Changeset - 3158cf0dafb7
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1 11 1
Thomas De Schampheleire - 7 years ago 2018-11-18 20:02:17
thomas.de_schampheleire@nokia.com
cli: convert 'gearbox setup-db' into 'kallithea-cli db-create'
12 files changed with 57 insertions and 93 deletions:
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docs/contributing.rst
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.. _contributing:
 

	
 
=========================
 
Contributing to Kallithea
 
=========================
 

	
 
Kallithea is developed and maintained by its users. Please join us and scratch
 
your own itch.
 

	
 

	
 
Infrastructure
 
--------------
 

	
 
The main repository is hosted on Our Own Kallithea (aka OOK) at
 
https://kallithea-scm.org/repos/kallithea/, our self-hosted instance
 
of Kallithea.
 

	
 
For now, we use Bitbucket_ for `pull requests`_ and `issue tracking`_. The
 
issue tracker is for tracking bugs, not for support, discussion, or ideas --
 
please use the `mailing list`_ or :ref:`IRC <readme>` to reach the community.
 

	
 
We use Weblate_ to translate the user interface messages into languages other
 
than English. Join our project on `Hosted Weblate`_ to help us.
 
To register, you can use your Bitbucket or GitHub account. See :ref:`translations`
 
for more details.
 

	
 

	
 
Getting started
 
---------------
 

	
 
To get started with Kallithea development::
 

	
 
        hg clone https://kallithea-scm.org/repos/kallithea
 
        cd kallithea
 
        virtualenv ../kallithea-venv
 
        source ../kallithea-venv/bin/activate
 
        pip install --upgrade pip setuptools
 
        pip install --upgrade -e .
 
        pip install --upgrade -r dev_requirements.txt
 
        npm install     # install dependencies - both tools and data
 
        npm run less    # for generating css from less
 
        kallithea-cli config-create my.ini
 
        gearbox setup-db -c my.ini --user=user --email=user@example.com --password=password --repos=/tmp
 
        kallithea-cli db-create -c my.ini --user=user --email=user@example.com --password=password --repos=/tmp
 
        gearbox serve -c my.ini --reload &
 
        firefox http://127.0.0.1:5000/
 

	
 
If you plan to use Bitbucket_ for sending contributions, you can also fork
 
Kallithea on Bitbucket_ first (https://bitbucket.org/conservancy/kallithea) and
 
then replace the clone step above by a clone of your fork. In this case, please
 
see :ref:`contributing-guidelines` below for configuring your fork correctly.
 

	
 

	
 
Contribution flow
 
-----------------
 

	
 
Starting from an existing Kallithea clone, make sure it is up to date with the
 
latest upstream changes::
 

	
 
        hg pull
 
        hg update
 

	
 
Review the :ref:`contributing-guidelines` and :ref:`coding-guidelines`.
 

	
 
If you are new to Mercurial, refer to Mercurial `Quick Start`_ and `Beginners
 
Guide`_ on the Mercurial wiki.
 

	
 
Now, make some changes and test them (see :ref:`contributing-tests`). Don't
 
forget to add new tests to cover new functionality or bug fixes.
 

	
 
For documentation changes, run ``make html`` from the ``docs`` directory to
 
generate the HTML result, then review them in your browser.
 

	
 
Before submitting any changes, run the cleanup script::
 

	
 
        ./scripts/run-all-cleanup
 

	
 
When you are completely ready, you can send your changes to the community for
 
review and inclusion. Most commonly used methods are sending patches to the
 
mailing list (via ``hg email``) or by creating a pull request on Bitbucket_.
 

	
 
.. _contributing-tests:
 

	
 

	
 
Running tests
 
-------------
 

	
 
After finishing your changes make sure all tests pass cleanly. Run the testsuite
 
by invoking ``py.test`` from the project root::
 

	
 
    py.test
 

	
 
Note that testing on Python 2.6 also requires ``unittest2``.
 

	
 
Note that on unix systems, the temporary directory (``/tmp`` or where
 
``$TMPDIR`` points) must allow executable files; Git hooks must be executable,
 
and the test suite creates repositories in the temporary directory. Linux
 
systems with /tmp mounted noexec will thus fail.
 

	
 
You can also use ``tox`` to run the tests with all supported Python versions
 
(currently Python 2.6--2.7).
 

	
 
When running tests, Kallithea generates a `test.ini` based on template values
 
in `kallithea/tests/conftest.py` and populates the SQLite database specified
 
there.
 

	
 
It is possible to avoid recreating the full test database on each invocation of
 
the tests, thus eliminating the initial delay. To achieve this, run the tests as::
 

	
 
    gearbox serve -c /tmp/kallithea-test-XXX/test.ini --pid-file=test.pid --daemon
 
    KALLITHEA_WHOOSH_TEST_DISABLE=1 KALLITHEA_NO_TMP_PATH=1 py.test
 
    kill -9 $(cat test.pid)
 

	
 
In these commands, the following variables are used::
 

	
 
    KALLITHEA_WHOOSH_TEST_DISABLE=1 - skip whoosh index building and tests
 
    KALLITHEA_NO_TMP_PATH=1 - disable new temp path for tests, used mostly for testing_vcs_operations
 

	
 
You can run individual tests by specifying their path as argument to py.test.
 
py.test also has many more options, see `py.test -h`. Some useful options
 
are::
 

	
 
    -k EXPRESSION         only run tests which match the given substring
 
                          expression. An expression is a python evaluable
 
                          expression where all names are substring-matched
 
                          against test names and their parent classes. Example:
 
    -x, --exitfirst       exit instantly on first error or failed test.
 
    --lf                  rerun only the tests that failed at the last run (or
 
                          all if none failed)
 
    --ff                  run all tests but run the last failures first. This
 
                          may re-order tests and thus lead to repeated fixture
 
                          setup/teardown
 
    --pdb                 start the interactive Python debugger on errors.
 
    -s, --capture=no      don't capture stdout (any stdout output will be
 
                          printed immediately)
 

	
 
Performance tests
 
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
 

	
 
A number of performance tests are present in the test suite, but they are
 
not run in a standard test run. These tests are useful to
 
evaluate the impact of certain code changes with respect to performance.
 

	
 
To run these tests::
 

	
 
    env TEST_PERFORMANCE=1 py.test kallithea/tests/performance
 

	
 
To analyze performance, you could install pytest-profiling_, which enables the
 
--profile and --profile-svg options to py.test.
 

	
 
.. _pytest-profiling: https://github.com/manahl/pytest-plugins/tree/master/pytest-profiling
 

	
 
.. _contributing-guidelines:
 

	
 

	
 
Contribution guidelines
 
-----------------------
 

	
 
Kallithea is GPLv3 and we assume all contributions are made by the
 
committer/contributor and under GPLv3 unless explicitly stated. We do care a
 
lot about preservation of copyright and license information for existing code
 
that is brought into the project.
 

	
 
Contributions will be accepted in most formats -- such as pull requests on
 
Bitbucket, something hosted on your own Kallithea instance, or patches sent by
 
email to the `kallithea-general`_ mailing list.
 

	
 
When contributing via Bitbucket, please make your fork of
 
https://bitbucket.org/conservancy/kallithea/ `non-publishing`_ -- it is one of
 
the settings on "Repository details" page. This ensures your commits are in
 
"draft" phase and makes it easier for you to address feedback and for project
 
maintainers to integrate your changes.
 

	
 
.. _non-publishing: https://www.mercurial-scm.org/wiki/Phases#Publishing_Repository
 

	
 
Make sure to test your changes both manually and with the automatic tests
 
before posting.
 

	
 
We care about quality and review and keeping a clean repository history. We
 
might give feedback that requests polishing contributions until they are
 
"perfect". We might also rebase and collapse and make minor adjustments to your
 
changes when we apply them.
 

	
 
We try to make sure we have consensus on the direction the project is taking.
 
Everything non-sensitive should be discussed in public -- preferably on the
 
mailing list.  We aim at having all non-trivial changes reviewed by at least
 
one other core developer before pushing. Obvious non-controversial changes will
 
be handled more casually.
 

	
 
There is a main development branch ("default") which is generally stable so that
 
it can be (and is) used in production. There is also a "stable" branch that is
 
almost exclusively reserved for bug fixes or trivial changes. Experimental
 
changes should live elsewhere (for example in a pull request) until they are
 
ready.
 

	
 
.. _coding-guidelines:
 

	
 

	
 
Coding guidelines
 
-----------------
 

	
 
We don't have a formal coding/formatting standard. We are currently using a mix
 
of Mercurial's (https://www.mercurial-scm.org/wiki/CodingStyle), pep8, and
 
consistency with existing code. Run ``scripts/run-all-cleanup`` before
 
committing to ensure some basic code formatting consistency.
 

	
 
We support both Python 2.6.x and 2.7.x and nothing else. For now we don't care
 
about Python 3 compatibility.
 

	
 
We try to support the most common modern web browsers. IE9 is still supported
 
to the extent it is feasible, IE8 is not.
 

	
 
We primarily support Linux and OS X on the server side but Windows should also work.
 

	
 
HTML templates should use 2 spaces for indentation ... but be pragmatic. We
 
should use templates cleverly and avoid duplication. We should use reasonable
 
semantic markup with element classes and IDs that can be used for styling and testing.
 
We should only use inline styles in places where it really is semantic (such as
 
``display: none``).
 

	
 
JavaScript must use ``;`` between/after statements. Indentation 4 spaces. Inline
 
multiline functions should be indented two levels -- one for the ``()`` and one for
 
``{}``.
 
Variables holding jQuery objects should be named with a leading ``$``.
 

	
 
Commit messages should have a leading short line summarizing the changes. For
 
bug fixes, put ``(Issue #123)`` at the end of this line.
 

	
 
Use American English grammar and spelling overall. Use `English title case`_ for
 
page titles, button labels, headers, and 'labels' for fields in forms.
 

	
 
.. _English title case: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Capitalization#Title_case
 

	
 
Template helpers (that is, everything in ``kallithea.lib.helpers``)
 
should only be referenced from templates. If you need to call a
 
helper from the Python code, consider moving the function somewhere
 
else (e.g. to the model).
 

	
 
Notes on the SQLAlchemy session
 
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
 

	
 
Each HTTP request runs inside an independent SQLAlchemy session (as well
 
as in an independent database transaction). ``Session`` is the session manager
 
and factory. ``Session()`` will create a new session on-demand or return the
 
current session for the active thread. Many database operations are methods on
 
such session instances - only ``Session.remove()`` should be called directly on
 
the manager.
 

	
 
Database model objects
 
(almost) always belong to a particular SQLAlchemy session, which means
 
that SQLAlchemy will ensure that they're kept in sync with the database
 
(but also means that they cannot be shared across requests).
 

	
 
Objects can be added to the session using ``Session().add``, but this is
 
rarely needed:
 

	
 
* When creating a database object by calling the constructor directly,
 
  it must explicitly be added to the session.
 

