Changeset - 7f9040460576
.hgignore
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syntax: glob
 
*.pyc
 
*.swp
 
*.sqlite
 
*.tox
 
*.egg-info
 
*.egg
 
*.mo
 
.eggs/
 
tarballcache/
 

	
 
syntax: regexp
 
^rcextensions
 
^build
 
^dist/
 
^docs/build/
 
^docs/_build/
 
^data$
 
^kallithea/tests/data$
 
^sql_dumps/
 
^\.settings$
 
^\.project$
 
^\.pydevproject$
 
^\.coverage$
 
^kallithea\.db$
 
^test\.db$
 
^Kallithea\.egg-info$
 
^my\.ini$
 
^fabfile.py
 
^\.idea$
 
^\.cache$
.hgsigs
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new file 100644
 
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.hgtags
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@@ -16,48 +16,49 @@ ca41d544dbdfd2f81bd0304168492a26276aadb6
 
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afd98d1f817e6a6b52172735c22160239e615a6b rhodecode-0.0.1.0.0
 
bee56f209c40a6880f2f633b02227b5ee1f8ff5a rhodecode-0.0.1.0.1
 
d85b0948e53925ebbbc49e9f7967013a04f866e9 rhodecode-0.0.1.0.2
 
d9c8dddb96af521e346f05b88d515c536eef3d17 rhodecode-0.0.1.1.0
 
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c252049af24cd98eef5f4143fa3abbff3c912e29 rhodecode-0.0.1.2.0
 
0b8fba8ab90b01f811a50e6e7384989cced21d38 rhodecode-0.0.1.2.1
 
22273bec00ba2fd860c60a9277d3d7229e288e18 rhodecode-0.0.1.2.2
 
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b6b611e7722e754abebaae6e265cbb4c823d344d rhodecode-0.0.1.2.5
 
dbc82e3362a25d2aece42060089824c4342efd17 rhodecode-0.0.1.3.0
 
79a95f338fd0115b2cdb77118f39e17d22ff505c rhodecode-0.0.1.3.1
 
9ab21c5ddb84935bea5c743b4e147ed5a398b30c rhodecode-0.0.1.3.2
 
934906f028b582a254e0028ba25e5d20dd32b9cd rhodecode-0.0.1.3.3
 
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9ae95fdeca184f2404205645f06c6597b74ef2db rhodecode-0.0.1.4.0
 
909143a4dde53c46d4f24abb426ec870471c7de1 rhodecode-0.0.1.4.1
 
d998cc84cf726798486a438763053f0e1dc1b646 rhodecode-0.0.1.4.2
 
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3259dc7caea48687eab018ee646ae6ad7e7ef377 rhodecode-0.0.1.5.1
 
efe23d6c178c11d575a0214181276a3452776e48 rhodecode-0.0.1.5.2
 
1a498b11f1540f5b94b6f6009298f5dc3eaad9e9 rhodecode-0.0.1.5.3
 
3447862ad8c9ceba85857774c526e39fde3a2281 rhodecode-0.0.1.5.4
 
c15d7b336af58df9f1bbc8f8957464e7ea618d4c rhodecode-0.0.1.6.0rc1
 
78b53ee0d247f90d51b028307ff5717851b6c265 rhodecode-0.0.1.6.0
 
351ad34d56321349ff5bd38f537bd768b8efef2e rhodecode-0.0.1.7.0
 
1f71ef689d2a3c9978cea6591a1f4e9107a5ca83 rhodecode-0.0.1.7.1
 
cc48c1541c7e2e84114bf92a0f9cd4b8b1341545 0.0
 
d17e88a1a88a29f6fac948c94498129e405a40d3 0.1
 
ad0ce803b40cb17fc3988373052943e041030b02 0.2
 
c6e32714336345403adf76abb6ebf9b8116fcdc7 0.2.1
 
14f488a5dc4ca6647bc6acf12534fd137e968aa8 0.2.2
 
9b3e9e242f5c97cc0c7657e5ac93dce7de61ca16 0.3
CONTRIBUTORS
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List of contributors to Kallithea project:
 

	
 
