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GIT web Interface
=================
The one working on:
http://git.kernel.org/
From the git version 1.4.0 gitweb is bundled with git.
Runtime gitweb configuration
----------------------------
gitweb: Introduce common system-wide settings for convenience Because of backward compatibility we cannot change gitweb to always use /etc/gitweb.conf (i.e. even if gitweb_config.perl exists). For common system-wide settings we therefore need separate configuration file: /etc/gitweb-common.conf. Long description: gitweb currently obtains configuration from the following sources: 1. per-instance configuration file (default: gitweb_conf.perl) 2. system-wide configuration file (default: /etc/gitweb.conf) If per-instance configuration file exists, then system-wide configuration is _not used at all_. This is quite untypical and suprising behavior. Moreover it is different from way git itself treats /etc/git.conf. It reads in stuff from /etc/git.conf and then local repos can change or override things as needed. In fact this is quite beneficial, because it gives site admins a simple and easy way to give an automatic hint to a repo about things the admin would like. On the other hand changing current behavior may lead to the situation, where something in /etc/gitweb.conf may interfere with unintended interaction in the local repository. One solution would be to _require_ to do explicit include; with read_config_file() it is now easy, as described in gitweb/README (description introduced in this commit). But as J.H. noticed we cannot ask people to modify their per-instance gitweb config file to include system-wide settings, nor we can require them to do this. Therefore, as proposed by Junio, for gitweb to have centralized config elements while retaining backwards compatibility, introduce separate common system-wide configuration file, by default /etc/gitweb-common.conf Noticed-by: Drew Northup <drew.northup@maine.edu> Helped-by: John 'Warthog9' Hawley <warthog9@kernel.org> Inspired-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com> Signed-off-by: Jakub Narebski <jnareb@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2011-07-25 00:29:18 +02:00
Gitweb obtains configuration data from the following sources in the
following order:
1. built-in values (some set during build stage),
2. common system-wide configuration file (`GITWEB_CONFIG_COMMON`,
defaults to '/etc/gitweb-common.conf'),
3. either per-instance configuration file (`GITWEB_CONFIG`, defaults to
'gitweb_config.perl' in the same directory as the installed gitweb),
or if it does not exists then system-wide configuration file
(`GITWEB_CONFIG_SYSTEM`, defaults to '/etc/gitweb.conf').
Values obtained in later configuration files override values obtained earlier
in above sequence.
You can read defaults in system-wide GITWEB_CONFIG_SYSTEM from GITWEB_CONFIG
by adding
read_config_file($GITWEB_CONFIG_SYSTEM);
at very beginning of per-instance GITWEB_CONFIG file. In this case
settings in said per-instance file will override settings from
system-wide configuration file. Note that read_config_file checks
itself that the $GITWEB_CONFIG_SYSTEM file exists.
The most notable thing that is not configurable at compile time are the
optional features, stored in the '%features' variable.
Ultimate description on how to reconfigure the default features setting
in your `GITWEB_CONFIG` or per-project in `project.git/config` can be found
as comments inside 'gitweb.cgi'.
See also the "Gitweb config file" (with an example of config file), and
the "Gitweb repositories" sections in INSTALL file for gitweb.
The gitweb config file is a fragment of perl code. You can set variables
using "our $variable = value"; text from "#" character until the end
of a line is ignored. See perlsyn(1) man page for details.
Below is the list of variables which you might want to set in gitweb config.
See the top of 'gitweb.cgi' for the full list of variables and their
descriptions.
Gitweb config file variables
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
You can set, among others, the following variables in gitweb config files
(with the exception of $projectroot and $projects_list this list does
not include variables usually directly set during build):
* $GIT
Core git executable to use. By default set to "$GIT_BINDIR/git", which
in turn is by default set to "$(bindir)/git". If you use git from binary
package, set this to "/usr/bin/git". This can just be "git" if your
webserver has a sensible PATH. If you have multiple git versions
installed it can be used to choose which one to use.
* $version
Gitweb version, set automatically when creating gitweb.cgi from
gitweb.perl. You might want to modify it if you are running modified
gitweb.