	
 
* When creating an object using a factory function (like
 
  ``create_repo``), the returned object has already (by convention)
 
  been added to the session, and should not be added again.
 

	
 
* When getting an object from the session (via ``Session().query`` or
 
  any of the utility functions that look up objects in the database),
 
  it's already part of the session, and should not be added again.
 
  SQLAlchemy monitors attribute modifications automatically for all
 
  objects it knows about and syncs them to the database.
 

	
 
SQLAlchemy also flushes changes to the database automatically; manually
 
calling ``Session().flush`` is usually only necessary when the Python
 
code needs the database to assign an "auto-increment" primary key ID to
 
a freshly created model object (before flushing, the ID attribute will
 
be ``None``).
 

	
 
TurboGears2 DebugBar
 
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
 

	
 
It is possible to enable the TurboGears2-provided DebugBar_, a toolbar overlayed
 
over the Kallithea web interface, allowing you to see:
 

	
 
* timing information of the current request, including profiling information
 
* request data, including GET data, POST data, cookies, headers and environment
 
  variables
 
* a list of executed database queries, including timing and result values
 

	
 
DebugBar is only activated when ``debug = true`` is set in the configuration
 
file. This is important, because the DebugBar toolbar will be visible for all
 
users, and allow them to see information they should not be allowed to see. Like
 
is anyway the case for ``debug = true``, do not use this in production!
 

	
 
To enable DebugBar, install ``tgext.debugbar`` and ``kajiki`` (typically via
 
``pip``) and restart Kallithea (in debug mode).
 

	
 

	
 
"Roadmap"
 
---------
 

	
 
We do not have a road map but are waiting for your contributions. Refer to the
 
wiki_ for some ideas of places we might want to go -- contributions in these
 
areas are very welcome.
 

	
 

	
 
Thank you for your contribution!
 
--------------------------------
 

	
 

	
 
.. _Weblate: http://weblate.org/
 
.. _issue tracking: https://bitbucket.org/conservancy/kallithea/issues?status=new&status=open
 
.. _pull requests: https://bitbucket.org/conservancy/kallithea/pull-requests
 
.. _bitbucket: http://bitbucket.org/
 
.. _mailing list: http://lists.sfconservancy.org/mailman/listinfo/kallithea-general
 
.. _kallithea-general: http://lists.sfconservancy.org/mailman/listinfo/kallithea-general
 
.. _Hosted Weblate: https://hosted.weblate.org/projects/kallithea/kallithea/
 
.. _wiki: https://bitbucket.org/conservancy/kallithea/wiki/Home
 
.. _DebugBar: https://github.com/TurboGears/tgext.debugbar
 
.. _Quick Start: https://www.mercurial-scm.org/wiki/QuickStart
 
.. _Beginners Guide: https://www.mercurial-scm.org/wiki/BeginnersGuides
docs/dev/dbmigrations.rst
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=======================
 
Database schema changes
 
=======================
 

	
 
Kallithea uses Alembic for :ref:`database migrations <upgrade_db>`
 
(upgrades and downgrades).
 

	
 
If you are developing a Kallithea feature that requires database schema
 
changes, you should make a matching Alembic database migration script:
 

	
 
1. :ref:`Create a Kallithea configuration and database <setup>` for testing
 
   the migration script, or use existing ``development.ini`` setup.
 

	
 
   Ensure that this database is up to date with the latest database
 
   schema *before* the changes you're currently developing. (Do not
 
   create the database while your new schema changes are applied.)
 

	
 
2. Create a separate throwaway configuration for iterating on the actual
 
   database changes::
 

	
 
    kallithea-cli config-create temp.ini
 

	
 
   Edit the file to change database settings. SQLite is typically fine,
 
   but make sure to change the path to e.g. ``temp.db``, to avoid
 
   clobbering any existing database file.
 

	
 
3. Make your code changes (including database schema changes in ``db.py``).
 

	
 
4. After every database schema change, recreate the throwaway database
 
   to test the changes::
 

	
 
    rm temp.db
 
    gearbox setup-db -c temp.ini --repos=/var/repos --user=doe --email doe@example.com --password=123456 --no-public-access --force-yes
 
    kallithea-cli db-create -c temp.ini --repos=/var/repos --user=doe --email doe@example.com --password=123456 --no-public-access --force-yes
 
    kallithea-cli repo-scan -c temp.ini
 

	
 
5. Once satisfied with the schema changes, auto-generate a draft Alembic
 
   script using the development database that has *not* been upgraded.
 
   (The generated script will upgrade the database to match the code.)
 

	
 
   ::
 

	
 
    alembic -c development.ini revision -m "area: add cool feature" --autogenerate
 

	
 
6. Edit the script to clean it up and fix any problems.
 

	
 
   Note that for changes that simply add columns, it may be appropriate
 
   to not remove them in the downgrade script (and instead do nothing),
 
   to avoid the loss of data. Unknown columns will simply be ignored by
 
   Kallithea versions predating your changes.
 

	
 
7. Run ``alembic -c development.ini upgrade head`` to apply changes to
 
   the (non-throwaway) database, and test the upgrade script. Also test
 
   downgrades.
 

	
 
   The included ``development.ini`` has full SQL logging enabled. If
 
   you're using another configuration file, you may want to enable it
 
   by setting ``level = DEBUG`` in section ``[handler_console_sql]``.
 

	
 
The Alembic migration script should be committed in the same revision as
 
the database schema (``db.py``) changes.
 

	
 
See the `Alembic documentation`__ for more information, in particular
 
the tutorial and the section about auto-generating migration scripts.
 

	
 
.. __: http://alembic.zzzcomputing.com/en/latest/
 

	
 

	
 
Troubleshooting
 
---------------
 

	
 
* If ``alembic --autogenerate`` responds "Target database is not up to
 
  date", you need to either first use Alembic to upgrade the database
 
  to the most recent version (before your changes), or recreate the
 
  database from scratch (without your schema changes applied).
docs/installation_win.rst
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.. _installation_win:
 

	
 
====================================================
 
Installation on Windows (7/Server 2008 R2 and newer)
 
====================================================
 

	
 

	
 
First time install
 
------------------
 

	
 
Target OS: Windows 7 and newer or Windows Server 2008 R2 and newer
 

	
 
Tested on Windows 8.1, Windows Server 2008 R2 and Windows Server 2012
 

	
 
To install on an older version of Windows, see `<installation_win_old.html>`_
 

	
 
Step 1 -- Install Python
 
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
 

	
 
Install Python 2.x.y (x = 6 or 7). Latest version is recommended. If you need another version, they can run side by side.
 

	
 
.. warning:: Python 3.x is not supported.
 

	
 
- Download Python 2.x.y from http://www.python.org/download/
 
- Choose and click on the version
 
- Click on "Windows X86-64 Installer" for x64 or "Windows x86 MSI installer" for Win32.
 
- Disable UAC or run the installer with admin privileges. If you chose to disable UAC, do not forget to reboot afterwards.
 

	
 
While writing this guide, the latest version was v2.7.9.
 
Remember the specific major and minor versions installed, because they will
 
be needed in the next step. In this case, it is "2.7".
 

	
 
Step 2 -- Python BIN
 
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
 

	
 
Add Python BIN folder to the path. This can be done manually (editing
 
"PATH" environment variable) or by using Windows Support Tools that
 
come pre-installed in Windows Vista/7 and later.
 

	
 
Open a CMD and type::
 

	
 
  SETX PATH "%PATH%;[your-python-path]" /M
 

	
 
Please substitute [your-python-path] with your Python installation
 
path. Typically this is ``C:\\Python27``.
 

	
 
Step 3 -- Install pywin32 extensions
 
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
 

	
 
Download pywin32 from:
 
http://sourceforge.net/projects/pywin32/files/
 

	
 
- Click on "pywin32" folder
 
- Click on the first folder (in this case, Build 219, maybe newer when you try)
 
- Choose the file ending with ".amd64-py2.x.exe" (".win32-py2.x.exe"
 
  for Win32) where x is the minor version of Python you installed.
 
  When writing this guide, the file was:
 
  http://sourceforge.net/projects/pywin32/files/pywin32/Build%20219/pywin32-219.win-amd64-py2.7.exe/download
 
  (x64)
 
  http://sourceforge.net/projects/pywin32/files/pywin32/Build%20219/pywin32-219.win32-py2.7.exe/download
 
  (Win32)
 

	
 
Step 4 -- Install pip
 
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
 

	
 
pip is a package management system for Python. You will need it to install Kallithea and its dependencies.
 

	
 
If you installed Python 2.7.9+, you already have it (as long as you ran the installer with admin privileges or disabled UAC).
 

	
 
If it was not installed or if you are using Python>=2.6,<2.7.9:
 

	
 
- Go to https://bootstrap.pypa.io
 
- Right-click on get-pip.py and choose Saves as...
 
- Run "python2 get-pip.py" in the folder where you downloaded get-pip.py (may require admin access).
 

	
 
.. note::
 

	
 
   See http://stackoverflow.com/questions/4750806/how-to-install-pip-on-windows
 
   for details and alternative methods.
 

	
 
Note that pip.exe will be placed inside your Python installation's
 
Scripts folder, which is likely not on your path. To correct this,
 
open a CMD and type::
 

	
 
  SETX PATH "%PATH%;[your-python-path]\Scripts" /M
 

	
 
Step 5 -- Kallithea folder structure
 
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
 

	
 
Create a Kallithea folder structure.
 

	
 
This is only an example to install Kallithea. Of course, you can
 
change it. However, this guide will follow the proposed structure, so
 
please later adapt the paths if you change them. Folders without
 
spaces are recommended.
 

	
 
Create the following folder structure::
 

	
 
  C:\Kallithea
 
  C:\Kallithea\Bin
 
  C:\Kallithea\Env
 
  C:\Kallithea\Repos
 

	
 
Step 6 -- Install virtualenv
 
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
 

	
 
.. note::
 
   A python virtual environment will allow for isolation between the Python packages of your system and those used for Kallithea.
 
   It is strongly recommended to use it to ensure that Kallithea does not change a dependency that other software uses or vice versa.
 

	
 
In a command prompt type::
 

	
 
  pip install virtualenv
 

	
 
Virtualenv will now be inside your Python Scripts path (C:\\Python27\\Scripts or similar).
 

	
 
To create a virtual environment, run::
 

	
 
  virtualenv C:\Kallithea\Env
 

	
 
Step 7 -- Install Kallithea
 
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
 

	
 
In order to install Kallithea, you need to be able to run "pip install kallithea". It will use pip to install the Kallithea Python package and its dependencies.
 
Some Python packages use managed code and need to be compiled.
 
This can be done on Linux without any special steps. On Windows, you will need to install Microsoft Visual C++ compiler for Python 2.7.
 

	
 
Download and install "Microsoft Visual C++ Compiler for Python 2.7" from http://aka.ms/vcpython27
 

	
 
.. note::
 
  You can also install the dependencies using already compiled Windows binaries packages. A good source of compiled Python packages is http://www.lfd.uci.edu/~gohlke/pythonlibs/. However, not all of the necessary packages for Kallithea are on this site and some are hard to find, so we will stick with using the compiler.
 