    Mads Kiilerich <madski@unity3d.com> 2012-2015
 
    Takumi IINO <trot.thunder@gmail.com> 2012-2015
 
    Unity Technologies 2012-2015
 
    Andrew Shadura <andrew@shadura.me> 2012 2014-2015
 
    Aras Pranckevičius <aras@unity3d.com> 2012-2013 2015
 
    Sean Farley <sean.michael.farley@gmail.com> 2013-2015
 
    Christian Oyarzun <oyarzun@gmail.com> 2014-2015
 
    Joseph Rivera <rivera.d.joseph@gmail.com> 2014-2015
 
    Thomas De Schampheleire <thomas.de.schampheleire@gmail.com> 2014-2015
 
    Anatoly Bubenkov <bubenkoff@gmail.com> 2015
 
    Andrew Bartlett <abartlet@catalyst.net.nz> 2015
 
    Balázs Úr <urbalazs@gmail.com> 2015
 
    Ben Finney <ben@benfinney.id.au> 2015
 
    Branko Majic <branko@majic.rs> 2015
 
    Daniel Hobley <danielh@unity3d.com> 2015
 
    David Avigni <david.avigni@ankapi.com> 2015
 
    Denis Blanchette <dblanchette@coveo.com> 2015
 
    duanhongyi <duanhongyi@doopai.com> 2015
 
    EriCSN Chang <ericsning@gmail.com> 2015
 
    Étienne Gilli <etienne.gilli@gmail.com> 2015
 
    Grzegorz Krason <grzegorz.krason@gmail.com> 2015
 
    Jan Heylen <heyleke@gmail.com> 2015
 
    Kazunari Kobayashi <kobanari@nifty.com> 2015
 
    Kevin Bullock <kbullock@ringworld.org> 2015
 
    kobanari <kobanari@nifty.com> 2015
 
    Marc Abramowitz <marc@marc-abramowitz.com> 2015
 
    Marc Villetard <marc.villetard@gmail.com> 2015
 
    Matthias Zilk <matthias.zilk@gmail.com> 2015
 
    Michael Pohl <michael@mipapo.de> 2015
 
    Michael V. DePalatis <mike@depalatis.net> 2015
 
    Morten Skaaning <mortens@unity3d.com> 2015
 
    Nick High <nick@silverchip.org> 2015
 
    Niemand Jedermann <predatorix@web.de> 2015
 
    Peter Vitt <petervitt@web.de> 2015
 
    Robert Martinez <ntttq@inboxen.org> 2015
 
    Robert Rauch <mail@robertrauch.de> 2015
 
    Ronny Pfannschmidt <opensource@ronnypfannschmidt.de> 2015
 
    Sam Jaques <sam.jaques@me.com> 2015
 
    Søren Løvborg <sorenl@unity3d.com> 2015
 
    Tuux <tuxa@galaxie.eu.org> 2015
 
    Viktar Palstsiuk <vipals@gmail.com> 2015
 
    Dominik Ruf <dominikruf@gmail.com> 2012 2014
 
    Bradley M. Kuhn <bkuhn@sfconservancy.org> 2014
 
    Calinou <calinou@opmbx.org> 2014
 
    Daniel Anderson <daniel@dattrix.com> 2014
 
    Henrik Stuart <hg@hstuart.dk> 2014
 
    Ingo von Borstel <kallithea@planetmaker.de> 2014
 
    Jelmer Vernooij <jelmer@samba.org> 2014
 
    Jim Hague <jim.hague@acm.org> 2014
 
    Matt Fellows <kallithea@matt-fellows.me.uk> 2014
 
    Max Roman <max@choloclos.se> 2014
 
    Michal Čihař <michal@cihar.com> 2014
 
    Na'Tosha Bard <natosha@unity3d.com> 2014
 
    Rasmus Selsmark <rasmuss@unity3d.com> 2014
 
    Tim Freund <tim@freunds.net> 2014
 
    Travis Burtrum <android@moparisthebest.com> 2014
 
    Zoltan Gyarmati <mr.zoltan.gyarmati@gmail.com> 2014
 
    Marcin Kuźmiński <marcin@python-works.com> 2010-2013
 
    xpol <xpolife@gmail.com> 2012-2013
 
    Aparkar <aparkar@icloud.com> 2013
 
    Dennis Brakhane <brakhane@googlemail.com> 2013
 
    Grzegorz Rożniecki <xaerxess@gmail.com> 2013
 
    Jonathan Sternberg <jonathansternberg@gmail.com> 2013
 
    Leonardo Carneiro <leonardo@unity3d.com> 2013
 
    Magnus Ericmats <magnus.ericmats@gmail.com> 2013
 
    Martin Vium <martinv@unity3d.com> 2013
 
    Simon Lopez <simon.lopez@slopez.org> 2013
 
    Ton Plomp <tcplomp@gmail.com> 2013
 
    Augusto Herrmann <augusto.herrmann@planejamento.gov.br> 2011-2012
 
    Dan Sheridan <djs@adelard.com> 2012
 
    Dies Koper <diesk@fast.au.fujitsu.com> 2012
 
    Erwin Kroon <e.kroon@smartmetersolutions.nl> 2012
 
    H Waldo G <gwaldo@gmail.com> 2012
 
    hppj <hppj@postmage.biz> 2012
 
    Indra Talip <indra.talip@gmail.com> 2012
 
    mikespook 2012
 
    nansenat16 <nansenat16@null.tw> 2012
 
    Philip Jameson <philip.j@hostdime.com> 2012
 
    Raoul Thill <raoul.thill@gmail.com> 2012
 
    Stefan Engel <mail@engel-stefan.de> 2012
 
    Tony Bussieres <t.bussieres@gmail.com> 2012
 
    Vincent Caron <vcaron@bearstech.com> 2012
 
    Vincent Duvert <vincent@duvert.net> 2012
 
    Vladislav Poluhin <nuklea@gmail.com> 2012
README.rst
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================
 
Kallithea README
 
================
 

	
 

	
 
About
 
-----
 

	
 
**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. It works on
 
http/https and has a built in permission/authentication system with the ability
 
to authenticate via LDAP or ActiveDirectory. Kallithea also provides simple API
 
so it's easy to integrate with existing external systems.
 

	
 
Kallithea is similar in some respects to GitHub_ or Bitbucket_, however
 
Kallithea can be run as standalone hosted application on your own server. It is
 
open-source donationware and focuses more on providing a customised,
 
self-administered interface for Mercurial_ and Git_ repositories. Kallithea
 
works on Unix-like systems and Windows, and is powered by the vcs_ library
 
created by Łukasz Balcerzak and Marcin Kuźmiński to uniformly handle multiple
 
version control systems.
 

	
 
Kallithea was forked from RhodeCode in July 2014 and has been heavily modified.
 

	
 

	
 
Installation
 
------------
 

	
 
Kallithea requires Python_ 2.x and it is recommended to install it in a
 
virtualenv_. Official releases of Kallithea can be installed with::
 

	
 
    pip install kallithea
 

	
 
The development repository is kept very stable and used in production by the
 
developers -- you can do the same.
 

	
 
Please visit https://docs.kallithea-scm.org/en/latest/installation.html for
 
more details.
 

	
 
There is also an experimental `Puppet module`_ for installing and setting up
 
Kallithea. Currently, only basic functionality is provided, but it is still
 
enough to get up and running quickly, especially for people without Python
 
background. See
 
https://docs.kallithea-scm.org/en/latest/installation_puppet.html for further
 
information.
 

	
 

	
 
Source code
 
-----------
 

	
 
The latest sources can be obtained from
 
https://kallithea-scm.org/repos/kallithea.
 

	
 
The issue tracker and a repository mirror can be found at Bitbucket_ on
 
https://bitbucket.org/conservancy/kallithea.
 

	
 

	
 
Kallithea features
 
------------------
 

	
 
- Has its own middleware to handle Mercurial_ and Git_ protocol requests. Each
 
  request is authenticated and logged together with IP address.
 
- Built for speed and performance. You can make multiple pulls/pushes
 
  simultaneously. Proven to work with thousands of repositories and users.
 
- Supports http/https, LDAP, AD, proxy-pass authentication.
 
- Full permissions (private/read/write/admin) together with IP restrictions for
 
  each repository, additional explicit forking, repositories group and
 
  repository creation permissions.
 
- User groups for easier permission management.
 
- Repository groups let you group repos and manage them easier. They come with
 
  permission delegation features, so you can delegate groups management.
 
- Users can fork other users repos, and compare them at any time.
 
- Built-in versioned paste functionality (Gist) for sharing code snippets.
 
- Integrates easily with other systems, with custom created mappers you can
 
  connect it to almost any issue tracker, and with a JSON-RPC API you can make
 
  much more.
 
- Built-in commit API lets you add, edit and commit files right from Kallithea
 
  web interface using simple editor or upload binary files using simple form.
 
- Powerful pull request driven review system with inline commenting, changeset
 
  statuses, and notification system.
 
- Importing and syncing repositories from remote locations for Git_, Mercurial_
 
  and Subversion.
 
- Mako templates let you customize the look and feel of the application.
 
- Beautiful diffs, annotations and source code browsing all colored by
 
  pygments. Raw diffs are made in Git-diff format for both VCS systems,
 
  including Git_ binary-patches.
 
- Mercurial_ and Git_ DAG graphs and Flot-powered graphs with zooming and
 
  statistics to track activity for repositories.
 
- Admin interface with user/permission management. Admin activity journal, logs
 
  pulls, pushes, forks, registrations and other actions made by all users.
 
- Server side forks. It is possible to fork a project and modify it freely
 
  without breaking the main repository.
 
- reST and Markdown README support for repositories.
 
- Full text search powered by Whoosh on the source files, commit messages, and
 
@@ -133,108 +140,109 @@ Get in touch with the rest of the commun
 
- Issues can be reported at `issue tracker
 
  <https://bitbucket.org/conservancy/kallithea/issues>`_.
 

	
 
   .. note::
 

	
 
       Please try to read the documentation before posting any issues,
 
       especially the **troubleshooting section**
 

	
 

	
 
Online documentation
 
--------------------
 

	
 
Online documentation for the current version of Kallithea is available at
 
https://pythonhosted.org/Kallithea/. Documentation for the current development
 
version can be found on https://docs.kallithea-scm.org/.
 

	
 
You can also build the documentation locally: go to ``docs/`` and run::
 

	
 
   make html
 

	
 
.. note:: You need to have Sphinx_ installed to build the
 
          documentation. If you don't have Sphinx_ installed you can
 
          install it via the command: ``pip install sphinx`` .
 

	
 

	
 
Converting from RhodeCode
 
-------------------------
 

	
 
Currently, you have two options for working with an existing RhodeCode
 
database:
 

	
 
- keep the database unconverted (intended for testing and evaluation)
 
- convert the database in a one-time step
 

	
 
Maintaining interoperability
 
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
 

	
 
Interoperability with RhodeCode 2.2.X installations is provided so you don't
 
have to immediately commit to switching to Kallithea. This option will most
 
likely go away once the two projects have diverged significantly.
 

	
 
To run Kallithea on a RhodeCode database, run::
 

	
 
   echo "BRAND = 'rhodecode'" > kallithea/brand.py
 

	
 
This location will depend on where you installed Kallithea. If you installed
 
via::
 

	
 
   python setup.py install
 
   python2 setup.py install
 

	
 
then you will find this location at
 
``$VIRTUAL_ENV/lib/python2.7/site-packages/Kallithea-0.1-py2.7.egg/kallithea``.
 

	
 
One-time conversion
 
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
 

	
 
Alternatively, if you would like to convert the database for good, you can use
 
a helper script provided by Kallithea. This script will operate directly on the
 
database, using the database string you can find in your ``production.ini`` (or
 
``development.ini``) file. For example, if using SQLite::
 

	
 
   cd /path/to/kallithea
 
   cp /path/to/rhodecode/rhodecode.db kallithea.db
 
   pip install sqlalchemy-migrate
 
   python kallithea/bin/rebranddb.py sqlite:///kallithea.db
 
   python2 kallithea/bin/rebranddb.py sqlite:///kallithea.db
 

	
 
.. Note::
 

	
 
   If you started out using the branding interoperability approach mentioned
 
   above, watch out for stray brand.pyc after removing brand.py.
 