* $projectroot
Absolute filesystem path which will be prepended to project path;
the path to repository is $projectroot/$project. Set to
$GITWEB_PROJECTROOT during installation. This variable have to be
set correctly for gitweb to find repositories.
* $projects_list
Source of projects list, either directory to scan, or text file
with list of repositories (in the "<URI-encoded repository path> SP
<URI-encoded repository owner>" line format; actually there can be
any sequence of whitespace in place of space (SP)). Set to
$GITWEB_LIST during installation. If empty, $projectroot is used
to scan for repositories.
* $my_url, $my_uri
Full URL and absolute URL of gitweb script;
in earlier versions of gitweb you might have need to set those
variables, now there should be no need to do it. See
$per_request_config if you need to set them still.
* $base_url
Base URL for relative URLs in pages generated by gitweb,
(e.g. $logo, $favicon, @stylesheets if they are relative URLs),
needed and used only for URLs with nonempty PATH_INFO via
<base href="$base_url">. Usually gitweb sets its value correctly,
and there is no need to set this variable, e.g. to $my_uri or "/".
See $per_request_config if you need to set it anyway.
* $home_link
Target of the home link on top of all pages (the first part of view
"breadcrumbs"). By default set to absolute URI of a page ($my_uri).
* @stylesheets
List of URIs of stylesheets (relative to base URI of a page). You
might specify more than one stylesheet, for example use gitweb.css
as base, with site specific modifications in separate stylesheet
to make it easier to upgrade gitweb. You can add 'site' stylesheet
for example by using
push @stylesheets, "gitweb-site.css";
in the gitweb config file.
* $logo_url, $logo_label
URI and label (title) of GIT logo link (or your site logo, if you choose
to use different logo image). By default they point to git homepage;
in the past they pointed to git documentation at www.kernel.org.
* $projects_list_description_width
The width (in characters) of the projects list "Description" column.
Longer descriptions will be cut (trying to cut at word boundary);
full description is available as 'title' attribute (usually shown on
mouseover). By default set to 25, which might be too small if you
use long project descriptions.
* $projects_list_group_categories
Enables the grouping of projects by category on the project list page.
The category of a project is determined by the $GIT_DIR/category
file or the 'gitweb.category' variable in its repository configuration.
Disabled by default.
* $project_list_default_category
Default category for projects for which none is specified. If set
to the empty string, such projects will remain uncategorized and
listed at the top, above categorized projects.
* @git_base_url_list
List of git base URLs used for URL to where fetch project from, shown
in project summary page. Full URL is "$git_base_url/$project".
You can setup multiple base URLs (for example one for git:// protocol
access, and one for http:// "dumb" protocol access). Note that per
repository configuration in 'cloneurl' file, or as values of gitweb.url
project config.
* $default_blob_plain_mimetype
Default mimetype for blob_plain (raw) view, if mimetype checking
doesn't result in some other type; by default 'text/plain'.
* $default_text_plain_charset
Default charset for text files. If not set, web server configuration
would be used.
* $mimetypes_file
File to use for (filename extension based) guessing of MIME types before
trying /etc/mime.types. Path, if relative, is taken currently as
relative to the current git repository.
* $fallback_encoding
Gitweb assumes this charset if line contains non-UTF-8 characters.
Fallback decoding is used without error checking, so it can be even
'utf-8'. Value must be valid encoding; see Encoding::Supported(3pm) man
page for a list. By default 'latin1', aka. 'iso-8859-1'.
* @diff_opts
Rename detection options for git-diff and git-diff-tree. By default
('-M'); set it to ('-C') or ('-C', '-C') to also detect copies, or
set it to () if you don't want to have renames detection.
* $prevent_xss
If true, some gitweb features are disabled to prevent content in
repositories from launching cross-site scripting (XSS) attacks. Set this
to true if you don't trust the content of your repositories. The default
is false.
* $maxload
Used to set the maximum load that we will still respond to gitweb queries.