	
 
In a command prompt type (adapting paths if necessary)::
 

	
 
  cd C:\Kallithea\Env\Scripts
 
  activate
 
  pip install --upgrade pip setuptools
 

	
 
The prompt will change into "(Env) C:\\Kallithea\\Env\\Scripts" or similar
 
(depending of your folder structure). Then type::
 

	
 
  pip install kallithea
 

	
 
.. note:: This will take some time. Please wait patiently until it is fully
 
          complete. Some warnings will appear. Don't worry, they are
 
          normal.
 

	
 
Step 8 -- Install Git (optional)
 
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
 

	
 
Mercurial being a python package, was installed automatically when doing ``pip install kallithea``.
 

	
 
You need to install Git manually if you want Kallithea to be able to host Git repositories.
 
See http://git-scm.com/book/en/v2/Getting-Started-Installing-Git#Installing-on-Windows for instructions.
 
The location of the Git binaries (like ``c:\path\to\git\bin``) must be
 
added to the ``PATH`` environment variable so ``git.exe`` and other tools like
 
``gzip.exe`` are available.
 

	
 
Step 9 -- Configuring Kallithea
 
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
 

	
 
Steps taken from `<setup.html>`_
 

	
 
You have to use the same command prompt as in Step 7, so if you closed
 
it, reopen it following the same commands (including the "activate"
 
one). When ready, type::
 

	
 
  cd C:\Kallithea\Bin
 
  kallithea-cli config-create my.ini
 

	
 
Then you must edit my.ini to fit your needs (IP address, IP
 
port, mail settings, database, etc.). `NotePad++`__ or a similar text
 
editor is recommended to properly handle the newline character
 
differences between Unix and Windows.
 

	
 
__ http://notepad-plus-plus.org/
 

	
 
For the sake of simplicity, run it with the default settings. After your edits (if any) in the previous command prompt, type::
 

	
 
  gearbox setup-db -c my.ini
 
  kallithea-cli db-create -c my.ini
 

	
 
.. warning:: This time a *new* database will be installed. You must
 
             follow a different process to later :ref:`upgrade <upgrade>`
 
             to a newer Kallithea version.
 

	
 
The script will ask you for confirmation about creating a new database, answer yes (y)
 

	
 
The script will ask you for the repository path, answer C:\\Kallithea\\Repos (or similar).
 

	
 
The script will ask you for the admin username and password, answer "admin" + "123456" (or whatever you want)
 

	
 
The script will ask you for admin mail, answer "admin@xxxx.com" (or whatever you want).
 

	
 
If you make a mistake and the script doesn't end, don't worry: start it again.
 

	
 
If you decided not to install Git, you will get errors about it that you can ignore.
 

	
 
Step 10 -- Running Kallithea
 
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
 

	
 
In the previous command prompt, being in the C:\\Kallithea\\Bin folder, type::
 

	
 
  gearbox serve -c my.ini
 

	
 
Open your web server, and go to http://127.0.0.1:5000
 

	
 
It works!! :-)
 

	
 
Remark:
 
If it does not work the first time, Ctrl-C the CMD process and start it again. Don't forget the "http://" in Internet Explorer.
 

	
 
What this guide does not cover:
 

	
 
- Installing Celery
 
- Running Kallithea as a Windows Service. You can investigate here:
 

	
 
  - http://pypi.python.org/pypi/wsgisvc
 
  - http://ryrobes.com/python/running-python-scripts-as-a-windows-service/
 
  - http://wiki.pylonshq.com/display/pylonscookbook/How+to+run+Pylons+as+a+Windows+service
 

	
 
- Using Apache. You can investigate here:
 

	
 
  - https://groups.google.com/group/rhodecode/msg/c433074e813ffdc4
docs/installation_win_old.rst
Show inline comments
 
.. _installation_win_old:
 

	
 
==========================================================
 
Installation on Windows (XP/Vista/Server 2003/Server 2008)
 
==========================================================
 

	
 

	
 
First-time install
 
------------------
 

	
 
Target OS: Windows XP SP3 32-bit English (Clean installation)
 
+ All Windows Updates until 24-may-2012
 

	
 
.. note::
 

	
 
   This installation is for 32-bit systems, for 64-bit Windows you might need
 
   to download proper 64-bit versions of the different packages (Windows Installer, Win32py extensions)
 
   plus some extra tweaks.
 
   These extra steps haven been marked as "64-bit".
 
   Tested on Windows Server 2008 R2 SP1, 9-feb-2013.
 
   If you run into any 64-bit related problems, please check these pages:
 

	
 
   - http://blog.victorjabur.com/2011/06/05/compiling-python-2-7-modules-on-windows-32-and-64-using-msvc-2008-express/
 
   - http://bugs.python.org/issue7511
 

	
 
Step 1 -- Install Visual Studio 2008 Express
 
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
 

	
 
Optional: You can also install MinGW, but VS2008 installation is easier.
 

	
 
Download "Visual C++ 2008 Express Edition with SP1" from:
 
http://download.microsoft.com/download/E/8/E/E8EEB394-7F42-4963-A2D8-29559B738298/VS2008ExpressWithSP1ENUX1504728.iso
 
(if not found or relocated, google for "visual studio 2008 express" for updated link. This link was taken from http://stackoverflow.com/questions/15318560/visual-c-2008-express-download-link-dead)
 

	
 
You can also download full ISO file for offline installation, just
 
choose "All -- Offline Install ISO image file" in the previous page and
 
choose "Visual C++ 2008 Express" when installing.
 

	
 
.. note::
 

	
 
   Using other versions of Visual Studio will lead to random crashes.
 
   You must use Visual Studio 2008!"
 

	
 
.. note::
 

	
 
   Silverlight Runtime and SQL Server 2008 Express Edition are not
 
   required, you can uncheck them
 

	
 
.. note::
 

	
 
   64-bit: You also need to install the Microsoft Windows SDK for .NET 3.5 SP1 (.NET 4.0 won't work).
 
   Download from: http://www.microsoft.com/en-us/download/details.aspx?id=3138
 

	
 
.. note::
 

	
 
   64-bit: You also need to copy and rename a .bat file to make the Visual C++ compiler work.
 
   I am not sure why this is not necessary for 32-bit.
 
   Copy C:\Program Files (x86)\Microsoft Visual Studio 9.0\VC\bin\vcvars64.bat to C:\Program Files (x86)\Microsoft Visual Studio 9.0\VC\bin\amd64\vcvarsamd64.bat
 

	
 
Step 2 -- Install Python
 
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
 

	
 
Install Python 2.x.y (x = 6 or 7) x86 version (32-bit). DO NOT USE A 3.x version.
 
Download Python 2.x.y from:
 
http://www.python.org/download/
 

	
 
Choose "Windows Installer" (32-bit version) not "Windows X86-64
 
Installer". While writing this guide, the latest version was v2.7.3.
 
Remember the specific major and minor version installed, because it will
 
be needed in the next step. In this case, it is "2.7".
 

	
 
.. note::
 

	
 
   64-bit: Just download and install the 64-bit version of python.
 

	
 
Step 3 -- Install Win32py extensions
 
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
 

	
 
Download pywin32 from:
 
http://sourceforge.net/projects/pywin32/files/
 

	
 
- Click on "pywin32" folder
 
- Click on the first folder (in this case, Build 217, maybe newer when you try)
 
- Choose the file ending with ".win32-py2.x.exe" -> x being the minor
 
  version of Python you installed (in this case, 7)
 
  When writing this guide, the file was:
 
  http://sourceforge.net/projects/pywin32/files/pywin32/Build%20217/pywin32-217.win32-py2.7.exe/download
 

	
 
  .. note::
 

	
 
     64-bit: Download and install the 64-bit version.
 
     At the time of writing you can find this at:
 
     http://sourceforge.net/projects/pywin32/files/pywin32/Build%20218/pywin32-218.win-amd64-py2.7.exe/download
 

	
 
Step 4 -- Python BIN
 
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
 

	
 
Add Python BIN folder to the path
 

	
 
You have to add the Python folder to the path, you can do it manually
 
(editing "PATH" environment variable) or using Windows Support Tools
 
that came preinstalled in Vista/7 and can be installed in Windows XP.
 

	
 
- Using support tools on WINDOWS XP:
 
  If you use Windows XP you can install them using Windows XP CD and
 
  navigating to \SUPPORT\TOOLS. There, execute Setup.EXE (not MSI).
 
  Afterwards, open a CMD and type::
 

	
 
    SETX PATH "%PATH%;[your-python-path]" -M
 

	
 
  Close CMD (the path variable will be updated then)
 

	
 
- Using support tools on WINDOWS Vista/7:
 

	
 
  Open a CMD and type::
 

	
 
    SETX PATH "%PATH%;[your-python-path]" /M
 

	
 
  Please substitute [your-python-path] with your Python installation path.
 
  Typically: C:\\Python27
 

	
 
Step 5 -- Kallithea folder structure
 
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
 

	
 
Create a Kallithea folder structure
 

	
 
This is only a example to install Kallithea, you can of course change
 
it. However, this guide will follow the proposed structure, so please
 
later adapt the paths if you change them. My recommendation is to use
 
folders with NO SPACES. But you can try if you are brave...
 

	
 
Create the following folder structure::
 

	
 
  C:\Kallithea
 
  C:\Kallithea\Bin
 
  C:\Kallithea\Env
 
  C:\Kallithea\Repos
 

	
 
Step 6 -- Install virtualenv
 
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
 

	
 
Install Virtual Env for Python
 

	
 
Navigate to: http://www.virtualenv.org/en/latest/index.html#installation
 
Right click on "virtualenv.py" file and choose "Save link as...".
 
Download to C:\\Kallithea (or whatever you want)
 
(the file is located at
 
https://raw.github.com/pypa/virtualenv/master/virtualenv.py)
 

	
 
Create a virtual Python environment in C:\\Kallithea\\Env (or similar). To
 
do so, open a CMD (Python Path should be included in Step3), navigate
 
where you downloaded "virtualenv.py", and write::
 

	
 
  python2 virtualenv.py C:\Kallithea\Env
 

	
 
(--no-site-packages is now the default behaviour of virtualenv, no need
 
to include it)
 

	
 
Step 7 -- Install Kallithea
 
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
 

	
 
Finally, install Kallithea
 

	
 
Close previously opened command prompt/s, and open a Visual Studio 2008
 
Command Prompt (**IMPORTANT!!**). To do so, go to Start Menu, and then open
 
"Microsoft Visual C++ 2008 Express Edition" -> "Visual Studio Tools" ->
 
"Visual Studio 2008 Command Prompt"
 

	
 
.. note::
 

	
 
   64-bit: For 64-bit you need to modify the shortcut that is used to start the
 
   Visual Studio 2008 Command Prompt. Use right-mouse click to open properties.
 