	
 
Git hooks
 
~~~~~~~~~
 

	
 
After switching to Kallithea, it will be necessary to update the Git_ hooks in
 
your repositories. If not, the Git_ hooks from RhodeCode will still be called,
 
which will cause ``git push`` to fail every time.
 

	
 
If you do not have any custom Git_ hooks deployed, perform the following steps
 
(this may take some time depending on the number and size of repositories you
 
have):
 

	
 
1. Log-in as an administrator.
 

	
 
2. Open page *Admin > Settings > Remap and Rescan*.
 

	
 
3. Turn on the option **Install Git Hooks**.
 

	
 
4. Turn on the option **Overwrite existing Git hooks**.
 

	
 
5. Click on the button **Rescan Repositories**.
 

	
 
If you do have custom hooks, you will need to merge those changes manually. In
 
order to get sample hooks from Kallithea, the easiest way is to create a new Git_
 
repository, and have a look at the hooks deployed there.
 

	
 

	
 
.. _virtualenv: http://pypi.python.org/pypi/virtualenv
 
.. _Python: http://www.python.org/
 
.. _Sphinx: http://sphinx.pocoo.org/
 
.. _Mercurial: http://mercurial.selenic.com/
 
.. _Bitbucket: http://bitbucket.org/
 
.. _GitHub: http://github.com/
 
.. _Subversion: http://subversion.tigris.org/
 
.. _Git: http://git-scm.com/
 
.. _Celery: http://celeryproject.org/
 
.. _vcs: http://pypi.python.org/pypi/vcs
 
.. _Software Freedom Conservancy: http://sfconservancy.org/
 
.. _Puppet module: https://forge.puppetlabs.com/rauch/kallithea
development.ini
Show inline comments
 
@@ -12,97 +12,97 @@
 
################################################################################
 

	
 
[DEFAULT]
 
debug = true
 
pdebug = false
 

	
 
################################################################################
 
## Email settings                                                             ##
 
##                                                                            ##
 
## Refer to the documentation ("Email settings") for more details.            ##
 
##                                                                            ##
 
## It is recommended to use a valid sender address that passes access         ##
 
## validation and spam filtering in mail servers.                             ##
 
################################################################################
 

	
 
## 'From' header for application emails. You can optionally add a name.
 
## Default:
 
#app_email_from = Kallithea
 
## Examples:
 
#app_email_from = Kallithea <kallithea-noreply@example.com>
 
#app_email_from = kallithea-noreply@example.com
 

	
 
## Subject prefix for application emails.
 
## A space between this prefix and the real subject is automatically added.
 
## Default:
 
#email_prefix =
 
## Example:
 
#email_prefix = [Kallithea]
 

	
 
## Recipients for error emails and fallback recipients of application mails.
 
## Multiple addresses can be specified, space-separated.
 
## Only addresses are allowed, do not add any name part.
 
## Default:
 
#email_to =
 
## Examples:
 
#email_to = admin@example.com
 
#email_to = admin@example.com another_admin@example.com
 

	
 
## 'From' header for error emails. You can optionally add a name.
 
## Default:
 
#error_email_from = pylons@yourapp.com
 
## Examples:
 
#error_email_from = Kallithea Errors <kallithea-noreply@example.com>
 
#error_email_from = paste_error@example.com
 

	
 
## SMTP server settings
 
## Only smtp_server is mandatory. All other settings take the specified default
 
## values.
 
#smtp_server = mail.server.com
 
#smtp_server = smtp.example.com
 
#smtp_username =
 
#smtp_password =
 
#smtp_port = 25
 
#smtp_use_tls = false
 
#smtp_use_ssl = false
 
## SMTP authentication parameters to use (e.g. LOGIN PLAIN CRAM-MD5, etc.).
 
## If empty, use any of the authentication parameters supported by the server.
 
#smtp_auth =
 

	
 
[server:main]
 
## PASTE ##
 
#use = egg:Paste#http
 
## nr of worker threads to spawn
 
#threadpool_workers = 5
 
## max request before thread respawn
 
#threadpool_max_requests = 10
 
## option to use threads of process
 
#use_threadpool = true
 

	
 
## WAITRESS ##
 
use = egg:waitress#main
 
## number of worker threads
 
threads = 5
 
## MAX BODY SIZE 100GB
 
max_request_body_size = 107374182400
 
## use poll instead of select, fixes fd limits, may not work on old
 
## windows systems.
 
#asyncore_use_poll = True
 

	
 
## GUNICORN ##
 
#use = egg:gunicorn#main
 
## number of process workers. You must set `instance_id = *` when this option
 
## is set to more than one worker
 
#workers = 1
 
## process name
 
#proc_name = kallithea
 
## type of worker class, one of sync, eventlet, gevent, tornado
 
## recommended for bigger setup is using of of other than sync one
 
#worker_class = sync
 
#max_requests = 1000
 
## ammount of time a worker can handle request before it gets killed and
 
## restarted
 
#timeout = 3600
 

	
 
## UWSGI ##
 
## run with uwsgi --ini-paste-logged <inifile.ini>
 
#[uwsgi]
 
#socket = /tmp/uwsgi.sock
 
@@ -183,146 +183,146 @@ static_files = true
 
lang =
 
cache_dir = %(here)s/data
 
index_dir = %(here)s/data/index
 

	
 
## perform a full repository scan on each server start, this should be
 
## set to false after first startup, to allow faster server restarts.
 
#initial_repo_scan = false
 
initial_repo_scan = true
 

	
 
## uncomment and set this path to use archive download cache
 
archive_cache_dir = %(here)s/tarballcache
 

	
 
## change this to unique ID for security
 
app_instance_uuid = development-not-secret
 

	
 
## cut off limit for large diffs (size in bytes)
 
cut_off_limit = 256000
 

	
 
## use cache version of scm repo everywhere
 
vcs_full_cache = true
 

	
 
## force https in Kallithea, fixes https redirects, assumes it's always https
 
force_https = false
 

	
 
## use Strict-Transport-Security headers
 
use_htsts = false
 

	
 
## number of commits stats will parse on each iteration
 
commit_parse_limit = 25
 

	
 
## path to git executable
 
git_path = git
 

	
 
## git rev filter option, --all is the default filter, if you need to
 
## hide all refs in changelog switch this to --branches --tags
 
#git_rev_filter = --branches --tags
 

	
 
## RSS feed options
 
rss_cut_off_limit = 256000
 
rss_items_per_page = 10
 
rss_include_diff = false
 

	
 
## options for showing and identifying changesets
 
show_sha_length = 12
 
show_revision_number = false
 

	
 
## gist URL alias, used to create nicer urls for gist. This should be an
 
## url that does rewrites to _admin/gists/<gistid>.
 
## example: http://gist.kallithea.server/{gistid}. Empty means use the internal
 
## Kallithea url, ie. http[s]://your.kallithea.server/_admin/gists/<gistid>
 
## example: http://gist.example.com/{gistid}. Empty means use the internal
 
## Kallithea url, ie. http[s]://kallithea.example.com/_admin/gists/<gistid>
 
gist_alias_url =
 

	
 
## white list of API enabled controllers. This allows to add list of
 
## controllers to which access will be enabled by api_key. eg: to enable
 
## api access to raw_files put `FilesController:raw`, to enable access to patches
 
## add `ChangesetController:changeset_patch`. This list should be "," separated
 
## Syntax is <ControllerClass>:<function>. Check debug logs for generated names
 
## Recommended settings below are commented out:
 
api_access_controllers_whitelist =
 
#    ChangesetController:changeset_patch,
 
#    ChangesetController:changeset_raw,
 
#    FilesController:raw,
 
#    FilesController:archivefile
 

	
 
## default encoding used to convert from and to unicode
 
## can be also a comma seperated list of encoding in case of mixed encodings
 
default_encoding = utf8
 

	
 
## issue tracker for Kallithea (leave blank to disable, absent for default)
 
#bugtracker = https://bitbucket.org/conservancy/kallithea/issues
 

	
 
## issue tracking mapping for commits messages
 
## comment out issue_pat, issue_server, issue_prefix to enable
 

	
 
## pattern to get the issues from commit messages
 
## default one used here is #<numbers> with a regex passive group for `#`
 
## {id} will be all groups matched from this pattern
 

	
 
issue_pat = (?:\s*#)(\d+)
 

	
 
## server url to the issue, each {id} will be replaced with match
 
## fetched from the regex and {repo} is replaced with full repository name
 
## including groups {repo_name} is replaced with just name of repo
 

	
 
issue_server_link = https://myissueserver.com/{repo}/issue/{id}
 
issue_server_link = https://issues.example.com/{repo}/issue/{id}
 

	
 
## prefix to add to link to indicate it's an url
 
## #314 will be replaced by <issue_prefix><id>
 

	
 
issue_prefix = #
 

	
 