If server load exceed this value then return "503 Service Unavailable" error.
Server load is taken to be 0 if gitweb cannot determine its value. Set it to
undefined value to turn it off. The default is 300.
* $highlight_bin
Path to the highlight executable to use (must be the one from
http://www.andre-simon.de due to assumptions about parameters and output).
Useful if highlight is not installed on your webserver's PATH.
[Default: highlight]
gitweb: selectable configurations that change with each request Allow selecting whether configuration file should be (re)parsed on each request (the default, for backward compatibility with configurations that change per session, see commit 7f425db (gitweb: allow configurations that change with each request, 2010-07-30)), or whether should it be parsed only once (for performance speedup for persistent environments, though currently only FastCGI is able to make use of it, when flexibility is not important). You can also have configuration file parsed only once, but have parts of configuration (re)evaluated once per each request. This is done by introducing $per_request_config variable: if set to code reference, this code would be run once per request, while config file would be parsed only once. For example gitolite's contrib/gitweb/gitweb.conf fragment mentioned in 7f425db could be rewritten as our $per_request_config = sub { $ENV{GL_USER} = ($cgi && $cgi->remote_user) || "gitweb"; }; to make use of this feature. If $per_request_config is not a code reference, it is taken to be boolean variable, to choose between running config file for each request (flexibility), and running config file only once (performance in persistent environments). The default value for $per_request_config is 1 (true), which means that old configuration that require to change per session (like gitolite's) will keep working. While at it, make it so evaluate_git_version() is run only once. Signed-off-by: Jakub Narebski <jnareb@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2010-11-25 19:43:59 +01:00
* $per_request_config
If set to code reference, it would be run once per each request. You can
set parts of configuration that change per session, e.g. by setting it to
sub { $ENV{GL_USER} = $cgi->remote_user || "gitweb"; }
Otherwise it is treated as boolean value: if true gitweb would process
config file once per request, if false it would process config file only
once. Note: $my_url, $my_uri, and $base_url are overwritten with
their default values before every request, so if you want to change
them, be sure to set this variable to true or a code reference effecting
the desired changes. The default is true.
Projects list file format
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Instead of having gitweb find repositories by scanning filesystem starting
from $projectroot (or $projects_list, if it points to directory), you can
provide list of projects by setting $projects_list to a text file with list
of projects (and some additional info). This file uses the following
format:
One record (for project / repository) per line, whitespace separated fields;
does not support (at least for now) lines continuation (newline escaping).
Leading and trailing whitespace are ignored, any run of whitespace can be
used as field separator (rules for Perl's "split(' ', $line)"). Keyed by
the first field, which is project name, i.e. path to repository GIT_DIR
relative to $projectroot. Fields use modified URI encoding, defined in
RFC 3986, section 2.1 (Percent-Encoding), or rather "Query string encoding"
(see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Query_string#URL_encoding), the difference
being that SP (' ') can be encoded as '+' (and therefore '+' has to be also
percent-encoded). Reserved characters are: '%' (used for encoding), '+'
(can be used to encode SPACE), all whitespace characters as defined in Perl,
including SP, TAB and LF, (used to separate fields in a record).
Currently list of fields is
* <repository path> - path to repository GIT_DIR, relative to $projectroot
* <repository owner> - displayed as repository owner, preferably full name,
or email, or both
You can additionally use $projects_list file to limit which repositories
are visible, and together with $strict_export to limit access to
repositories (see "Gitweb repositories" section in gitweb/INSTALL).
Per-repository gitweb configuration
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
You can also configure individual repositories shown in gitweb by creating
file in the GIT_DIR of git repository, or by setting some repo configuration
variable (in GIT_DIR/config).
You can use the following files in repository:
* README.html
A .html file (HTML fragment) which is included on the gitweb project
summary page inside <div> block element. You can use it for longer
description of a project, to provide links (for example to project's
homepage), etc. This is recognized only if XSS prevention is off
($prevent_xss is false); a way to include a readme safely when XSS
prevention is on may be worked out in the future.