	
 
Change commandline from::
 

	
 
%comspec% /k ""C:\Program Files (x86)\Microsoft Visual Studio 9.0\VC\vcvarsall.bat"" x86
 

	
 
to::
 

	
 
%comspec% /k ""C:\Program Files (x86)\Microsoft Visual Studio 9.0\VC\vcvarsall.bat"" amd64
 

	
 
In that CMD (loaded with VS2008 PATHs) type::
 

	
 
  cd C:\Kallithea\Env\Scripts (or similar)
 
  activate
 
  pip install --upgrade pip setuptools
 

	
 
The prompt will change into "(Env) C:\\Kallithea\\Env\\Scripts" or similar
 
(depending of your folder structure). Then type::
 

	
 
 pip install kallithea
 

	
 
(long step, please wait until fully complete)
 

	
 
Some warnings will appear, don't worry as they are normal.
 

	
 
Step 8 -- Configuring Kallithea
 
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
 

	
 
steps taken from http://packages.python.org/Kallithea/setup.html
 

	
 
You have to use the same Visual Studio 2008 command prompt as Step7, so
 
if you closed it reopen it following the same commands (including the
 
"activate" one). When ready, just type::
 

	
 
  cd C:\Kallithea\Bin
 
  kallithea-cli config-create my.ini
 

	
 
Then, you must edit my.ini to fit your needs (network address and
 
port, mail settings, database, whatever). I recommend using NotePad++
 
(free) or similar text editor, as it handles well the EndOfLine
 
character differences between Unix and Windows
 
(http://notepad-plus-plus.org/)
 

	
 
For the sake of simplicity lets run it with the default settings. After
 
your edits (if any), in the previous Command Prompt, type::
 

	
 
 gearbox setup-db -c my.ini
 
  kallithea-cli db-create -c my.ini
 

	
 
.. warning:: This time a *new* database will be installed. You must
 
             follow a different process to later :ref:`upgrade <upgrade>`
 
             to a newer Kallithea version.
 

	
 
The script will ask you for confirmation about creating a NEW database,
 
answer yes (y)
 
The script will ask you for repository path, answer C:\\Kallithea\\Repos
 
(or similar)
 
The script will ask you for admin username and password, answer "admin"
 
+ "123456" (or whatever you want)
 
The script will ask you for admin mail, answer "admin@xxxx.com" (or
 
whatever you want)
 

	
 
If you make some mistake and the script does not end, don't worry, start
 
it again.
 

	
 
Step 9 -- Running Kallithea
 
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
 

	
 
In the previous command prompt, being in the C:\\Kallithea\\Bin folder,
 
just type::
 

	
 
 gearbox serve -c my.ini
 

	
 
Open yout web server, and go to http://127.0.0.1:5000
 

	
 
It works!! :-)
 

	
 
Remark:
 
If it does not work first time, just Ctrl-C the CMD process and start it
 
again. Don't forget the "http://" in Internet Explorer
 

	
 
What this Guide does not cover:
 

	
 
- Installing Celery
 
- Running Kallithea as Windows Service. You can investigate here:
 

	
 
  - http://pypi.python.org/pypi/wsgisvc
 
  - http://ryrobes.com/python/running-python-scripts-as-a-windows-service/
 
  - http://wiki.pylonshq.com/display/pylonscookbook/How+to+run+Pylons+as+a+Windows+service
 

	
 
- Using Apache. You can investigate here:
 

	
 
  - https://groups.google.com/group/rhodecode/msg/c433074e813ffdc4
docs/setup.rst
Show inline comments
 
.. _setup:
 

	
 
=====
 
Setup
 
=====
 

	
 

	
 
Preparing front-end
 
-------------------
 

	
 
Temporarily, in the current Kallithea version, some extra steps are required to
 
build front-end files:
 

	
 
Find the right ``kallithea/public/less`` path with::
 

	
 
    python -c "import os, kallithea; print os.path.join(os.path.dirname(os.path.abspath(kallithea.__file__)), 'public', 'less')"
 

	
 
Then run::
 

	
 
    npm install
 
    npm run less
 

	
 

	
 
Setting up Kallithea
 
--------------------
 

	
 
First, you will need to create a Kallithea configuration file. Run the
 
following command to do so::
 

	
 
    kallithea-cli config-create my.ini
 

	
 
This will create the file ``my.ini`` in the current directory. This
 
configuration file contains the various settings for Kallithea, e.g.
 
proxy port, email settings, usage of static files, cache, Celery
 
settings, and logging. Extra settings can be specified like::
 

	
 
    kallithea-cli config-create my.ini host=8.8.8.8 "[handler_console]" formatter=color_formatter
 

	
 
Next, you need to create the databases used by Kallithea. It is recommended to
 
use PostgreSQL or SQLite (default). If you choose a database other than the
 
default, ensure you properly adjust the database URL in your ``my.ini``
 
configuration file to use this other database. Kallithea currently supports
 
PostgreSQL, SQLite and MySQL databases. Create the database by running
 
the following command::
 

	
 
    gearbox setup-db -c my.ini
 
    kallithea-cli db-create -c my.ini
 

	
 
This will prompt you for a "root" path. This "root" path is the location where
 
Kallithea will store all of its repositories on the current machine. After
 
entering this "root" path ``setup-db`` will also prompt you for a username
 
and password for the initial admin account which ``setup-db`` sets
 
entering this "root" path ``db-create`` will also prompt you for a username
 
and password for the initial admin account which ``db-create`` sets
 
up for you.
 

	
 
The ``setup-db`` values can also be given on the command line.
 
The ``db-create`` values can also be given on the command line.
 
Example::
 

	
 
    gearbox setup-db -c my.ini --user=nn --password=secret --email=nn@example.com --repos=/srv/repos
 
    kallithea-cli db-create -c my.ini --user=nn --password=secret --email=nn@example.com --repos=/srv/repos
 

	
 
The ``setup-db`` command will create all needed tables and an
 
The ``db-create`` command will create all needed tables and an
 
admin account. When choosing a root path you can either use a new
 
empty location, or a location which already contains existing
 
repositories. If you choose a location which contains existing
 
repositories Kallithea will add all of the repositories at the chosen
 
location to its database.  (Note: make sure you specify the correct
 
path to the root).
 

	
 
.. note:: the given path for Mercurial_ repositories **must** be write
 
          accessible for the application. It's very important since
 
          the Kallithea web interface will work without write access,
 
          but when trying to do a push it will fail with permission
 
          denied errors unless it has write access.
 

	
 
You are now ready to use Kallithea. To run it simply execute::
 

	
 
    gearbox serve -c my.ini
 

	
 
- This command runs the Kallithea server. The web app should be available at
 
  http://127.0.0.1:5000. The IP address and port is configurable via the
 
  configuration file created in the previous step.
 
- Log in to Kallithea using the admin account created when running ``setup-db``.
 
- Log in to Kallithea using the admin account created when running ``db-create``.
 
- The default permissions on each repository is read, and the owner is admin.
 
  Remember to update these if needed.
 
- In the admin panel you can toggle LDAP, anonymous, and permissions
 
  settings, as well as edit more advanced options on users and
 
  repositories.
 

	
 

	
 
Internationalization (i18n support)
 
-----------------------------------
 

	
 
The Kallithea web interface is automatically displayed in the user's preferred
 
language, as indicated by the browser. Thus, different users may see the
 
application in different languages. If the requested language is not available
 
(because the translation file for that language does not yet exist or is
 
incomplete), the language specified in setting ``i18n.lang`` in the Kallithea
 
configuration file is used as fallback. If no fallback language is explicitly
 
specified, English is used.
 

	
 
If you want to disable automatic language detection and instead configure a
 
fixed language regardless of user preference, set ``i18n.enabled = false`` and
 
set ``i18n.lang`` to the desired language (or leave empty for English).
 

	
 

	
 
Using Kallithea with SSH
 
------------------------
 

	
 
Kallithea currently only hosts repositories using http and https. (The addition
 
of ssh hosting is a planned future feature.) However you can easily use ssh in
 
parallel with Kallithea. (Repository access via ssh is a standard "out of
 
the box" feature of Mercurial_ and you can use this to access any of the
 
repositories that Kallithea is hosting. See PublishingRepositories_)
 

	
 
Kallithea repository structures are kept in directories with the same name
 
as the project. When using repository groups, each group is a subdirectory.
 
This allows you to easily use ssh for accessing repositories.
 

	
 
In order to use ssh you need to make sure that your web server and the users'
 
login accounts have the correct permissions set on the appropriate directories.
 

	
 
.. note:: These permissions are independent of any permissions you
 
          have set up using the Kallithea web interface.
 

	
 
If your main directory (the same as set in Kallithea settings) is for
 
example set to ``/srv/repos`` and the repository you are using is
 
named ``kallithea``, then to clone via ssh you should run::
 

	
 
    hg clone ssh://user@kallithea.example.com/srv/repos/kallithea
 

	
 
Using other external tools such as mercurial-server_ or using ssh key-based
 
authentication is fully supported.
 

	
 
.. note:: In an advanced setup, in order for your ssh access to use
 
          the same permissions as set up via the Kallithea web
 
          interface, you can create an authentication hook to connect
 
          to the Kallithea db and run check functions for permissions
 
          against that.
 

	
 

	
 
Setting up Whoosh full text search
 
----------------------------------
 

	
 
Kallithea provides full text search of repositories using `Whoosh`__.
 

	
 
.. __: https://whoosh.readthedocs.io/en/latest/
 

	
 
For an incremental index build, run::
 

	
 
    gearbox make-index -c my.ini
 

	
 
For a full index rebuild, run::
 

	
 
    gearbox make-index -c my.ini -f
 

	
 
The ``--repo-location`` option allows the location of the repositories to be overridden;
 
usually, the location is retrieved from the Kallithea database.
 

	
 
The ``--index-only`` option can be used to limit the indexed repositories to a comma-separated list::
 

	
 
    gearbox make-index -c my.ini --index-only=vcs,kallithea
 

	
 
To keep your index up-to-date it is necessary to do periodic index builds;
 
for this, it is recommended to use a crontab entry. Example::
 

	
 
    0  3  *  *  *  /path/to/virtualenv/bin/gearbox make-index -c /path/to/kallithea/my.ini
 

	
 
When using incremental mode (the default), Whoosh will check the last
 
modification date of each file and add it to be reindexed if a newer file is
 
available. The indexing daemon checks for any removed files and removes them
 
from index.
 

	
 
If you want to rebuild the index from scratch, you can use the ``-f`` flag as above,
 
or in the admin panel you can check the "build from scratch" checkbox.
 

	
 

	
 
Integration with issue trackers
 
-------------------------------
 

	
 
Kallithea provides a simple integration with issue trackers. It's possible
 
to define a regular expression that will match an issue ID in commit messages,
 
and have that replaced with a URL to the issue.
 

	
 
This is achieved with following three variables in the ini file::
 

	
 
    issue_pat = #(\d+)
 
    issue_server_link = https://issues.example.com/{repo}/issue/\1
 
    issue_sub =
 

	
 
``issue_pat`` is the regular expression describing which strings in
 
commit messages will be treated as issue references. The expression can/should
 
have one or more parenthesized groups that can later be referred to in
 
``issue_server_link`` and ``issue_sub`` (see below). If you prefer, named groups
 
can be used instead of simple parenthesized groups.
 