## issue_pat, issue_server_link, issue_prefix can have suffixes to specify
 
## multiple patterns, to other issues server, wiki or others
 
## below an example how to create a wiki pattern
 
# wiki-some-id -> https://mywiki.com/some-id
 
# wiki-some-id -> https://wiki.example.com/some-id
 

	
 
#issue_pat_wiki = (?:wiki-)(.+)
 
#issue_server_link_wiki = https://mywiki.com/{id}
 
#issue_server_link_wiki = https://wiki.example.com/{id}
 
#issue_prefix_wiki = WIKI-
 

	
 
## instance-id prefix
 
## a prefix key for this instance used for cache invalidation when running
 
## multiple instances of kallithea, make sure it's globally unique for
 
## all running kallithea instances. Leave empty if you don't use it
 
instance_id =
 

	
 
## alternative return HTTP header for failed authentication. Default HTTP
 
## response is 401 HTTPUnauthorized. Currently Mercurial clients have trouble with
 
## handling that. Set this variable to 403 to return HTTPForbidden
 
auth_ret_code =
 

	
 
## locking return code. When repository is locked return this HTTP code. 2XX
 
## codes don't break the transactions while 4XX codes do
 
lock_ret_code = 423
 

	
 
## allows to change the repository location in settings page
 
allow_repo_location_change = True
 

	
 
## allows to setup custom hooks in settings page
 
allow_custom_hooks_settings = True
 

	
 
####################################
 
###        CELERY CONFIG        ####
 
####################################
 

	
 
use_celery = false
 
broker.host = localhost
 
broker.vhost = rabbitmqhost
 
broker.port = 5672
 
broker.user = rabbitmq
 
broker.password = qweqwe
 

	
 
celery.imports = kallithea.lib.celerylib.tasks
 

	
 
celery.result.backend = amqp
 
celery.result.dburi = amqp://
 
celery.result.serialier = json
 

	
 
#celery.send.task.error.emails = true
 
#celery.amqp.task.result.expires = 18000
 

	
 
celeryd.concurrency = 2
 
#celeryd.log.file = celeryd.log
 
celeryd.log.level = DEBUG
 
celeryd.max.tasks.per.child = 1
 

	
docs/api/api.rst
Show inline comments
 
@@ -4,154 +4,153 @@
 
API
 
===
 

	
 
Kallithea has a simple JSON RPC API with a single schema for calling all API
 
methods. Everything is available by sending JSON encoded http(s) requests to
 
``<your_server>/_admin/api``.
 

	
 

	
 
API access for web views
 
++++++++++++++++++++++++
 

	
 
API access can also be turned on for each web view in Kallithea that is
 
decorated with the ``@LoginRequired`` decorator. Some views use
 
``@LoginRequired(api_access=True)`` and are always available. By default only
 
RSS/Atom feed views are enabled. Other views are
 
only available if they have been whitelisted. Edit the
 
``api_access_controllers_whitelist`` option in your .ini file and define views
 
that should have API access enabled.
 

	
 
For example, to enable API access to patch/diff, raw file and archive::
 

	
 
    api_access_controllers_whitelist =
 
        ChangesetController:changeset_patch,
 
        ChangesetController:changeset_raw,
 
        FilesController:raw,
 
        FilesController:archivefile
 

	
 
After this change, a Kallithea view can be accessed without login by adding a
 
GET parameter ``?api_key=<api_key>`` to the URL.
 

	
 
Exposing raw diffs is a good way to integrate with
 
third-party services like code review, or build farms that can download archives.
 

	
 

	
 
API access
 
++++++++++
 

	
 
Clients must send JSON encoded JSON-RPC requests::
 

	
 
    {
 
        "id: "<id>",
 
        "api_key": "<api_key>",
 
        "method": "<method_name>",
 
        "args": {"<arg_key>": "<arg_val>"}
 
    }
 

	
 
For example, to pull to a local "CPython" mirror using curl::
 

	
 
    curl https://example.com/_admin/api -X POST -H 'content-type:text/plain' \
 
    curl https://kallithea.example.com/_admin/api -X POST -H 'content-type:text/plain' \
 
        --data-binary '{"id":1,"api_key":"xe7cdb2v278e4evbdf5vs04v832v0efvcbcve4a3","method":"pull","args":{"repo":"CPython"}}'
 

	
 
In general, provide
 
 - *id*, a value of any type, can be used to match the response with the request that it is replying to.
 
 - *api_key*, for authentication and permission validation.
 
 - *method*, the name of the method to call -- a list of available methods can be found below.
 
 - *args*, the arguments to pass to the method.
 

	
 
.. note::
 

	
 
    api_key can be found or set on the user account page.
 

	
 
The response to the JSON-RPC API call will always be a JSON structure::
 

	
 
    {
 
        "id": <id>,  # the id that was used in the request
 
        "result": <result>|null,  # JSON formatted result (null on error)
 
        "error": null|<error_message>  # JSON formatted error (null on success)
 
    }
 

	
 
All responses from the API will be ``HTTP/1.0 200 OK``. If an error occurs,
 
the reponse will have a failure description in *error* and
 
*result* will be null.
 

	
 

	
 
API client
 
++++++++++
 

	
 
Kallithea comes with a ``kallithea-api`` command line tool, providing a convenient
 
way to call the JSON-RPC API.
 

	
 
For example, to call ``get_repo``::
 

	
 
 kallithea-api --apihost=<your.kallithea.server.url> --apikey=<yourapikey> get_repo
 
    kallithea-api --apihost=<Kallithea URL> --apikey=<API key> get_repo
 

	
 
 calling {"api_key": "<apikey>", "id": 75, "args": {}, "method": "get_repo"} to http://127.0.0.1:5000
 
 Kallithea said:
 
 {'error': 'Missing non optional `repoid` arg in JSON DATA',
 
  'id': 75,
 
  'result': None}
 
    Calling method get_repo => <Kallithea URL>
 
    Server response
 
    ERROR:"Missing non optional `repoid` arg in JSON DATA"
 

	
 
Oops, looks like we forgot to add an argument. Let's try again, now
 
providing the ``repoid`` as a parameter::
 

	
 
    kallithea-api get_repo repoid:myrepo
 
    kallithea-api --apihost=<Kallithea URL> --apikey=<API key> get_repo repoid:myrepo
 

	
 
    calling {"api_key": "<apikey>", "id": 39, "args": {"repoid": "myrepo"}, "method": "get_repo"} to http://127.0.0.1:5000
 
    Kallithea said:
 
    {'error': None,
 
     'id': 39,
 
     'result': <json data...>}
 
    Calling method get_repo => <Kallithea URL>
 
    Server response
 
    {
 
        "clone_uri": null,
 
        "created_on": "2015-08-31T14:55:19.042",
 
    ...
 

	
 
To avoid specifying ``apihost`` and ``apikey`` every time, run::
 

	
 
  kallithea-api --save-config --apihost=<your.kallithea.server.url> --apikey=<yourapikey>
 
    kallithea-api --save-config --apihost=<Kallithea URL> --apikey=<API key>
 

	
 
This will create a ``~/.config/kallithea`` with the specified hostname and API key
 
This will create a ``~/.config/kallithea`` with the specified URL and API key
 
so you don't have to specify them every time.
 

	
 

	
 
API methods
 
+++++++++++
 

	
 

	
 
pull
 
----
 

	
 
Pull the given repo from remote location. Can be used to automatically keep
 
remote repos up to date.
 
This command can only be executed using the api_key of a user with admin rights.
 

	
 
INPUT::
 

	
 
    id : <id_for_response>
 
    api_key : "<api_key>"
 
    method :  "pull"
 
    args :    {
 
                "repoid" : "<reponame or repo_id>"
 
              }
 

	
 
OUTPUT::
 

	
 
    id : <id_given_in_input>
 
    result : "Pulled from `<reponame>`"
 
    error :  null
 

	
 
rescan_repos
 
------------
 

	
 
Rescan repositories. If ``remove_obsolete`` is set,
 
Kallithea will delete repos that are in the database but not in the filesystem.
 
This command can only be executed using the api_key of a user with admin rights.
 

	
 
INPUT::
 

	
 
    id : <id_for_response>
 
    api_key : "<api_key>"
 
    method :  "rescan_repos"
 
    args :    {
 
                "remove_obsolete" : "<boolean = Optional(False)>"
 
              }
 

	
 
OUTPUT::
 

	
 
    id : <id_given_in_input>
docs/contributing.rst
Show inline comments
 
.. _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 development::
 

	
 
        hg clone https://kallithea-scm.org/repos/kallithea
 
        cd kallithea
 
        virtualenv ../kallithea-venv
 
        source ../kallithea-venv/bin/activate
 
        python setup.py develop
 
        pip install --upgrade pip setuptools
 
        python2 setup.py develop
 
        paster make-config Kallithea my.ini
 
        paster setup-db my.ini --user=user --email=user@example.com --password=password --repos=/tmp
 
        paster serve my.ini --reload &
 
        firefox http://127.0.0.1:5000/
 

	
 
You can also start out by forking https://bitbucket.org/conservancy/kallithea
 
on Bitbucket_ and create a local clone of your own fork.
 

	
 

	
 
Running tests
 
-------------
 

	
 