* description (or gitweb.description)
Short (shortened by default to 25 characters in the projects list page)
single line description of a project (of a repository). Plain text file;
HTML will be escaped. By default set to
Unnamed repository; edit this file to name it for gitweb.
from the template during repository creation. You can use the
gitweb.description repo configuration variable, but the file takes
precedence.
* category (or gitweb.category)
Singe line category of a project, used to group projects if
$projects_list_group_categories is enabled. By default (file and
configuration variable absent), uncategorized projects are put in
the $project_list_default_category category. You can use the
gitweb.category repo configuration variable, but the file takes
precedence.
* cloneurl (or multiple-valued gitweb.url)
File with repository URL (used for clone and fetch), one per line.
Displayed in the project summary page. You can use multiple-valued
gitweb.url repository configuration variable for that, but the file
takes precedence.
* gitweb.owner
You can use the gitweb.owner repository configuration variable to set
repository's owner. It is displayed in the project list and summary
page. If it's not set, filesystem directory's owner is used
(via GECOS field / real name field from getpwiud(3)).
* various gitweb.* config variables (in config)
Read description of %feature hash for detailed list, and some
descriptions.
Webserver configuration
-----------------------
If you want to have one URL for both gitweb and your http://
repositories, you can configure apache like this:
<VirtualHost *:80>
ServerName git.example.org
DocumentRoot /pub/git
SetEnv GITWEB_CONFIG /etc/gitweb.conf
# turning on mod rewrite
RewriteEngine on
# make the front page an internal rewrite to the gitweb script
RewriteRule ^/$ /cgi-bin/gitweb.cgi
# make access for "dumb clients" work
RewriteRule ^/(.*\.git/(?!/?(HEAD|info|objects|refs)).*)?$ /cgi-bin/gitweb.cgi%{REQUEST_URI} [L,PT]
</VirtualHost>
The above configuration expects your public repositories to live under
/pub/git and will serve them as http://git.domain.org/dir-under-pub-git,
both as cloneable GIT URL and as browseable gitweb interface.
If you then start your git-daemon with --base-path=/pub/git --export-all
then you can even use the git:// URL with exactly the same path.
Setting the environment variable GITWEB_CONFIG will tell gitweb to use
the named file (i.e. in this example /etc/gitweb.conf) as a
configuration for gitweb. Perl variables defined in here will
override the defaults given at the head of the gitweb.perl (or
gitweb.cgi). Look at the comments in that file for information on
which variables and what they mean.
If you use the rewrite rules from the example you'll likely also need
something like the following in your gitweb.conf (or gitweb_config.perl) file:
@stylesheets = ("/some/absolute/path/gitweb.css");
$my_uri = "/";
$home_link = "/";
Webserver configuration with multiple projects' root
----------------------------------------------------
If you want to use gitweb with several project roots you can edit your apache
virtual host and gitweb.conf configuration files like this :
virtual host configuration :
<VirtualHost *:80>
ServerName git.example.org
DocumentRoot /pub/git
SetEnv GITWEB_CONFIG /etc/gitweb.conf
# turning on mod rewrite
RewriteEngine on
# make the front page an internal rewrite to the gitweb script
RewriteRule ^/$ /cgi-bin/gitweb.cgi [QSA,L,PT]
# look for a public_git folder in unix users' home
# http://git.example.org/~<user>/
RewriteRule ^/\~([^\/]+)(/|/gitweb.cgi)?$ /cgi-bin/gitweb.cgi [QSA,E=GITWEB_PROJECTROOT:/home/$1/public_git/,L,PT]
# http://git.example.org/+<user>/
#RewriteRule ^/\+([^\/]+)(/|/gitweb.cgi)?$ /cgi-bin/gitweb.cgi [QSA,E=GITWEB_PROJECTROOT:/home/$1/public_git/,L,PT]
# http://git.example.org/user/<user>/
#RewriteRule ^/user/([^\/]+)/(gitweb.cgi)?$ /cgi-bin/gitweb.cgi [QSA,E=GITWEB_PROJECTROOT:/home/$1/public_git/,L,PT]
# defined list of project roots
RewriteRule ^/scm(/|/gitweb.cgi)?$ /cgi-bin/gitweb.cgi [QSA,E=GITWEB_PROJECTROOT:/pub/scm/,L,PT]
RewriteRule ^/var(/|/gitweb.cgi)?$ /cgi-bin/gitweb.cgi [QSA,E=GITWEB_PROJECTROOT:/var/git/,L,PT]
# make access for "dumb clients" work
RewriteRule ^/(.*\.git/(?!/?(HEAD|info|objects|refs)).*)?$ /cgi-bin/gitweb.cgi%{REQUEST_URI} [L,PT]
</VirtualHost>
gitweb.conf configuration :
$projectroot = $ENV{'GITWEB_PROJECTROOT'} || "/pub/git";
These configurations enable two things. First, each unix user (<user>) of the
server will be able to browse through gitweb git repositories found in
~/public_git/ with the following url : http://git.example.org/~<user>/
If you do not want this feature on your server just remove the second rewrite rule.