	
 
If the pattern should only match if it is preceded by whitespace, add the
 
following string before the actual pattern: ``(?:^|(?<=\s))``.
 
If the pattern should only match if it is followed by whitespace, add the
 
following string after the actual pattern: ``(?:$|(?=\s))``.
 
These expressions use lookbehind and lookahead assertions of the Python regular
 
expression module to avoid the whitespace to be part of the actual pattern,
 
otherwise the link text will also contain that whitespace.
 

	
 
Matched issue references are replaced with the link specified in
 
``issue_server_link``, in which any backreferences are resolved. Backreferences
 
can be ``\1``, ``\2``, ... or for named groups ``\g<groupname>``.
 
The special token ``{repo}`` is replaced with the full repository path
 
(including repository groups), while token ``{repo_name}`` is replaced with the
 
repository name (without repository groups).
 

	
 
The link text is determined by ``issue_sub``, which can be a string containing
 
backreferences to the groups specified in ``issue_pat``. If ``issue_sub`` is
 
empty, then the text matched by ``issue_pat`` is used verbatim.
 

	
 
The example settings shown above match issues in the format ``#<number>``.
 
This will cause the text ``#300`` to be transformed into a link:
 

	
 
.. code-block:: html
 

	
 
  <a href="https://issues.example.com/example_repo/issue/300">#300</a>
 

	
 
The following example transforms a text starting with either of 'pullrequest',
 
'pull request' or 'PR', followed by an optional space, then a pound character
 
(#) and one or more digits, into a link with the text 'PR #' followed by the
 
digits::
 

	
 
    issue_pat = (pullrequest|pull request|PR) ?#(\d+)
 
    issue_server_link = https://issues.example.com/\2
 
    issue_sub = PR #\2
 

	
 
The following example demonstrates how to require whitespace before the issue
 
reference in order for it to be recognized, such that the text ``issue#123`` will
 
not cause a match, but ``issue #123`` will::
 

	
 
    issue_pat = (?:^|(?<=\s))#(\d+)
 
    issue_server_link = https://issues.example.com/\1
 
    issue_sub =
 

	
 
If needed, more than one pattern can be specified by appending a unique suffix to
 
the variables. For example, also demonstrating the use of named groups::
 

	
 
    issue_pat_wiki = wiki-(?P<pagename>\S+)
 
    issue_server_link_wiki = https://wiki.example.com/\g<pagename>
 
    issue_sub_wiki = WIKI-\g<pagename>
 

	
 
With these settings, wiki pages can be referenced as wiki-some-id, and every
 
such reference will be transformed into:
 

	
 
.. code-block:: html
 

	
 
  <a href="https://wiki.example.com/some-id">WIKI-some-id</a>
 

	
 
Refer to the `Python regular expression documentation`_ for more details about
 
the supported syntax in ``issue_pat``, ``issue_server_link`` and ``issue_sub``.
 

	
 

	
 
Hook management
 
---------------
 

	
 
Hooks can be managed in similar way to that used in ``.hgrc`` files.
 
To manage hooks, choose *Admin > Settings > Hooks*.
 

	
 
The built-in hooks cannot be modified, though they can be enabled or disabled in the *VCS* section.
 

	
 
To add another custom hook simply fill in the first textbox with
 
``<name>.<hook_type>`` and the second with the hook path. Example hooks
 
can be found in ``kallithea.lib.hooks``.
 

	
 

	
 
Changing default encoding
 
-------------------------
 

	
 
By default, Kallithea uses UTF-8 encoding.
 
This is configurable as ``default_encoding`` in the .ini file.
 
This affects many parts in Kallithea including user names, filenames, and
 
encoding of commit messages. In addition Kallithea can detect if the ``chardet``
 
library is installed. If ``chardet`` is detected Kallithea will fallback to it
 
when there are encode/decode errors.
 

	
 
The Mercurial encoding is configurable as ``hgencoding``. It is similar to
 
setting the ``HGENCODING`` environment variable, but will override it.
 

	
 

	
 
Celery configuration
 
--------------------
 

	
 
Kallithea can use the distributed task queue system Celery_ to run tasks like
 
cloning repositories or sending emails.
 

	
 
Kallithea will in most setups work perfectly fine out of the box (without
 
Celery), executing all tasks in the web server process. Some tasks can however
 
take some time to run and it can be better to run such tasks asynchronously in
 
a separate process so the web server can focus on serving web requests.
 

	
 
For installation and configuration of Celery, see the `Celery documentation`_.
 
Note that Celery requires a message broker service like RabbitMQ_ (recommended)
 
or Redis_.
 

	
 
The use of Celery is configured in the Kallithea ini configuration file.
 
To enable it, simply set::
 

	
 
  use_celery = true
 

	
 
and add or change the ``celery.*`` and ``broker.*`` configuration variables.
 

	
 
Remember that the ini files use the format with '.' and not with '_' like
 
Celery. So for example setting `BROKER_HOST` in Celery means setting
 
`broker.host` in the configuration file.
 

	
 
To start the Celery process, run::
 

	
 
  gearbox celeryd -c my.ini
 

	
 
Extra options to the Celery worker can be passed after ``--`` - see ``-- -h``
 
for more info.
 

	
 
.. note::
 
   Make sure you run this command from the same virtualenv, and with the same
 
   user that Kallithea runs.
 

	
 

	
 
HTTPS support
 
-------------
 

	
 
Kallithea will by default generate URLs based on the WSGI environment.
 

	
 
Alternatively, you can use some special configuration settings to control
 
directly which scheme/protocol Kallithea will use when generating URLs:
 

	
 
- With ``https_fixup = true``, the scheme will be taken from the
 
  ``X-Url-Scheme``, ``X-Forwarded-Scheme`` or ``X-Forwarded-Proto`` HTTP header
 
  (default ``http``).
 
- With ``force_https = true`` the default will be ``https``.
 
- With ``use_htsts = true``, Kallithea will set ``Strict-Transport-Security`` when using https.
 

	
 
.. _nginx_virtual_host:
 

	
 

	
 
Nginx virtual host example
 
--------------------------
 

	
 
Sample config for Nginx using proxy:
 

	
 
.. code-block:: nginx
 

	
 
    upstream kallithea {
 
        server 127.0.0.1:5000;
 
        # add more instances for load balancing
 
        #server 127.0.0.1:5001;
 
        #server 127.0.0.1:5002;
 
    }
 

	
 
    ## gist alias
 
    server {
 
       listen          443;
 
       server_name     gist.example.com;
 
       access_log      /var/log/nginx/gist.access.log;
 
       error_log       /var/log/nginx/gist.error.log;
 

	
 
       ssl on;
 
       ssl_certificate     gist.your.kallithea.server.crt;
 
       ssl_certificate_key gist.your.kallithea.server.key;
 

	
 
       ssl_session_timeout 5m;
 

	
 
       ssl_protocols SSLv3 TLSv1;
 
       ssl_ciphers DHE-RSA-AES256-SHA:DHE-RSA-AES128-SHA:EDH-RSA-DES-CBC3-SHA:AES256-SHA:DES-CBC3-SHA:AES128-SHA:RC4-SHA:RC4-MD5;
 
       ssl_prefer_server_ciphers on;
 

	
 
       rewrite ^/(.+)$ https://kallithea.example.com/_admin/gists/$1;
 
       rewrite (.*)    https://kallithea.example.com/_admin/gists;
 
    }
 

	
 
    server {
 
       listen          443;
 
       server_name     kallithea.example.com
 
       access_log      /var/log/nginx/kallithea.access.log;
 
       error_log       /var/log/nginx/kallithea.error.log;
 

	
 
       ssl on;
 
       ssl_certificate     your.kallithea.server.crt;
 
       ssl_certificate_key your.kallithea.server.key;
 

	
 
       ssl_session_timeout 5m;
 

	
 
       ssl_protocols SSLv3 TLSv1;
 
       ssl_ciphers DHE-RSA-AES256-SHA:DHE-RSA-AES128-SHA:EDH-RSA-DES-CBC3-SHA:AES256-SHA:DES-CBC3-SHA:AES128-SHA:RC4-SHA:RC4-MD5;
 
       ssl_prefer_server_ciphers on;
 

	
 
       ## uncomment root directive if you want to serve static files by nginx
 
       ## requires static_files = false in .ini file
 
       #root /srv/kallithea/kallithea/kallithea/public;
 
       include         /etc/nginx/proxy.conf;
 
       location / {
 
            try_files $uri @kallithea;
 
       }
 

	
 
       location @kallithea {
 
            proxy_pass      http://127.0.0.1:5000;
 
       }
 

	
 
    }
 

	
 
Here's the proxy.conf. It's tuned so it will not timeout on long
 
pushes or large pushes::
 

	
 
    proxy_redirect              off;
 
    proxy_set_header            Host $host;
 
    ## needed for container auth
 
    #proxy_set_header            REMOTE_USER $remote_user;
 
    #proxy_set_header            X-Forwarded-User $remote_user;
 
    proxy_set_header            X-Url-Scheme $scheme;
 
    proxy_set_header            X-Host $http_host;
 
    proxy_set_header            X-Real-IP $remote_addr;
 
    proxy_set_header            X-Forwarded-For $proxy_add_x_forwarded_for;
 
    proxy_set_header            Proxy-host $proxy_host;
 
    proxy_buffering             off;
 
    proxy_connect_timeout       7200;
 
    proxy_send_timeout          7200;
 
    proxy_read_timeout          7200;
 
    proxy_buffers               8 32k;
 
    client_max_body_size        1024m;
 
    client_body_buffer_size     128k;
 
    large_client_header_buffers 8 64k;
 

	
 
.. _apache_virtual_host_reverse_proxy:
 

	
 

	
 
Apache virtual host reverse proxy example
 
-----------------------------------------
 

	
 
Here is a sample configuration file for Apache using proxy:
 

	
 
.. code-block:: apache
 

	
 
    <VirtualHost *:80>
 
            ServerName kallithea.example.com
 

	
 
            <Proxy *>
 
              # For Apache 2.4 and later:
 
              Require all granted
 

	
 
              # For Apache 2.2 and earlier, instead use:
 
              # Order allow,deny
 
              # Allow from all
 
            </Proxy>
 

	
 
            #important !
 
