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This repository was for preparing merge requests of YouSource's features and other fixes to Gitorious mainline. YouSource is a local deployment of Gitorious, currently in beta use in the University of Jyväskylä (in middle of Finland). YouSource is a custom version of Gitorious, developed by Verso team for Department of Mathematical Information …
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Gitorious.org ============= Contributing ============ Please see HACKING License ======= Please see the LICENSE file Further documentation ===================== Also see the files in the doc/ folder, they contain further detailed information about setting up the application for specific linux distributions such as CenOS and Ubuntu/Debian Installation to a production environment -- a partial walkthrough. ================================================================== Make ready ========== You may want to make separate directories, away from everything, to hold the site code and the git repository respectively. In production, you'll be setting up a special user account too, but don't worry about that yet. For this intro we're going to use, as examples, * /www/gitorious -- directory for the website code * /gitorious/repositories -- root directory for the git repositories * a MySQL database on localhost at port 3306 with a _mysql_ user 'gitorious' * eventually, a system account named 'gitslave' All of these can be adjusted to suit: specifically, dirs within your home directory are fine, and (though MySQL has the best development coverage), the website code should be free of mysql-isms/quirks. Prerequisites ============= First of all, **we assume you have a working Ruby on Rails installation on your machine**. The Rails project has several resources about getting up and running with Rails, have a look at [getting started on rubyonrails.org](http://rubyonrails.org/download). Please ensure you're able to create a Rails project that uses your database of choice; this guide assumes your machine is ready to run Rails. Gitorious itself runs on either Ruby 1.8 or 1.9. Gitorious.org itself uses Ruby 1.9 and we recommend you do the same. Dependencies ============ First, install each of these Libraries/applications: * Git (http://git-scm.org) * Sphinx (http://sphinxsearch.com/) * MySQL (or whatever) * ImageMagick (need version >= 6.3.0) * aspell (optional) An ActiveMessaging (http://code.google.com/p/activemessaging/wiki/Installation) compatible queue server. Gitorious.org runs ActiveMQ and STOMP, stompserver might be a nice flyweight alternative for your needs Getting the code ================ Next, get the gitorious code itself: # mkdir /www/gitorious ;# or another location of your choice # cd /www/gitorious # git clone git://gitorious.org/gitorious/mainline.git gitorious Now you need edit a couple of configuration files. config/database.yml ------------------ This file contains settings for the databases used for Gitorious. The Gitorious distribution provides a sample config file - database.sample.yml - that you could copy to config/database.yml. Gitorious should be database agnostic, so feel free to use your database of choice. Gitorious.org uses MySQL, but there shouldn't be any MySQL specific code in Gitorious, so use whatever you're most comfortable with. config/gitorious.yml -------------------- This file holds Gitorious specific configuration for each Rails environment. There's a sample file in config/gitorious.sample.yml that describes what each instruction means. Do make sure you have a section for each Rails environment, especially if you're upgrading an existing Gitorious installation. * Create a directory to hold project files # sudo mkdir /gitorious/repositories * Add the path to this directory under repository_base_path in gitorious.yml * Make a long, complicated string. You can run "apg -m 64", or if you lack 'apg' `dd if=/dev/random count=1 | md5sum` , and put that on the 'cookie_secret' line (replacing the 'ssssht'). config/broker.yml ----------------- This file contains information about the Message Queing system used in your Gitorious installation. There's a section about this further down in this document, but as a starting point you can use the supplied sample file in config/broker.yml.example (cp config/broker.yml.example config/broker.yml) Install the gems required by Gitorious ====================================== Next, you need to install a couple of gems: * chronic * daemons * diff-lcs * echoe * fastthread * geoip * highline * hoe * mime-types * oauth * rack >= 1.0.0 * rake * rdiscount >= 1.3.1.1 * RedCloth * rmagick * ruby-hmac * ruby-openid * ruby-yadis * stomp >= 1.1 Most of these can be installed using $ [sudo] rake gems:install Create your database ==================== It is now time for creating the Gitorious database. rake db:create:all will create an empty database for you. Migrate your database ===================== Now that you have a database, it's time to add the database schema rake db:migrate will take care of this for you Run the tests ============= Running all the tests will ensure your Gitorious installation is correctly set up. It takes less than a minute to run all the tests, and gives confidence that the code is working as intended. There is at the time being one gem that's required to run the tests, so start out with [sudo] rake gems:install