gitolite/doc/setup.mkd
Sitaram Chamarty de40461d9a document overhaul
- explicit 'list' gives way to mindmap, ...
  - 'fm2mt.pl' to produce master-toc.mkd from the mindmap
  - mkdoc no longer ignores master-toc.mkd, calls fm2mt.pl itself

and LOTS of changes to the actual docs
2012-04-05 21:42:22 +05:30

1.5 KiB

setting up gitolite

Installing the software gets you ready to use it, but the first "use" of it is always the "setup" command.

The first time you run it, you need to have a public key file ready. If the main gitolite admin's username is "alice", this file should be named "alice.pub". Then run

gitolite setup -pk alice.pub

If that command completes without any warnings, you should be done. If it had a warning, you probably supplied a key which already has shell access to the server. That won't work.


Normally, gitolite is hosted on a user that no one accesses directly -- you log on to the server using some other userid, and then su - git. In this scenario, there is no key being used for shell access, so there is no conflict.

An alternative method is to use two different keys, and a [host alias][ssh-ha] to distinguish the two.

[common errors][ce] has some links to background information on this issue.


The 'setup' command has other uses, so you will be running it at other times after the install as well:

  • to setup the update hook when you move [existing][] repos to gitolite. This also applies if someone has been fiddling with the hooks on some repos and you want to put them all right quickly.

  • to replace a [lost admin key][lost-key].

When in doubt, run 'gitolite setup' anyway; it doesn't do any harm, though it may take a minute or so if you have more than a few thousand repos!