If you already use mod_userdir in your virtual host or you don't want to use
the '~' as first character just comment or remove the second rewrite rule and
uncomment one of the following according to what you want.
Second, repositories found in /pub/scm/ and /var/git/ will be accesible
through http://git.example.org/scm/ and http://git.example.org/var/.
You can add as many project roots as you want by adding rewrite rules like the
third and the fourth.
PATH_INFO usage
-----------------------
If you enable PATH_INFO usage in gitweb by putting
$feature{'pathinfo'}{'default'} = [1];
in your gitweb.conf, it is possible to set up your server so that it
consumes and produces URLs in the form
http://git.example.com/project.git/shortlog/sometag
by using a configuration such as the following, that assumes that
/var/www/gitweb is the DocumentRoot of your webserver, and that it
contains the gitweb.cgi script and complementary static files
(stylesheet, favicon):
<VirtualHost *:80>
ServerAlias git.example.com
DocumentRoot /var/www/gitweb
<Directory /var/www/gitweb>
Options ExecCGI
AddHandler cgi-script cgi
DirectoryIndex gitweb.cgi
RewriteEngine On
RewriteCond %{REQUEST_FILENAME} !-f
RewriteCond %{REQUEST_FILENAME} !-d
RewriteRule ^.* /gitweb.cgi/$0 [L,PT]
</Directory>
</VirtualHost>
The rewrite rule guarantees that existing static files will be properly
served, whereas any other URL will be passed to gitweb as PATH_INFO
parameter.
Notice that in this case you don't need special settings for
@stylesheets, $my_uri and $home_link, but you lose "dumb client" access
to your project .git dirs. A possible workaround for the latter is the
following: in your project root dir (e.g. /pub/git) have the projects
named without a .git extension (e.g. /pub/git/project instead of
/pub/git/project.git) and configure Apache as follows:
<VirtualHost *:80>
ServerAlias git.example.com
DocumentRoot /var/www/gitweb
AliasMatch ^(/.*?)(\.git)(/.*)?$ /pub/git$1$3
<Directory /var/www/gitweb>
Options ExecCGI
AddHandler cgi-script cgi
DirectoryIndex gitweb.cgi
RewriteEngine On
RewriteCond %{REQUEST_FILENAME} !-f
RewriteCond %{REQUEST_FILENAME} !-d
RewriteRule ^.* /gitweb.cgi/$0 [L,PT]
</Directory>
</VirtualHost>
The additional AliasMatch makes it so that
http://git.example.com/project.git
will give raw access to the project's git dir (so that the project can
be cloned), while
http://git.example.com/project
will provide human-friendly gitweb access.
This solution is not 100% bulletproof, in the sense that if some project
has a named ref (branch, tag) starting with 'git/', then paths such as
http://git.example.com/project/command/abranch..git/abranch
will fail with a 404 error.
Originally written by:
Kay Sievers <kay.sievers@vrfy.org>
Any comment/question/concern to:
Git mailing list <git@vger.kernel.org>