RAILS_ENV=test to make sure the test specific gems are installed. Then run the entire test suite: rake test Once all the tests pass, you're almost ready. Messaging server ================ Gitorious uses the ActiveMessaging plugin, which supports a range of different messaging platforms, for sending demanding tasks for asynchronous processing. In order to these events to be processed, you need to run a messaging server when running Gitorious. A pretty reliable solution is to use Apache's ActiveMQ messaging queue system, located at http://activemq.apache.org/ . Download a version for you operating system, unpack, and follow the instructions to get running. On Unix-like systems, this is as easy as unpacking the tarball, going into it and running bin/activemq This will start the ActiveMQ server in a default setup, probably pretty well suited for development purposes. The ActiveMessaging plugin needs to know how to contact your MQ server, so it needs a config/broker.yml file. The Gitorious distribution provides an example (again, the defaults should work in a development environment). Just copy the config/broker.yml.example to config/broker.yml and start your server. The messages are sent to the server, in order to "consume" the messages, there is a script in scripts/poller that will run all registered "processors" (found in app/processors) that consume messages. In order to have eg. creation of repositories done automatically run script/poller start and the script will be started and daemonized. You're free to use other messaging protocols than the default Stomp protocol, which is required in config/environment.rb. The ActiveMessaging website (http://code.google.com/p/activemessaging/wiki/ActiveMessaging) has more information about how to set this up. Get Sphinx going ================ $ env RAILS_ENV=production rake ultrasphinx:configure $ env RAILS_ENV=production rake ultrasphinx:index $ env RAILS_ENV=production rake ultrasphinx:daemon:start This sequence of commands will configure, index the database and start the sphinx daemon Tweak environment ================= * If you haven't set up your mailer, production mode will fail on login. Set config.action_mailer.delivery_method = :test for immediate gratification. Start the server ================ Now that you have all the components running, it's time to try Gitorious on your local machine: ruby script/server (for Mongrel/Webrick) thin start (for Thin) Remember the values you put for gitorious_host and gitorious_port in config/gitorious.yml? Go to http://<gitorious_host>:<gitorious_port> to see the main page of your local Gitorious. You are now officially up and running, congratulations! Production setup ================ In a production environment, you'll want to automate as much as possible. We use Capistrano for deploying to gitorious.org, and use custom Capistrano recipes for starting and stopping the various tasks in Gitorious. The doc/recipies directory contains instructions for setting up init scripts for these tasks for various platforms. Please consult these, and feel free to contribute your own! Sphinx ------ The sphinx daemon needs to be running in order for full text search to work. Git-daemon ---------- For cloning over the Git protocol, Gitorious includes a custom git daemon found in script/git-daemon. script/poller ------------- The script/poller script needs to be kept running. Web/application server ---------------------- While Mongrel/thin is great for trying out Gitorious on a local install, in a production environment you'll probably want something a little more robust. Most Rails folks use Passenger with Apache or Nginx these days, Gitorious will play happily in such an environment. Support for pushing via SSH =========================== In order for people to be able to push to your repositories, you need an SSH daemon running. You'll also need a system user account that's used for git connections through SSH. Consult the recipies in doc/recipies for instructions on how to set this up. Until you've done this, the web frontend will work, but users won't be able to push their changes. Button up ========= * In production, you'll want to have a limited-privileges user to run the git processes, just as you do for your webserver * Make the tree invisible to any other non-root user; make the tree read-only by that user; but grant write access to the /tmp and /public/cache directories. * Consider setting up the standard (lighttpd|nginx|apache) frontend <=> mongrel backend if you see traffic (or configure mod_passenger for apache2). More Help ========= * Consult the mailinglist (http://groups.google.com/group/gitorious) or drop by #gitorious on irc.freenode.net if you have questions. Gotchas ======= Gitorious will add a 'forced command' to your ~/.ssh/authorized_keys file for the target host: if you start finding ssh oddities suspect this first. Don't log out until you've ensured you can still log in remotely.
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This repository was for preparing merge requests of YouSource's features and other fixes to Gitorious mainline. YouSource is a local deployment of Gitorious, currently in beta use in the University of Jyväskylä (in middle of Finland). YouSource is a custom version of Gitorious, developed by Verso team for Department of Mathematical Information …
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