            #Directive to properly generate url (clone url) for Kallithea
 
            ProxyPreserveHost On
 

	
 
            #kallithea instance
 
            ProxyPass / http://127.0.0.1:5000/
 
            ProxyPassReverse / http://127.0.0.1:5000/
 

	
 
            #to enable https use line below
 
            #SetEnvIf X-Url-Scheme https HTTPS=1
 
    </VirtualHost>
 

	
 
Additional tutorial
 
http://pylonsbook.com/en/1.1/deployment.html#using-apache-to-proxy-requests-to-pylons
 

	
 
.. _apache_subdirectory:
 

	
 

	
 
Apache as subdirectory
 
----------------------
 

	
 
Apache subdirectory part:
 

	
 
.. code-block:: apache
 

	
 
    <Location /PREFIX >
 
      ProxyPass http://127.0.0.1:5000/PREFIX
 
      ProxyPassReverse http://127.0.0.1:5000/PREFIX
 
      SetEnvIf X-Url-Scheme https HTTPS=1
 
    </Location>
 

	
 
Besides the regular apache setup you will need to add the following line
 
into ``[app:main]`` section of your .ini file::
 

	
 
    filter-with = proxy-prefix
 

	
 
Add the following at the end of the .ini file::
 

	
 
    [filter:proxy-prefix]
 
    use = egg:PasteDeploy#prefix
 
    prefix = /PREFIX
 

	
 
then change ``PREFIX`` into your chosen prefix
 

	
 
.. _apache_mod_wsgi:
 

	
 

	
 
Apache with mod_wsgi
 
--------------------
 

	
 
Alternatively, Kallithea can be set up with Apache under mod_wsgi. For
 
that, you'll need to:
 

	
 
- Install mod_wsgi. If using a Debian-based distro, you can install
 
  the package libapache2-mod-wsgi::
 

	
 
    aptitude install libapache2-mod-wsgi
 

	
 
- Enable mod_wsgi::
 

	
 
    a2enmod wsgi
 

	
 
- Add global Apache configuration to tell mod_wsgi that Python only will be
 
  used in the WSGI processes and shouldn't be initialized in the Apache
 
  processes::
 

	
 
    WSGIRestrictEmbedded On
 

	
 
- Create a wsgi dispatch script, like the one below. Make sure you
 
  check that the paths correctly point to where you installed Kallithea
 
  and its Python Virtual Environment.
 
- Enable the ``WSGIScriptAlias`` directive for the WSGI dispatch script,
 
  as in the following example. Once again, check the paths are
 
  correctly specified.
 

	
 
Here is a sample excerpt from an Apache Virtual Host configuration file:
 

	
 
.. code-block:: apache
 

	
 
    WSGIDaemonProcess kallithea processes=5 threads=1 maximum-requests=100 \
 
        python-home=/srv/kallithea/venv
 
    WSGIProcessGroup kallithea
 
    WSGIScriptAlias / /srv/kallithea/dispatch.wsgi
 
    WSGIPassAuthorization On
 

	
 
Or if using a dispatcher WSGI script with proper virtualenv activation:
 

	
 
.. code-block:: apache
 

	
 
    WSGIDaemonProcess kallithea processes=5 threads=1 maximum-requests=100
 
    WSGIProcessGroup kallithea
 
    WSGIScriptAlias / /srv/kallithea/dispatch.wsgi
 
    WSGIPassAuthorization On
 

	
 
Apache will by default run as a special Apache user, on Linux systems
 
usually ``www-data`` or ``apache``. If you need to have the repositories
 
directory owned by a different user, use the user and group options to
 
WSGIDaemonProcess to set the name of the user and group.
 

	
 
Example WSGI dispatch script:
 

	
 
.. code-block:: python
 

	
 
    import os
 
    os.environ['PYTHON_EGG_CACHE'] = '/srv/kallithea/.egg-cache'
 

	
 
    # sometimes it's needed to set the current dir
 
    os.chdir('/srv/kallithea/')
 

	
 
    import site
 
    site.addsitedir("/srv/kallithea/venv/lib/python2.7/site-packages")
 

	
 
    ini = '/srv/kallithea/my.ini'
 
    from paste.script.util.logging_config import fileConfig
 
    fileConfig(ini)
 
    from paste.deploy import loadapp
 
    application = loadapp('config:' + ini)
 

	
 
Or using proper virtualenv activation:
 

	
 
.. code-block:: python
 

	
 
    activate_this = '/srv/kallithea/venv/bin/activate_this.py'
 
    execfile(activate_this, dict(__file__=activate_this))
 

	
 
    import os
 
    os.environ['HOME'] = '/srv/kallithea'
 

	
 
    ini = '/srv/kallithea/kallithea.ini'
 
    from paste.script.util.logging_config import fileConfig
 
    fileConfig(ini)
 
    from paste.deploy import loadapp
 
    application = loadapp('config:' + ini)
 

	
 

	
 
Other configuration files
 
-------------------------
 

	
 
A number of `example init.d scripts`__ can be found in
 
the ``init.d`` directory of the Kallithea source.
 

	
 
.. __: https://kallithea-scm.org/repos/kallithea/files/tip/init.d/ .
 

	
 

	
 
.. _virtualenv: http://pypi.python.org/pypi/virtualenv
 
.. _python: http://www.python.org/
 
.. _Python regular expression documentation: https://docs.python.org/2/library/re.html
 
.. _Mercurial: https://www.mercurial-scm.org/
 
.. _Celery: http://celeryproject.org/
 
.. _Celery documentation: http://docs.celeryproject.org/en/latest/getting-started/index.html
 
.. _RabbitMQ: http://www.rabbitmq.com/
 
.. _Redis: http://redis.io/
 
.. _mercurial-server: http://www.lshift.net/mercurial-server.html
 
.. _PublishingRepositories: https://www.mercurial-scm.org/wiki/PublishingRepositories
docs/usage/vcs_notes.rst
Show inline comments
 
.. _vcs_notes:
 

	
 
===================================
 
Version control systems usage notes
 
===================================
 

	
 
.. _importing:
 

	
 

	
 
Importing existing repositories
 
-------------------------------
 

	
 
There are two main methods to import repositories in Kallithea: via the web
 
interface or via the filesystem. If you have a large number of repositories to
 
import, importing them via the filesystem is more convenient.
 

	
 
Importing via web interface
 
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
 

	
 
For a small number of repositories, it may be easier to create the target
 
repositories through the Kallithea web interface, via *Admin > Repositories* or
 
via the *Add Repository* button on the entry page of the web interface.
 

	
 
Repositories can be nested in repository groups by first creating the group (via
 
*Admin > Repository Groups* or via the *Add Repository Group* button on the
 
entry page of the web interface) and then selecting the appropriate group when
 
adding the repository.
 

	
 
After creation of the (empty) repository, push the existing commits to the
 
*Clone URL* displayed on the repository summary page. For Git repositories,
 
first add the *Clone URL* as remote, then push the commits to that remote.  The
 
specific commands to execute are shown under the *Existing repository?* section
 
of the new repository's summary page.
 

	
 
A benefit of this method particular for Git repositories, is that the
 
Kallithea-specific Git hooks are installed automatically.  For Mercurial, no
 
hooks are required anyway.
 

	
 
Importing via the filesystem
 
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
 

	
 
The alternative method of importing repositories consists of creating the
 
repositories in the desired hierarchy on the filesystem and letting Kallithea
 
scan that location.
 

	
 
All repositories are stored in a central location on the filesystem. This
 
location is specified during installation (via ``setup-db``) and can be reviewed
 
location is specified during installation (via ``db-create``) and can be reviewed
 
at *Admin > Settings > VCS > Location of repositories*. Repository groups
 
(defined in *Admin > Repository Groups*) are represented by a directory in that
 
repository location. Repositories of the repository group are nested under that
 
directory.
 

	
 
To import a set of repositories and organize them in a certain repository group
 
structure, first place clones in the desired hierarchy at the configured
 
repository location.
 
These clones should be created without working directory. For Mercurial, this is
 
done with ``hg clone -U``, for Git with ``git clone --bare``.
 

	
 
When the repositories are added correctly on the filesystem:
 

	
 
* go to *Admin > Settings > Remap and Rescan* in the Kallithea web interface
 
* select the *Install Git hooks* checkbox when importing Git repositories
 
* click *Rescan Repositories*
 

	
 
This step will scan the filesystem and create the appropriate repository groups
 
and repositories in Kallithea.
 

	
 
*Note*: Once repository groups have been created this way, manage their access
 
permissions through the Kallithea web interface.
 

	
 

	
 
Mercurial-specific notes
 
------------------------
 

	
 

	
 
Working with subrepositories
 
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
 

	
 
This section explains how to use Mercurial subrepositories_ in Kallithea.
 

	
 
Example usage::
 

	
 
    ## init a simple repo
 
    hg init mainrepo
 
    cd mainrepo
 
    echo "file" > file
 
    hg add file
 
    hg ci --message "initial file"
 

	
 
    # clone subrepo we want to add from Kallithea
 
    hg clone http://kallithea.local/subrepo
 

	
 
    ## specify URL to existing repo in Kallithea as subrepository path
 
    echo "subrepo = http://kallithea.local/subrepo" > .hgsub
 
    hg add .hgsub
 
    hg ci --message "added remote subrepo"
 

	
 
In the file list of a clone of ``mainrepo`` you will see a connected
 
subrepository at the revision it was cloned with. Clicking on the
 
subrepository link sends you to the proper repository in Kallithea.
 

	
 
Cloning ``mainrepo`` will also clone the attached subrepository.
 

	
 
Next we can edit the subrepository data, and push back to Kallithea. This will
 
update both repositories.
 

	
 

	
 
.. _subrepositories: http://mercurial.aragost.com/kick-start/en/subrepositories/
kallithea/alembic/env.py
Show inline comments
 
# -*- coding: utf-8 -*-
 
# This program is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify
 
# it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
 
# the Free Software Foundation, either version 3 of the License, or
 
# (at your option) any later version.
 
#
 
# This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
 
# but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
 
# MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.  See the
 
# GNU General Public License for more details.
 
#
 
# You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
 
# along with this program.  If not, see <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>.
 

	
 
# Alembic migration environment (configuration).
 

	
 
import logging
 
from logging.config import fileConfig
 

	
 
from alembic import context
 
from sqlalchemy import engine_from_config, pool
 

	
 
from kallithea.model import db
 

	
 

	
 
# The alembic.config.Config object, which wraps the current .ini file.
 
config = context.config
 

	
 
# Default to use the main Kallithea database string in [app:main].
 
# For advanced uses, this can be overridden by specifying an explicit
 
# [alembic] sqlalchemy.url.
 
database_url = (
 
    config.get_main_option('sqlalchemy.url') or
 
    config.get_section_option('app:main', 'sqlalchemy.url')
 
)
 

	
 
# Configure default logging for Alembic. (This can be overriden by the
 
# config file, but usually isn't.)
 
logging.getLogger('alembic').setLevel(logging.INFO)
 

	
 
# Setup Python loggers based on the config file provided to the alembic
 
# command. If we're being invoked via the Alembic API (presumably for
 
# stamping during "gearbox setup-db"), config_file_name is not available,
 
# stamping during "kallithea-cli db-create"), config_file_name is not available,
 
# and loggers are assumed to already have been configured.
 
if config.config_file_name:
 
    fileConfig(config.config_file_name, disable_existing_loggers=False)
 

	
 

	
 
def include_in_autogeneration(object, name, type, reflected, compare_to):
 
    """Filter changes subject to autogeneration of migrations. """
 

	
 
    # Don't include changes to sqlite_sequence.
 
    if type == 'table' and name == 'sqlite_sequence':
 
        return False
 

	
 
    return True
 

	
 

	
 
def run_migrations_offline():
 
    """Run migrations in 'offline' (--sql) mode.
 