After finishing your changes make sure all tests pass cleanly. You can run
 
the testsuite running ``nosetests`` from the project root, or if you use tox
 
run ``tox`` for Python 2.6--2.7 with multiple database test.
 

	
 
When running tests, Kallithea uses `kallithea/tests/test.ini` 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::
 

	
 
    paster serve kallithea/tests/test.ini --pid-file=test.pid --daemon
 
    KALLITHEA_WHOOSH_TEST_DISABLE=1 KALLITHEA_NO_TMP_PATH=1 nosetests
 
    kill -9 $(cat test.pid)
 

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

	
 
    -x, --stop            Stop running tests after the first error or failure
 
    -s, --nocapture       Don't capture stdout (any stdout output will be
 
                          printed immediately) [NOSE_NOCAPTURE]
 
    --failed              Run the tests that failed in the last test run.
 

	
 

	
 
Coding/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.
 

	
 
We don't have a formal coding/formatting standard. We are currently using a mix
 
of Mercurial (http://mercurial.selenic.com/wiki/CodingStyle), pep8, and
 
consistency with existing code. Run whitespacecleanup.sh to avoid stupid
 
whitespace noise in your patches.
docs/index.rst
Show inline comments
 
.. _index:
 

	
 
#######################
 
Kallithea Documentation
 
#######################
 

	
 
**Readme**
 

	
 
.. toctree::
 
   :maxdepth: 1
 

	
 
   readme
 

	
 
**Installation**
 

	
 
.. toctree::
 
   :maxdepth: 1
 

	
 
   overview
 
   installation
 
   installation_win
 
   installation_win_old
 
   installation_iis
 
   setup
 
   installation_puppet
 

	
 
**Usage**
 

	
 
.. toctree::
 
   :maxdepth: 1
 

	
 
   usage/general
 
   usage/vcs_support
 
   usage/locking
 
   usage/statistics
 

	
 
**Administrator's guide**
 

	
 
.. toctree::
 
   :maxdepth: 1
 

	
 
   usage/email
 
   usage/performance
 
   usage/backup
 
   usage/debugging
 
   usage/troubleshooting
 

	
 
**Development**
 

	
 
.. toctree::
 
   :maxdepth: 1
 

	
 
   contributing
 
   changelog
 

	
 
**API**
 

	
 
.. toctree::
 
   :maxdepth: 1
 

	
 
   api/api
 
   api/models
 

	
 

	
 
Other topics
 
------------
 

	
 
* :ref:`genindex`
 
* :ref:`search`
 

	
 

	
 
.. _virtualenv: http://pypi.python.org/pypi/virtualenv
 
.. _python: http://www.python.org/
docs/installation.rst
Show inline comments
 
.. _installation:
 

	
 
==========================
 
Installation on Unix/Linux
 
==========================
 

	
 
The following describes three different ways of installing Kallithea:
 

	
 
- :ref:`installation-source`: The simplest way to keep the installation
 
  up-to-date and track any local customizations is to run directly from
 
  source in a Kallithea repository clone, preferably inside a virtualenv
 
  virtual Python environment.
 

	
 
- :ref:`installation-virtualenv`: If you prefer to only use released versions
 
  of Kallithea, the recommended method is to install Kallithea in a virtual
 
  Python environment using `virtualenv`. The advantages of this method over
 
  direct installation is that Kallithea and its dependencies are completely
 
  contained inside the virtualenv (which also means you can have multiple
 
  installations side by side or remove it entirely by just removing the
 
  virtualenv directory) and does not require root privileges.
 

	
 
- :ref:`installation-without-virtualenv`: The alternative method of installing
 
  a Kallithea release is using standard pip. The package will be installed in
 
  the same location as all other Python packages you have ever installed. As a
 
  result, removing it is not as straightforward as with a virtualenv, as you'd
 
  have to remove its dependencies manually and make sure that they are not
 
  needed by other packages.
 

	
 
.. _installation-source:
 

	
 

	
 
Installation from repository source
 
-----------------------------------
 

	
 
To install Kallithea in a virtualenv_ using the stable branch of the development
 
repository, follow the instructions below::
 

	
 
        hg clone https://kallithea-scm.org/repos/kallithea -u stable
 
        cd kallithea
 
        virtualenv ../kallithea-venv
 
        source ../kallithea-venv/bin/activate
 
        python setup.py develop
 
        python setup.py compile_catalog   # for translation of the UI
 
        pip install --upgrade pip setuptools
 
        python2 setup.py develop
 
        python2 setup.py compile_catalog   # for translation of the UI
 

	
 
You can now proceed to :ref:`setup`.
 

	
 
To upgrade, simply update the repository with ``hg pull -u`` and restart the
 
server.
 

	
 
.. _installation-virtualenv:
 

	
 

	
 
Installing a released version in a virtualenv
 
---------------------------------------------
 

	
 
It is highly recommended to use a separate virtualenv_ for installing Kallithea.
 
This way, all libraries required by Kallithea will be installed separately from your
 
main Python installation and other applications and things will be less
 
problematic when upgrading the system or Kallithea.
 
An additional benefit of virtualenv_ is that it doesn't require root privileges.
 

	
 
- Assuming you have installed virtualenv_, create a new virtual environment
 
  for example, in `/srv/kallithea/venv`, using the virtualenv command::
 

	
 
    virtualenv /srv/kallithea/venv
 

	
 
- Activate the virtualenv_ in your current shell session by running::
 
- Activate the virtualenv_ in your current shell session and make sure the
 
  basic requirements are up-to-date by running::
 

	
 
    source /srv/kallithea/venv/bin/activate
 
    pip install --upgrade pip setuptools
 

	
 
.. note:: You can't use UNIX ``sudo`` to source the ``virtualenv`` script; it
 
   will "activate" a shell that terminates immediately. It is also perfectly
 
   acceptable (and desirable) to create a virtualenv as a normal user.
 

	
 
.. note:: Some dependencies are optional. If you need them, install them in
 
   the virtualenv too::
 

	
 
     pip install psycopg2
 
     pip install python-ldap
 

	
 
   This might require installation of development packages using your
 
   distribution's package manager.
 

	
 
- Make a folder for Kallithea data files, and configuration somewhere on the
 
  filesystem. For example::
 

	
 
    mkdir /srv/kallithea
 

	
 
- Go into the created directory and run this command to install Kallithea::
 

	
 
    pip install kallithea
 

	
 
  Alternatively, download a .tar.gz from http://pypi.python.org/pypi/Kallithea,
 
  extract it and run::
 

	
 
    python setup.py install
 
    python2 setup.py install
 

	
 
- This will install Kallithea together with pylons_ and all other required
 
  python libraries into the activated virtualenv.
 

	
 
You can now proceed to :ref:`setup`.
 

	
 
.. _installation-without-virtualenv:
 

	
 

	
 
Installing a released version without virtualenv
 
------------------------------------------------
 

	
 
For installation without virtualenv, 'just' use::
 

	
 
    pip install kallithea
 

	
 
Note that this method requires root privileges and will install packages
 
globally without using the system's package manager.
 

	
 
To install as a regular user in ``~/.local``, you can use::
 

	
 
    pip install --user kallithea
 

	
 
You can now proceed to :ref:`setup`.
 

	
 

	
 
Upgrading Kallithea from Python Package Index (PyPI)
 
----------------------------------------------------
 

	
 
.. note::
 
   It is strongly recommended that you **always** perform a database and
 
   configuration backup before doing an upgrade.
 

	
 
   These directions will use '{version}' to note that this is the version of
 
   Kallithea that these files were used with.  If backing up your Kallithea
 
   instance from version 0.1 to 0.2, the ``my.ini`` file could be
 
   backed up to ``my.ini.0-1``.
 

	
 
If using a SQLite database, stop the Kallithea process/daemon/service, and
 
then make a copy of the database file::
 

	
 
 service kallithea stop
 
 cp kallithea.db kallithea.db.{version}
 

	
 
Back up your configuration file::
 

	
 
 cp my.ini my.ini.{version}
 

	
docs/installation_iis.rst
Show inline comments
 
@@ -10,101 +10,101 @@ preventing you from applying this on IIS
 
.. note::
 

	
 
    For the best security, it is strongly recommended to only host the site over
 
    a secure connection, e.g. using TLS.
 

	
 

	
 
Prerequisites
 
-------------
 

	
 
Apart from the normal requirements for Kallithea, it is also necessary to get an
 
ISAPI-WSGI bridge module, e.g. isapi-wsgi.
 

	
 

	
 
Installation
 
------------
 

	
 
The following assumes that your Kallithea is at ``c:\inetpub\kallithea``, and
 
