20 |
18 |
21 You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License along |
19 You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License along |
22 with this program; if not, write to the Free Software Foundation, Inc., |
20 with this program; if not, write to the Free Software Foundation, Inc., |
23 51 Franklin Street, Fifth Floor, Boston, MA 02110-1301 USA. |
21 51 Franklin Street, Fifth Floor, Boston, MA 02110-1301 USA. |
24 |
22 |
25 SUMMARY |
23 Though mercurial-server is currently targeted at Debian-based systems such as Ubuntu, other users have reported success getting it running on other Unix-based systems such as Red Hat. Running it on a non-Unix system such as Windows is not supported. You will need root privileges to install it. |
26 |
24 |
27 mercurial-server makes a group of repositories available to the developers |
25 The best way to install mercurial-server is using your package management system. However, there is some provision for installing it directly. On Debian based systems such as Ubuntu, use the command |
28 you choose, identified by ssh keys, with easy key and access management |
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29 based on hg. |
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30 |
26 |
31 All of the repositories controlled by mercurial-server are owned by a |
27 sudo make setup-adduser |
32 single user (the "hg" user in what follows), but many remote users can act |
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33 on them, and different users can have different permissions. We don't use |
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34 file permissions to achieve that - instead, developers log in as the "hg" |
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35 user when they connect to the repository host using ssh, using ssh URLs of |
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36 the form "ssh://hg@repository-host/repository-name". A restricted shell |
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37 prevents them from using this access for unauthorized purposes. Developers |
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38 are authenticated only using SSH keys; no other form of authentication is |
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39 supported. |
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40 |
28 |
41 To give a user access to the repository, place their key in an |
29 On Red Hat and possibly other variants of Unix, try |
42 appropriately-named subdirectory of "/etc/mercurial-server/keys" and run |
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43 "/usr/local/share/mercurial-server/refresh-auth". You can then control what |
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44 access they have to what repositories by editing the control file |
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45 "/etc/mercurial-server/access.conf", which can match the names of these keys |
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46 against a glob pattern. |
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47 |
30 |
48 For convenient remote control of access, you can instead (if you have the |
31 sudo make setup-useradd |
49 privileges) make changes to a special repository called "hgadmin", which |
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50 contains its own "access.conf" file and "keys" directory. Changes pushed to |
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51 this repository take effect immediately. The two "access.conf" files are |
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52 concatenated, and the keys directories merged. |
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53 |
32 |
54 QUICK START |
33 See doc/manual.docbook for the rest of the documentation. |
55 |
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56 You and all developers using this system will need an SSH public key, and |
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57 will almost certainly want to be running ssh-agent (or its equivalent, eg |
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58 Pageant under Windows). If you're not familiar with ssh-agent, you should |
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59 learn about that before using this. |
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60 |
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61 In what follows, certain operations (eg installing mercurial-server itself) |
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62 have to be done on the repository server (which we call "repository-host"), |
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63 but any operation that involves checking in or out of Mercurial can be done |
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64 wherever is most convenient to you; the most usual arrangment would be that |
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65 you'd do these things at the machine you sit at, and on which you run |
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66 ssh-agent, which is what authenticates you when you talk to the repository |
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67 server. |
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68 |
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69 Ensure there is no user called "hg" on the repository host, and run |
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70 "./install". This installs the mercurial-server files and control files, and |
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71 creates and sets up the "hg" user. |
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72 |
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73 Place your SSH public key in the directory "/etc/mercurial-server/keys/root". |
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74 I suggest creating yourself a directory and naming the key after your hostname |
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75 (ie the file is called something like |
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76 "/etc/mercurial-server/keys/root/yourname/yourhostname") so that you can |
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77 easily manage users who have a different key on each host they use. Then run |
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78 "/usr/local/share/mercurial-server/refresh-auth". |
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79 |
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80 The repository is now ready to use, and you are now the sole user able to |
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81 change and create repositories on this repository host. |
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82 |
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83 CREATING REPOSITORIES |
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84 |
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85 To create a new repository, you clone a local repository onto the remote |
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86 server. So if you want a new empty repository called "myproject", you can do |
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87 (as yourself): |
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88 |
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89 hg init myproject |
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90 hg clone myproject ssh://hg@repository-host/myproject |
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91 |
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92 ADDING OTHER USERS |
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93 |
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94 Because your key is in the "keys/root" subdirectory, you have the equivalent |
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95 of "root privileges" over mercurial-server (not the whole computer, just |
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96 mercurial-server). You can add other root users by putting their keys next to |
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97 yours, or you can make less privileged users by putting their keys in the |
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98 "keys/users" subdirectory - these users will be able to read and write to any |
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99 repository (except one - see below) but will not be able to create new |
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100 repositories. As always, when you change "/etc/mercurial-server/keys" you need |
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101 to re-run "/usr/local/share/mercurial-server/refresh-auth". |
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102 |
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103 LOGGING |
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104 |
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105 Every push and pull is logged with the key used: see the file .hg/serve-log in |
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106 each repository. |
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107 |
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108 USING HGADMIN |
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109 |
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110 It can be inconvenient to log on to the repository server, become root, copy |
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111 keys around, and run "refresh-auth" every time you want to change user |
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112 privileges. This is where mercurial-server shines :-) Suppose you have another |
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113 user's SSH public key in the file "/tmp/theirkey" (on the machine you sit at, |
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114 not necessarily the repository server) and you want to give them user-level |
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115 access to the repository server. Run these commands: |
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116 |
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117 hg clone ssh://hg@repository-server/hgadmin |
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118 cd hgadmin |
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119 mkdir keys/users/thatuser |
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120 cp /tmp/theirkey keys/users/thatuser/theirhostname |
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121 hg add |
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122 hg commit -m "Added key for thatuser" |
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123 hg push |
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124 |
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125 In other words, hgadmin is a version controlled version of |
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126 "/etc/mercurial-server", and changes to it take effect immediately - |
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127 "refresh-auth" is run after every push. |
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128 |
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129 With the default access.conf file (see doc/configuring-access for more |
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130 details) only users in "keys/root" can act on "hgadmin" - those with keys in |
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131 "keys/users" cannot even read this repository. So multiple admins can use |
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132 Mercurial's version control to cooperate on controlling access to the |
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133 repository server in a natural way. |
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134 |
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135 You can also create an "access.conf" file in hgadmin, and this is appended to |
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136 /etc/mercurial-server/access.conf whenever this is read - in other words, |
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137 rules in the latter take precedence over those in the former. So once you're |
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138 working with "hgadmin", it can be convenient to remove all the keys in |
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139 "/etc/mercurial-server/keys" and all the entries in |
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140 "/etc/mercurial-server/access.conf" and use hgadmin to control everything. If |
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141 you find yourself locked out, you can get back in again by restoring some of |
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142 the entries you removed from these files. |
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143 |
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144 MORE INFORMATION |
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145 |
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146 For more on how to use mercurial-server and configure access, see the files in |
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147 the doc directory. |
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148 |
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149 THANKS |
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150 |
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151 Thanks for reading this far. If you use mercurial-server, please tell me about |
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152 it. |
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153 |
34 |
154 Paul Crowley, paul@lshift.net, 2009 |
35 Paul Crowley, paul@lshift.net, 2009 |
155 |
36 |