	
 
    This produces an SQL script instead of directly applying the changes.
 
    Some migrations may not run in offline mode.
 
    """
 
    context.configure(
 
        url=database_url,
 
        literal_binds=True,
 
    )
 

	
 
    with context.begin_transaction():
 
        context.run_migrations()
 

	
 

	
 
def run_migrations_online():
 
    """Run migrations in 'online' mode.
 

	
 
    Connects to the database and directly applies the necessary
 
    migrations.
 
    """
 
    cfg = config.get_section(config.config_ini_section)
 
    cfg['sqlalchemy.url'] = database_url
 
    connectable = engine_from_config(
 
        cfg,
 
        prefix='sqlalchemy.',
 
        poolclass=pool.NullPool)
 

	
 
    with connectable.connect() as connection:
 
        context.configure(
 
            connection=connection,
 

	
 
            # Support autogeneration of migration scripts based on "diff" between
 
            # current database schema and kallithea.model.db schema.
 
            target_metadata=db.Base.metadata,
 
            include_object=include_in_autogeneration,
 
            render_as_batch=True, # batch mode is needed for SQLite support
 
        )
 

	
 
        with context.begin_transaction():
 
            context.run_migrations()
 

	
 

	
 
if context.is_offline_mode():
 
    run_migrations_offline()
 
else:
 
    run_migrations_online()
kallithea/bin/kallithea_cli.py
Show inline comments
 
# -*- coding: utf-8 -*-
 
# This program is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify
 
# it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
 
# the Free Software Foundation, either version 3 of the License, or
 
# (at your option) any later version.
 
#
 
# This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
 
# but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
 
# MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.  See the
 
# GNU General Public License for more details.
 
#
 
# You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
 
# along with this program.  If not, see <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>.
 

	
 
# 'cli' is the main entry point for 'kallithea-cli', specified in setup.py as entry_points console_scripts
 
from kallithea.bin.kallithea_cli_base import cli
 

	
 
# import commands (they will add themselves to the 'cli' object)
 
import kallithea.bin.kallithea_cli_config
 
import kallithea.bin.kallithea_cli_db
 
import kallithea.bin.kallithea_cli_iis
 
import kallithea.bin.kallithea_cli_ishell
 
import kallithea.bin.kallithea_cli_repo
kallithea/bin/kallithea_cli_db.py
Show inline comments
 
file renamed from kallithea/lib/paster_commands/setup_db.py to kallithea/bin/kallithea_cli_db.py
 
# -*- coding: utf-8 -*-
 
# This program is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify
 
# it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
 
# the Free Software Foundation, either version 3 of the License, or
 
# (at your option) any later version.
 
#
 
# This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
 
# but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
 
# MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.  See the
 
# GNU General Public License for more details.
 
#
 
# You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
 
# along with this program.  If not, see <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>.
 
"""
 
kallithea.lib.paster_commands.setup_db
 
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
 

	
 
Databaset setup gearbox command for Kallithea
 
"""
 

	
 

	
 
import click
 
import kallithea.bin.kallithea_cli_base as cli_base
 

	
 
import kallithea
 
from kallithea.lib.db_manage import DbManage
 
from kallithea.lib.paster_commands.common import BasePasterCommand
 
from kallithea.model.meta import Session
 

	
 

	
 
# This is almost like SetupAppCommand ... but we have to pass options and it is
 
# thus simpler to drop websetup and reimplement everything
 
class Command(BasePasterCommand):
 
    """Kallithea: Configure the database specified in the .ini file
 
@cli_base.register_command(config_file=True)
 
@click.option('--user', help='Username of administrator account.')
 
@click.option('--password', help='Password for administrator account.')
 
@click.option('--email', help='Email address of administrator account.')
 
@click.option('--repos', help='Absolute path to repositories location.')
 
@click.option('--force-yes', is_flag=True, help='Answer yes to every question.')
 
@click.option('--force-no', is_flag=True, help='Answer no to every question.')
 
@click.option('--public-access/--no-public-access', default=True,
 
        help='Enable/disable public access on this installation (default: enable)')
 
def db_create(user, password, email, repos, force_yes, force_no, public_access):
 
    """Initialize the database.
 

	
 
    Setup Kallithea according to its configuration file.  This is
 
    the second part of a two-phase web application installation
 
    process (the first phase is prepare-app). The setup process
 
    consist of things like setting up databases and creating the admin user
 
    """
 

	
 
    def get_description(self):
 
        return self.__doc__.splitlines()[0]
 

	
 
    requires_db_session = False # only available after this command has been run
 

	
 
    def get_parser(self, prog_name):
 
        parser = super(Command, self).get_parser(prog_name)
 
    Create all required tables in the database specified in the configuration
 
    file. Create the administrator account. Set certain settings based on
 
    values you provide.
 

	
 
        parser.add_argument('--user',
 
                          action='store',
 
                          dest='username',
 
                          default=None,
 
                          help='Admin Username')
 
        parser.add_argument('--email',
 
                          action='store',
 
                          dest='email',
 
                          default=None,
 
                          help='Admin Email')
 
        parser.add_argument('--password',
 
                          action='store',
 
                          dest='password',
 
                          default=None,
 
                          help='Admin password min 6 chars')
 
        parser.add_argument('--repos',
 
                          action='store',
 
                          dest='repos_location',
 
                          default=None,
 
                          help='Absolute path to repositories location')
 
        parser.add_argument('--force-yes',
 
                           action='store_true',
 
                           dest='force_ask',
 
                           default=None,
 
                           help='Force yes to every question')
 
        parser.add_argument('--force-no',
 
                           action='store_false',
 
                           dest='force_ask',
 
                           default=None,
 
                           help='Force no to every question')
 
        parser.add_argument('--public-access',
 
                           action='store_true',
 
                           dest='public_access',
 
                           default=None,
 
                           help='Enable public access on this installation (default)')
 
        parser.add_argument('--no-public-access',
 
                           action='store_false',
 
                           dest='public_access',
 
                           default=None,
 
                           help='Disable public access on this installation ')
 
    You can pass the answers to all questions as options to this command.
 
    """
 
    dbconf = kallithea.CONFIG['sqlalchemy.url']
 

	
 
        return parser
 
    # force_ask should be True (yes), False (no), or None (ask)
 
    if force_yes:
 
        force_ask = True
 
    elif force_no:
 
        force_ask = False
 
    else:
 
        force_ask = None
 

	
 
    def take_action(self, opts):
 
        dbconf = self.config['sqlalchemy.url']
 
        dbmanage = DbManage(dbconf=dbconf, root=self.config['here'],
 
                            tests=False, cli_args=vars(opts))
 
    cli_args = dict(
 
            username=user,
 
            password=password,
 
            email=email,
 
            repos_location=repos,
 
            force_ask=force_ask,
 
            public_access=public_access,
 
    )
 
    dbmanage = DbManage(dbconf=dbconf, root=kallithea.CONFIG['here'],
 
                        tests=False, cli_args=cli_args)
 
        dbmanage.create_tables(override=True)
 
        opts = dbmanage.config_prompt(None)
 
        dbmanage.create_settings(opts)
 
        dbmanage.create_default_user()
 
        dbmanage.admin_prompt()
 
        dbmanage.create_permissions()
 
        dbmanage.populate_default_permissions()
 
        Session().commit()
 

	
 
        # initial repository scan
 
        kallithea.config.middleware.make_app_without_logging(
 
                self.config.global_conf, **self.config.local_conf)
 
            kallithea.CONFIG.global_conf, **kallithea.CONFIG.local_conf)
 
        added, _ = kallithea.lib.utils.repo2db_mapper(kallithea.model.scm.ScmModel().repo_scan())
 
        if added:
 
            print 'Initial repository scan: added following repositories:'
 
            print '\t','\n\t'.join(added)
 
        click.echo('Initial repository scan: added following repositories:')
 
        click.echo('\t%s' % '\n\t'.join(added))
 
        else:
 
            print 'Initial repository scan: no repositories found.'
 
        click.echo('Initial repository scan: no repositories found.')
 

	
 
        print 'Database set up successfully.'
 
    click.echo('Database set up successfully.')
kallithea/tests/scripts/create_rc.sh
Show inline comments
 
#!/bin/sh
 
psql -U postgres -h localhost -c 'drop database if exists kallithea;'
 
psql -U postgres -h localhost -c 'create database kallithea;'
 
gearbox setup-db -c server.ini --force-yes --user=username --password=qweqwe --email=username@example.com --repos=/home/username/repos --no-public-access
 
kallithea-cli db-create -c server.ini --force-yes --user=username --password=qweqwe --email=username@example.com --repos=/home/username/repos --no-public-access
 
API_KEY=`psql -R " " -A -U postgres -h localhost -c "select api_key from users where admin=TRUE" -d kallithea | awk '{print $2}'`
 
echo "run those after running server"
 
gearbox serve -c server.ini --pid-file=server.pid --daemon
 
sleep 3
 
kallithea-api --apikey=$API_KEY --apihost=http://127.0.0.1:5001 create_user username:demo1 password:qweqwe email:demo1@example.com
 
kallithea-api --apikey=$API_KEY --apihost=http://127.0.0.1:5001 create_user username:demo2 password:qweqwe email:demo2@example.com
 
kallithea-api --apikey=$API_KEY --apihost=http://127.0.0.1:5001 create_user username:demo3 password:qweqwe email:demo3@example.com
 
kallithea-api --apikey=$API_KEY --apihost=http://127.0.0.1:5001 create_user_group group_name:demo12
 
kallithea-api --apikey=$API_KEY --apihost=http://127.0.0.1:5001 add_user_to_user_group usergroupid:demo12 userid:demo1
 
kallithea-api --apikey=$API_KEY --apihost=http://127.0.0.1:5001 add_user_to_user_group usergroupid:demo12 userid:demo2
 
echo "killing server"
 
kill `cat server.pid`
 
rm server.pid
scripts/dbmigrate-test
Show inline comments
 
#!/bin/sh -e
 

	
 
if [ $# -lt 2 ] || [ $# -gt 3 ]; then
 
    cat >&2 <<EOD
 
usage: $0 CONFIG_FILE FROM_REV [TO_REV]
 

	
 
Runs a database migration from FROM_REV to TO_REV (default: current
 
working directory parent), using the specified CONFIG_FILE (.ini file).
 

	
 
Test is run using a clean Kallithea install, in a temporary virtual
 
environment. FROM_REV and (optional) TO_REV should be Mercurial revision
 
identifiers (e.g. changeset hash or a version number tag). The working
 
directory is not touched, but the database referenced in the config file
 
will be (re)created.
 