will be served from the root of its own website. The changes to serve it in its
 
own virtual folder will be noted where appropriate.
 

	
 
Application pool
 
................
 

	
 
Make sure that there is a unique application pool for the Kallithea application
 
with an identity that has read access to the Kallithea distribution.
 

	
 
The application pool does not need to be able to run any managed code. If you
 
are using a 32-bit Python installation, then you must enable 32-bit program in
 
the advanced settings for the application pool; otherwise Python will not be able
 
to run on the website and neither will Kallithea.
 

	
 
.. note::
 

	
 
    The application pool can be the same as an existing application pool,
 
    as long as the Kallithea requirements are met by the existing pool.
 

	
 
ISAPI handler
 
.............
 

	
 
The ISAPI handler can be generated using::
 

	
 
    paster install-iis my.ini --root=/
 

	
 
This will generate a ``dispatch.py`` file in the current directory that contains
 
the necessary components to finalize an installation into IIS. Once this file
 
has been generated, it is necessary to run the following command due to the way
 
that ISAPI-WSGI is made::
 

	
 
    python dispatch.py install
 
    python2 dispatch.py install
 

	
 
This accomplishes two things: generating an ISAPI compliant DLL file,
 
``_dispatch.dll``, and installing a script map handler into IIS for the
 
``--root`` specified above pointing to ``_dispatch.dll``.
 

	
 
The ISAPI handler is registered to all file extensions, so it will automatically
 
be the one handling all requests to the specified root. When the website starts
 
the ISAPI handler, it will start a thread pool managed wrapper around the paster
 
middleware WSGI handler that Kallithea runs within and each HTTP request to the
 
site will be processed through this logic henceforth.
 

	
 
Authentication with Kallithea using IIS authentication modules
 
..............................................................
 

	
 
The recommended way to handle authentication with Kallithea using IIS is to let
 
IIS handle all the authentication and just pass it to Kallithea.
 

	
 
To move responsibility into IIS from Kallithea, we need to configure Kallithea
 
to let external systems handle authentication and then let Kallithea create the
 
user automatically. To do this, access the administration's authentication page
 
and enable the ``kallithea.lib.auth_modules.auth_container`` plugin. Once it is
 
added, enable it with the ``REMOTE_USER`` header and check *Clean username*.
 
Finally, save the changes on this page.
 

	
 
Switch to the administration's permissions page and disable anonymous access,
 
otherwise Kallithea will not attempt to use the authenticated user name. By
 
default, Kallithea will populate the list of users lazily as they log in. Either
 
disable external auth account activation and ensure that you pre-populate the
 
user database with an external tool, or set it to *Automatic activation of
 
external account*. Finally, save the changes.
 

	
 
The last necessary step is to enable the relevant authentication in IIS, e.g.
 
Windows authentication.
 

	
 

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

	
 
Typically, any issues in this setup will either be entirely in IIS or entirely
 
in Kallithea (or Kallithea's WSGI/paster middleware). Consequently, two
 
different options for finding issues exist: IIS' failed request tracking which
 
is great at finding issues until they exist inside Kallithea, at which point the
 
ISAPI-WSGI wrapper above uses ``win32traceutil``, which is part of ``pywin32``.
 

	
 
In order to dump output from WSGI using ``win32traceutil`` it is sufficient to
 
type the following in a console window::
 

	
 
    python -m win32traceutil
 
    python2 -m win32traceutil
 

	
 
and any exceptions occurring in the WSGI layer and below (i.e. in the Kallithea
 
application itself) that are uncaught, will be printed here complete with stack
 
traces, making it a lot easier to identify issues.
docs/installation_puppet.rst
Show inline comments
 
new file 100644
 
.. _installation_puppet:
 

	
 
===================================
 
Installation and setup using Puppet
 
===================================
 

	
 
The whole installation and setup process of Kallithea can be simplified by
 
using Puppet and the `rauch/kallithea
 
<https://forge.puppetlabs.com/rauch/kallithea>`_ Puppet module. This is
 
especially useful for getting started quickly, without having to deal with all
 
the Python specialities.
 

	
 
.. note:: The following instructions assume you are not familiar with Puppet at
 
          all. If this is not the case, you should probably skip directly to the
 
          `Kallithea Puppet module documentation
 
          <https://forge.puppetlabs.com/rauch/kallithea#puppet-kallithea>`_.
 

	
 

	
 
Installing Puppet
 
-----------------
 

	
 
This installation variant requires a Unix/Linux type server with Puppet 3.0+
 
installed. Many major distributions have Puppet in their standard repositories.
 
Thus, you will probably be ready to go by running, e.g. ``apt-get install
 
puppet`` or ``yum install puppet``, depending on your distro's favoured package
 
manager. Afterwards, check the Puppet version by running ``puppet --version``
 
and ensure you have at least 3.0.
 

	
 
If your distribution does not provide Puppet packages or you need a
 
newer version, please see the `Puppet Reference Manual
 
<https://docs.puppetlabs.com/puppet/4.2/reference/install_linux.html>`_ for
 
instructions on how to install Puppet on your target platform.
 

	
 

	
 
Installing the Puppet module
 
----------------------------
 

	
 
To install the latest version of the Kallithea Puppet module from the Puppet
 
Forge, run the following as ``root``:
 

	
 
.. code-block:: bash
 

	
 
    puppet module install rauch/kallithea
 

	
 
This will install both the Kallithea Puppet module and its dependency modules.
 

	
 
.. warning::  Be aware that Puppet can do all kinds of things to your systems.
 
              Third-party modules (like the ``kallithea`` module) may run
 
              arbitrary commands on your system (most of the time as the
 
              ``root`` user), so do not apply them on production machines if
 
              you don't know what you are doing. Instead, use a test system
 
              (e.g. a virtual machine) for evaluation purposes.
 

	
 

	
 
Applying the module
 
-------------------
 

	
 
To trigger the actual installation process, we have to *apply* the
 
``kallithea`` Puppet class, which is provided by the module we have just
 
installed, to our system. For this, create a file named e.g. ``kallithea.pp``,
 
a *Puppet manifest*, with the following content:
 

	
 
.. _simple_manifest:
 
.. code-block:: puppet
 

	
 
    class { 'kallithea':
 
      seed_db    => true,
 
      manage_git => true,
 
    }
 

	
 
To apply the manifest, simply run the following (preferably as root):
 

	
 
.. code-block:: bash
 

	
 
    puppet apply kallithea.pp
 

	
 
This will basically run through the usual Kallithea :ref:`installation` and
 
:ref:`setup` steps, as documented. Consult the module documentation for details
 
on `what the module affects
 
<https://forge.puppetlabs.com/rauch/kallithea#what-kallithea-affects>`_. You
 
can also do a *dry run* by adding the ``--noop`` option to the command.
 

	
 

	
 
Using parameters for customizing the setup process
 
--------------------------------------------------
 

	
 
The ``kallithea`` Puppet class provides a number of `parameters
 
<https://forge.puppetlabs.com/rauch/kallithea#class-kallithea>`_ for
 
customizing the setup process. You have seen the usage of the ``seed_db``
 
parameter in the :ref:`example above <simple_manifest>`, but there are more.
 
For example, you can specify the installation directory, the name of the user
 
under which Kallithea gets installed, the initial admin password, etc.
 
Notably, you can provide arbitrary modifications to Kallitheas configuration
 
file by means of the ``config_hash`` parameter.
 

	
 
Parameters, which have not been set explicitly, will be set to default values,
 
which are defined inside the ``kallithea`` Puppet module. For example, if you
 
just stick to the defaults as in the :ref:`example above <simple_manifest>`,
 
you will end up with a Kallithea instance, which
 

	
 
- is installed in ``/srv/kallithea``, owned by the user ``kallithea``
 
- uses the Kallithea default configuration
 
- uses the admin user ``admin`` with password ``adminpw``
 
