does not
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look like a regex to gitolite. Use `foo/..*` if you want that.
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Also, `..*` by itself is not considered a valid repo pattern. Try
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`[a-zA-Z0-9].*`.
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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]+$` -- notice the line beginning and ending
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metacharacters.
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#### contrast with refexes
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Just for interest, note that this is in contrast to the refexes for the normal
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"branch" permissions, as described in `doc/gitolite.conf.mkd` and elsewhere.
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These "refexes" are only anchored at the start; a pattern like
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`refs/heads/master` actually can match `refs/heads/master01/bar` as well, even
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if no one will actually push such a branch! You can anchor both sides if you
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really care, by using `master$` instead of `master`, but that is *not* the
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default for refexes.
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## F=setperms handing out rights to wildcard-matched 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 creator to take ad hoc sets of
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users from among the actual users in the system, and give them one of two
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roles (in this example, READERS and WRITERS respectively). In theory you
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could do the same thing by creating lots of little "assignment-NN" groups in
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the config file but that may be a little too cumbersome for non-secret
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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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READERS u5
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WRITERS 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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READERS u5
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WRITERS 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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READERS u5
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WRITERS u6
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The following points are important:
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* note the syntax of the command; it's not a "git" command, and there's no
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`:` like in a repo URL.
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* for the actual text being sent in via STDIN, the first space-separated
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word is the role (in this example, READERS or WRITERS), and the rest
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are simple usernames.
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### (admin) adding other roles than READERS and WRITERS
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Let's say your needs are more complex and you need more roles. For example,
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you might like to have a setup where only a tester can update tags, and only a
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manager can delete branches:
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repo foo/..*
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C = u1
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RW refs/tags/ = TESTERS
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- refs/tags/ = @all
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RW+ = WRITERS
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RW = INTERNS
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R = READERS
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RW+D = MANAGERS
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As you can see, someone pre-creates the repo and assigns rights to various
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people, say by sending something like this to `setperms`:
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READERS wally
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WRITERS dilbert alice
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MANAGERS phb
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INTERNS ashok
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TESTERS ashok
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You can enable this by setting the `GL_WILDREPOS_PERM_CATS` variable in the rc
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file. The rc file documentation (`doc/gitolite.rc.mkd`) explains how.
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#### #rolenamewarn **IMPORTANT WARNING ABOUT THIS FEATURE**
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Please make sure that none of the role names conflict with any of the
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**usernames** in the system. For example, if you have a user called "foo",
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make sure you do not include "foo" as a valid role in
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`$GL_WILDREPOS_PERM_CATS`.
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You can keep things sane by using UPPERCASE names for roles, while keeping all
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your usernames lowercase; then you don't have to worry about this problem.
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## setting a gitweb description for a wildcard-matched repo
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Similar to the getperms/setperms commands, there are the
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[getdesc/setdesc][setdesc] commands, thanks to Teemu.
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## reporting
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In order to see what repositories were created from a wildcard, use the
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["expand"][expand] command.
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## deleting a wild repo
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See [repo deletion][wild_repodel] for more on this. Note that this requires you
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to install/setup "adc"s (admin defined commands). See
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[admin-defined-commands][ADCs] for how to do that.
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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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## F=wildhow__ how it actually works
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This section tells you what is happening inside gitolite so you can understand
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this feature better. Let's use the config example at the beginning of this
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document:
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repo assignments/CREATOR/a[0-9][0-9]
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C = @students
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RW+ = CREATOR
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RW = WRITERS @TAs
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R = READERS @prof
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First we find the set of rules to apply. This involves replacing the special
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words CREATOR, WRITERS, and READERS with appropriate usernames to derive an
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"effective" ruleset for the repo in question.
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For a **new** repo, replace the word CREATOR in all repo patterns and rules
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with the name of the invoking user.
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> (Note: this is why you should never use `C = CREATOR`; it becomes `C =
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> invoking_user`! Unless you really want to allow *all* users to create
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> repos, you should restrict "C" perms to an actual user or set of users,
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> like in the examples in this document).
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For an **existing** repo, do the same but replace with the name of the user
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who actually *created* the repo (this name is recorded in a special file in
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the repo directory when the repo is first created, so it is available).
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Now find a repo pattern that matches the actual reponame being pushed -- this
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tells you which set of rules to apply. There can be multiple matches; if so,
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they will all be applied in the sequence they appear in the config file.
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If the invoking user has been given the "WRITERS" role using `setperms`, all
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permissions for the the user WRITERS are given to the invoking username (and
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similarly for READERS).
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At this point we have an effective ruleset, and the normal access rules (R,
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RW, etc) apply, with the addition that the invoking user needs "C" access to
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be able to create a repo.
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> (Note: "C" rights do not automatically give the CREATOR any other rights;
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> they must be specifically given. `RW+ = CREATOR` is recommended in most
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> situations, as you can see in our example).
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Assuming user "u4" trying to push-create a new repo called
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`assignments/u4/a23`, this is what the effective ruleset looks like:
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repo assignments/u4/a23
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C = @students
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RW+ = u4
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RW = @TAs
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R = @prof
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If u4 gives u5 the "WRITERS" role using `setperms`, and u5 tries to access
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that repo, the ruleset looks like:
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repo assignments/u4/a23
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C = @students
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RW+ = u4
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RW = u5 @TAs
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R = @prof
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I hope that helps.
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