	
 
Only SQLite is available out of the box; for MySQL or PostgreSQL, set
 
the EXTRA environment variable to the required package(s), and it'll
 
be installed in the virtual environment. (E.g. EXTRA=MySQL-python or
 
EXTRA=psycopg2.)
 

	
 
The temporary directory is not removed, allowing follow-up examination
 
of the upgrade results. It is, however, created in /tmp by default,
 
which many Linux distributions automatically clean at regular intervals.
 
EOD
 
    exit 1
 
fi
 

	
 
config_file=$(readlink -f "$1")
 
from_rev=$2
 
to_rev=$3
 
source_repo=$(dirname "$(dirname "$(readlink -f "$0")")")
 

	
 
announce() {
 
    echo
 
    echo "$1"
 
    echo
 
}
 

	
 
quiet_if_ok() (
 
    local output
 
    local st
 
    set +e
 
    output=$("$@" < /dev/null 2>&1)
 
    st=$?
 
    if [ $st -ne 0 ]; then
 
        echo "$output" >&2
 
        echo "Command $@ returned exit status $st." >&2
 
        exit 1
 
    fi
 
)
 

	
 
HG() {
 
    "${HG:-hg}" --repository "$source_repo" "$@"
 
}
 

	
 
# If upgrading to "current revision", warn if working directory is dirty.
 
if [ ! "$to_rev" ] && [ "$(HG status -mard)" ]; then
 
    announce "Warning: Uncommitted changes in working directory will be ignored!"
 
fi
 

	
 
from_rev_hash=$(HG id --id --rev "${from_rev:-.}")
 
to_rev_hash=$(HG id --id --rev "${to_rev:-.}")
 
temp=$(readlink -f "$(mktemp --tmpdir -d 'dbmigrate-test.XXXXXX')")
 

	
 
cat <<EOD
 
Config file:    $config_file
 
EOD
 
sed -n -e 's/^sqlalchemy\.url *= */Database URL:   /p' "$config_file"
 
cat <<EOD
 
Working dir:    $temp
 
Repository:     $source_repo
 
Upgrade from:   $from_rev_hash (${from_rev:-current})
 
Upgrade to:     $to_rev_hash (${to_rev:-current})
 
Extra packages: ${EXTRA:-(none)}
 
EOD
 

	
 
mkdir "$temp/repos" # empty
 

	
 
# Enable caching for old pip versions (this will cache the pip upgrade)
 
# Newer pip versions cache automatically, and don't use this variable.
 
if [ ! "$PIP_DOWNLOAD_CACHE" ]; then
 
    export PIP_DOWNLOAD_CACHE=$HOME/.cache/pip/legacy
 
fi
 

	
 
install_kallithea() {
 
    local prefix=$1
 
    local rev=$2
 

	
 
    announce "Installing Kallithea $rev in $prefix..."
 

	
 
    "${VIRTUALENV:-virtualenv}" --quiet "$prefix-env"
 
    HG archive --rev "$rev" "$prefix"
 

	
 
    (
 
        cd "$prefix"
 
        . "$prefix-env/bin/activate"
 
        pip install --quiet --upgrade pip setuptools mercurial $EXTRA
 
        pip install --quiet -e .
 
    )
 
}
 

	
 
install_kallithea "$temp/from" "$from_rev_hash"
 
(
 
    cd "$temp/from"
 
    . "$temp/from-env/bin/activate"
 
    announce "Initializing database..."
 
    quiet_if_ok gearbox setup-db -c "$config_file" --repos="$temp/repos" --user=doe --email=doe@example.com --password=123456 --no-public-access --force-yes
 
    quiet_if_ok kallithea-cli db-create -c "$config_file" --repos="$temp/repos" --user=doe --email=doe@example.com --password=123456 --no-public-access --force-yes
 
    alembic -c "$config_file" current -v
 
)
 

	
 
install_kallithea "$temp/to" "$to_rev_hash"
 
(
 
    cd "$temp/to"
 
    . "$temp/to-env/bin/activate"
 

	
 
    announce "Commencing database upgrade from shown Alembic revision to head..."
 
    alembic -c "$config_file" current -v
 
    alembic -c "$config_file" upgrade head
 
    announce "Upgrade complete, now at the shown Alembic revision:"
 
    alembic -c "$config_file" current -v
 
)
setup.py
Show inline comments
 
#!/usr/bin/env python2
 
# -*- coding: utf-8 -*-
 
import os
 
import sys
 
import platform
 

	
 
if sys.version_info < (2, 6) or sys.version_info >= (3,):
 
    raise Exception('Kallithea requires python 2.6 or 2.7')
 

	
 

	
 
here = os.path.abspath(os.path.dirname(__file__))
 

	
 

	
 
def _get_meta_var(name, data, callback_handler=None):
 
    import re
 
    matches = re.compile(r'(?:%s)\s*=\s*(.*)' % name).search(data)
 
    if matches:
 
        if not callable(callback_handler):
 
            callback_handler = lambda v: v
 

	
 
        return callback_handler(eval(matches.groups()[0]))
 

	
 
_meta = open(os.path.join(here, 'kallithea', '__init__.py'), 'rb')
 
_metadata = _meta.read()
 
_meta.close()
 

	
 
callback = lambda V: ('.'.join(map(str, V[:3])) + '.'.join(V[3:]))
 
__version__ = _get_meta_var('VERSION', _metadata, callback)
 
__license__ = _get_meta_var('__license__', _metadata)
 
__author__ = _get_meta_var('__author__', _metadata)
 
__url__ = _get_meta_var('__url__', _metadata)
 
# defines current platform
 
__platform__ = platform.system()
 

	
 
is_windows = __platform__ in ['Windows']
 

	
 
requirements = [
 
    "alembic >= 0.8.0, < 1.1",
 
    "gearbox < 1",
 
    "waitress >= 0.8.8, < 1.2",
 
    "WebOb >= 1.7, < 1.8", # turbogears2 2.3.12 requires WebOb<1.8.0
 
    "backlash >= 0.1.2, < 1",
 
    "TurboGears2 >= 2.3.10, < 3",
 
    "tgext.routes >= 0.2.0, < 1",
 
    "Beaker >= 1.7.0, < 2",
 
    "WebHelpers >= 1.3, < 1.4",
 
    "FormEncode >= 1.2.4, < 1.4",
 
    "SQLAlchemy >= 1.1, < 1.3",
 
    "Mako >= 0.9.0, < 1.1",
 
    "Pygments >= 1.5, < 2.3",
 
    "Whoosh >= 2.5.0, < 2.8",
 
    "celery >= 3.1, < 4.0", # celery 4 doesn't work
 
    "Babel >= 0.9.6, < 2.7",
 
    "python-dateutil >= 1.5.0, < 2.8",
 
    "Markdown >= 2.2.1, < 2.7",
 
    "docutils >= 0.8.1, < 0.15",
 
    "URLObject >= 2.3.4, < 2.5",
 
    "Routes >= 1.13, < 2",
 
    "dulwich >= 0.14.1, < 0.20",
 
    "mercurial >= 4.1.1, < 4.9",
 
    "decorator >= 3.3.2, < 4.4",
 
    "Paste >= 2.0.3, < 3",
 
    "bleach >= 3.0, < 3.1",
 
    "Click >= 7.0, < 8",
 
]
 

	
 
if sys.version_info < (2, 7):
 
    requirements.append("importlib == 1.0.1")
 
    requirements.append("argparse")
 

	
 
if not is_windows:
 
    requirements.append("bcrypt >= 3.1.0, < 3.2")
 

	
 
dependency_links = [
 
]
 

	
 
classifiers = [
 
    'Development Status :: 4 - Beta',
 
    'Environment :: Web Environment',
 
    'Framework :: Pylons',
 
    'Intended Audience :: Developers',
 
    'License :: OSI Approved :: GNU General Public License (GPL)',
 
    'Operating System :: OS Independent',
 
    'Programming Language :: Python',
 
    'Programming Language :: Python :: 2.6',
 
    'Programming Language :: Python :: 2.7',
 
    'Topic :: Software Development :: Version Control',
 
]
 

	
 

	
 
# additional files from project that goes somewhere in the filesystem
 
# relative to sys.prefix
 
data_files = []
 

	
 
description = ('Kallithea is a fast and powerful management tool '
 
               'for Mercurial and Git with a built in push/pull server, '
 
               'full text search and code-review.')
 

	
 
keywords = ' '.join([
 
    'kallithea', 'mercurial', 'git', 'code review',
 
    'repo groups', 'ldap', 'repository management', 'hgweb replacement',
 
    'hgwebdir', 'gitweb replacement', 'serving hgweb',
 
])
 

	
 
# long description
 
README_FILE = 'README.rst'
 
try:
 
    long_description = open(README_FILE).read()
 
except IOError as err:
 
    sys.stderr.write(
 
        "[WARNING] Cannot find file specified as long_description (%s)\n"
 
        % README_FILE
 
    )
 
    long_description = description
 

	
 
import setuptools
 

	
 
# monkey patch setuptools to use distutils owner/group functionality
 
from setuptools.command import sdist
 
sdist_org = sdist.sdist
 
class sdist_new(sdist_org):
 
    def initialize_options(self):
 
        sdist_org.initialize_options(self)
 
        self.owner = self.group = 'root'
 
sdist.sdist = sdist_new
 

	
 
packages = setuptools.find_packages(exclude=['ez_setup'])
 

	
 
setuptools.setup(
 
    name='Kallithea',
 
    version=__version__,
 
    description=description,
 
    long_description=long_description,
 
    keywords=keywords,
 
    license=__license__,
 
    author=__author__,
 
    author_email='kallithea@sfconservancy.org',
 
    dependency_links=dependency_links,
 
    url=__url__,
 
    install_requires=requirements,
 
    classifiers=classifiers,
 
    data_files=data_files,
 
    packages=packages,
 
    include_package_data=True,
 
    message_extractors={'kallithea': [
 
            ('**.py', 'python', None),
 
            ('templates/**.mako', 'mako', {'input_encoding': 'utf-8'}),
 
            ('templates/**.html', 'mako', {'input_encoding': 'utf-8'}),
 
            ('public/**', 'ignore', None)]},
 
    zip_safe=False,
 
    entry_points="""
 
    [console_scripts]
 
    kallithea-api =    kallithea.bin.kallithea_api:main
 
    kallithea-gist =   kallithea.bin.kallithea_gist:main
 
    kallithea-config = kallithea.bin.kallithea_config:main
 
    kallithea-cli =    kallithea.bin.kallithea_cli:cli
 

	
 
    [paste.app_factory]
 
    main = kallithea.config.middleware:make_app
 

	
 
    [gearbox.commands]
 
    celeryd=kallithea.lib.paster_commands.celeryd:Command
 
    make-index=kallithea.lib.paster_commands.make_index:Command
 
    make-rcext=kallithea.lib.paster_commands.make_rcextensions:Command
 
    setup-db=kallithea.lib.paster_commands.setup_db:Command
 
    upgrade-db=kallithea.lib.dbmigrate:UpgradeDb
 
    """,
 
)
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