- is started automatically and enabled on boot
 

	
 
As of Kallithea 0.3.0, this in particular means that Kallithea will use an
 
SQLite database and listen on ``http://localhost:5000``.
 

	
 
See also the `full parameters list
 
<https://forge.puppetlabs.com/rauch/kallithea#class-kallithea>`_ for more
 
information.
 

	
 

	
 
Making your Kallithea instance publicly available
 
-------------------------------------------------
 

	
 
If you followed the instructions above, the Kallithea instance will be
 
listening on ``http://localhost:5000`` and therefore not publicly available.
 
There are several ways to change this.
 

	
 
The direct way
 
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
 

	
 
The simplest setup is to instruct Kallithea to listen on another IP address
 
and/or port by using the ``config_hash`` parameter of the Kallithea Puppet
 
class. For example, assume we want to listen on all interfaces on port 80:
 

	
 
.. code-block:: puppet
 

	
 
    class { 'kallithea':
 
      seed_db => true,
 
      config_hash => {
 
        "server:main" => {
 
          'host' => '0.0.0.0',
 
          'port' => '80',
 
        }
 
      }
 
    }
 

	
 
Using Apache as reverse proxy
 
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
 

	
 
In a more advanced setup, you might instead want use a full-blown web server
 
like Apache HTTP Server as the public web server, configured such that requests
 
are internally forwarded to the local Kallithea instance (a so called *reverse
 
proxy setup*). This can be easily done with Puppet as well:
 

	
 
First, install the `puppetlabs/apache
 
<https://forge.puppetlabs.com/puppetlabs/apache>`_ Puppet module as above by running the following as root:
 

	
 
.. code-block:: bash
 

	
 
    puppet module install puppetlabs/apache
 

	
 
Then, append the following to your manifest:
 

	
 
.. code-block:: puppet
 

	
 
    include apache
 

	
 
    apache::vhost { 'kallithea.example.com':
 
      docroot             => '/var/www/html',
 
      manage_docroot      => false,
 
      port                => 80,
 
      proxy_preserve_host => true,
 
      proxy_pass          => [
 
        {
 
          path => '/',
 
          url  => 'http://localhost:5000/',
 
        },
 
      ],
 
    }
 

	
 
Applying the resulting manifest will install the Apache web server and setup a
 
virtual host acting as a reverse proxy for your local Kallithea instance.
docs/installation_win.rst
Show inline comments
 
@@ -26,159 +26,160 @@ Install Python 2.x.y (x = 6 or 7). Lates
 
- 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 "python get-pip.py" in the folder where you downloaded get-pip.py (may require admin access).
 
- 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, it 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.
 

	
 
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
 
  paster make-config Kallithea production.ini
 

	
 
Then you must edit production.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::
 

	
 
  paster setup-db production.ini
 

	
 
.. warning:: This time a *new* database will be installed. You must
 
             follow a different step to later *upgrade* to a newer
 
             Kallithea version)
 

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

	
docs/installation_win_old.rst
Show inline comments
 
@@ -106,128 +106,129 @@ that came preinstalled in Vista/7 and ca
 
  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::
 

	
 
 python virtualenv.py C:\Kallithea\Env
 
  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
 
  paster make-config Kallithea production.ini
 

	
 
Then, you must edit production.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::
 

	
 
 paster setup-db production.ini
 

	
 
(this time a NEW database will be installed, you must follow a different
 
step to later 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.
 

	
docs/setup.rst
Show inline comments
 
.. _setup:
 

	
 
=====
 
Setup
 
=====
 

	
 

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

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

	
 
    paster make-config Kallithea 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.
 

	
 
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::
 

	
 
    paster setup-db 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
 
up for you.
 

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

	
 
    paster setup-db my.ini --user=nn --password=secret --email=nn@example.org --repos=/srv/repos
 
    paster setup-db my.ini --user=nn --password=secret --email=nn@example.com --repos=/srv/repos
 

	
 
The ``setup-db`` 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::
 

	
 
    paster serve 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``.
 
- 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.
 

	
 

	
 
Extensions
 
----------
 

	
 
Optionally one can create an ``rcextensions`` package that extends Kallithea
 
functionality.
 
To generate a skeleton extensions package, run::
 

	
 
    paster make-rcext my.ini
 

	
 
This will create an ``rcextensions`` package next to the specified ``ini`` file.
 
With ``rcextensions`` it's possible to add additional mapping for whoosh,
 
stats and add additional code into the push/pull/create/delete repo hooks,
 
for example for sending signals to build-bots such as Jenkins.
 

	
 
See the ``__init__.py`` file inside the generated ``rcextensions`` package
 
for more details.
 

	
 

	
 
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@server.com//srv/repos/kallithea
 
    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://pythonhosted.org/Whoosh/
 

	
 
For an incremental index build, run::
 

	
 
    paster make-index my.ini
 

	
 
For a full index rebuild, run::
 

	
 
    paster make-index my.ini -f
 

	
 
The ``--repo-location`` option allows the location of the repositories to be overriden;
 
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::
 

	
 
    paster make-index 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/paster make-index /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.
 

	
 

	
 
Setting up LDAP support
 
-----------------------
 

	
 
Kallithea supports LDAP authentication. In order
 
to use LDAP, you have to install the python-ldap_ package. This package is
 
available via PyPI, so you can install it by running::
 

	
 
    pip install python-ldap
 

	
 
.. note:: ``python-ldap`` requires some libraries to be installed on
 
          your system, so before installing it check that you have at
 
          least the ``openldap`` and ``sasl`` libraries.
 

	
 
Choose *Admin > Authentication*, click the ``kallithea.lib.auth_modules.auth_ldap`` button
 
and then *Save*, to enable the LDAP plugin and configure its settings.
 

	
 
Here's a typical LDAP setup::
 

	
 
 Connection settings
 
 Enable LDAP          = checked
 
 Host                 = host.example.org
 
 Host                 = host.example.com
 
 Port                 = 389
 
 Account              = <account>
 
 Password             = <password>
 
 Connection Security  = LDAPS connection
 
 Certificate Checks   = DEMAND
 

	
 
 Search settings
 
 Base DN              = CN=users,DC=host,DC=example,DC=org
 
 LDAP Filter          = (&(objectClass=user)(!(objectClass=computer)))
 
 LDAP Search Scope    = SUBTREE
 

	
 
 Attribute mappings
 
 Login Attribute      = uid
 
 First Name Attribute = firstName
 
 Last Name Attribute  = lastName
 
 Email Attribute      = mail
 

	
 
If your user groups are placed in an Organisation Unit (OU) structure, the Search Settings configuration differs::
 

	
 
 Search settings
 
 Base DN              = DC=host,DC=example,DC=org
 
 LDAP Filter          = (&(memberOf=CN=your user group,OU=subunit,OU=unit,DC=host,DC=example,DC=org)(objectClass=user))
 
 LDAP Search Scope    = SUBTREE
 

	
 
.. _enable_ldap:
 

	
 
Enable LDAP : required
 
    Whether to use LDAP for authenticating users.
 

	
 
.. _ldap_host:
 

	
 
Host : required
 
    LDAP server hostname or IP address. Can be also a comma separated
 
    list of servers to support LDAP fail-over.
 

	
 
.. _Port:
 

	
 
Port : required
 
    389 for un-encrypted LDAP, 636 for SSL-encrypted LDAP.
 

	
 
.. _ldap_account:
 

	
 
Account : optional
 
    Only required if the LDAP server does not allow anonymous browsing of
 
    records.  This should be a special account for record browsing.  This
 
    will require `LDAP Password`_ below.
 

	
 
.. _LDAP Password:
 
@@ -398,303 +398,302 @@ Proxy pass-through authentication
 
In a proxy pass-through authentication setup, Kallithea reads the user name
 
from the ``X-Forwarded-User`` request header, which should be configured to be
 
sent by the reverse-proxy server.
 

	
 
After setting up your proxy solution (see `Apache virtual host reverse proxy example`_,
 
`Apache as subdirectory`_ or `Nginx virtual host example`_), you'll need to
 
configure the authentication and add the username in a request header named
 
``X-Forwarded-User``.
 

	
 
For example, the following config section for Apache sets a subdirectory in a
 
reverse-proxy setup with basic auth:
 

	
 
.. code-block:: apache
 

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

	
 
      AuthType Basic
 
      AuthName "Kallithea authentication"
 
      AuthUserFile /srv/kallithea/.htpasswd
 
      Require valid-user
 

	
 
      RequestHeader unset X-Forwarded-User
 

	
 
      RewriteEngine On
 
      RewriteCond %{LA-U:REMOTE_USER} (.+)
 
      RewriteRule .* - [E=RU:%1]
 
      RequestHeader set X-Forwarded-User %{RU}e
 
    </Location>
 

	
 
.. note::
 
   If you enable proxy pass-through authentication, make sure your server is
 
   only accessible through the proxy. Otherwise, any client would be able to
 
   forge the authentication header and could effectively become authenticated
 
   using any account of their liking.
 

	
 

	
 
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. To enable this simply
 
uncomment the following variables in the ini file::
 

	
 
    issue_pat = (?:^#|\s#)(\w+)
 
    issue_server_link = https://myissueserver.com/{repo}/issue/{id}
 
    issue_server_link = https://issues.example.com/{repo}/issue/{id}
 
    issue_prefix = #
 

	
 
``issue_pat`` is the regular expression describing which strings in
 
commit messages will be treated as issue references. A match group in
 
parentheses should be used to specify the actual issue id.
 

	
 
The default expression matches issues in the format ``#<number>``, e.g., ``#300``.
 

	
 
Matched issue references are replaced with the link specified in
 
``issue_server_link``. ``{id}`` is replaced with the issue ID, and
 
``{repo}`` with the repository name.  Since the # is stripped away,
 
``issue_prefix`` is prepended to the link text.  ``issue_prefix`` doesn't
 
necessarily need to be ``#``: if you set issue prefix to ``ISSUE-`` this will
 
generate a URL in the format:
 

	
 
.. code-block:: html
 

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

	
 
If needed, more than one pattern can be specified by appending a unique suffix to
 
the variables. For example::
 

	
 
    issue_pat_wiki = (?:wiki-)(.+)
 
    issue_server_link_wiki = https://mywiki.com/{id}
 
    issue_server_link_wiki = https://wiki.example.com/{id}
 
    issue_prefix_wiki = WIKI-
 

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

	
 

	
 
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.
 

	
 

	
 
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::
 

	
 
 paster celeryd <configfile.ini>
 

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

	
 
    server {
 
       listen          443;
 
       server_name     your.kallithea.server;
 
       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 /path/to/installation/kallithea/public;
 
       include         /etc/nginx/proxy.conf;
 
       location / {
 
            try_files $uri @kallithea;
 
       }
 

	
 
       location @kallithea {
 
            proxy_pass      http://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 example
 
-----------------------------------------
 

	
 
Here is a sample configuration file for Apache using proxy:
 

	
 
.. code-block:: apache
 

	
 
    <VirtualHost *:80>
 
            ServerName hg.myserver.com
 
            ServerAlias hg.myserver.com
 
            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 pylons
 
            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 as subdirectory
 
----------------------
 

	
 
Apache subdirectory part:
 

	
 
.. code-block:: apache
 

	
 
    <Location /<someprefix> >
 
      ProxyPass http://127.0.0.1:5000/<someprefix>
 
      ProxyPassReverse http://127.0.0.1:5000/<someprefix>
 
      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
docs/usage/general.rst
Show inline comments
 
@@ -33,149 +33,149 @@ File view: follow current branch
 

	
 
In the file view, left and right arrows allow to jump to the previous and next
 
revision. Depending on the way revisions were created in the repository, this
 
could jump to a different branch.  When the checkbox ``Follow current branch``
 
is checked, these arrows will only jump to revisions on the same branch as the
 
currently visible revision.  So for example, if someone is viewing files in the
 
``beta`` branch and marks the `Follow current branch` checkbox, the < and >
 
arrows will only show revisions on the ``beta`` branch.
 

	
 

	
 
Changelog features
 
------------------
 

	
 
The core feature of a repository's ``changelog`` page is to show the revisions
 
in a repository. However, there are several other features available from the
 
changelog.
 

	
 
Branch filter
 
  By default, the changelog shows revisions from all branches in the
 
  repository. Use the branch filter to restrict to a given branch.
 

	
 
Viewing a changeset
 
  A particular changeset can be opened by clicking on either the changeset
 
  hash or the commit message, or by ticking the checkbox and clicking the
 
  ``Show selected changeset`` button at the top.
 

	
 
Viewing all changes between two changesets
 
  To get a list of all changesets between two selected changesets, along with
 
  the changes in each one of them, tick the checkboxes of the first and
 
  last changeset in the desired range and click the ``Show selected changesets``
 
  button at the top. You can only show the range between the first and last
 
  checkbox (no cherry-picking).
 

	
 
  From that page, you can proceed to viewing the overall delta between the
 
  selected changesets, by clicking the ``Compare revisions`` button.
 

	
 
Creating a pull request
 
  You can create a new pull request for the changes of a particular changeset
 
  (and its ancestors) by selecting it and clicking the ``Open new pull request
 
  for selected changesets`` button.
 

	
 

	
 
Permanent repository URLs
 
-------------------------
 

	
 
Due to the complicated nature of repository grouping, URLs of repositories
 
can often change. For example, a repository originally accessible from::
 

	
 
  http://example.com/repo_name
 
  http://kallithea.example.com/repo_name
 

	
 
would get a new URL after moving it to test_group::
 

	
 
  http://example.com/test_group/repo_name
 
  http://kallithea.example.com/test_group/repo_name
 

	
 
Such moving of a repository to a group can be an issue for build systems and
 
other scripts where the repository paths are hardcoded. To mitigate this,
 
Kallithea provides permanent URLs using the repository ID prefixed with an
 
underscore. In all Kallithea URLs, for example those for the changelog and the
 
file view, a repository name can be replaced by this ``_ID`` string. Since IDs
 
are always the same, moving the repository to a different group will not affect
 
such URLs.
 

	
 
In the example, the repository could also be accessible as::
 

	
 
  http://example.com/_<ID>
 
  http://kallithea.example.com/_<ID>
 

	
 
The ID of a given repository can be shown from the repository ``Summary`` page,
 
by selecting the ``Show by ID`` button next to ``Clone URL``.
 

	
 

	
 
Email notifications
 
-------------------
 

	
 
With email settings properly configured in the Kallithea
 
configuration file, Kallithea will send emails on user registration and when
 
errors occur.
 

	
 
Emails are also sent for comments on changesets. In this case, an email is sent
 
to the committer of the changeset (if known to Kallithea), to all reviewers of
 
the pull request (if applicable) and to all people mentioned in the comment
 
using @mention notation.
 

	
 

	
 
Trending source files
 
---------------------
 

	
 
Trending source files are calculated based on a predefined dictionary of known
 
types and extensions. If an extension is missing or you would like to scan
 
custom files, it is possible to extend the ``LANGUAGES_EXTENSIONS_MAP``
 
dictionary located in ``kallithea/config/conf.py`` with new types.
 

	
 

	
 
Cloning remote repositories
 
---------------------------
 

	
 
Kallithea has the ability to clone repositories from given remote locations.
 
Currently it supports the following options:
 

	
 
- hg  -> hg clone
 
- svn -> hg clone
 
- git -> git clone
 

	
 
.. note:: svn -> hg cloning requires the ``hgsubversion`` library to be
 
   installed.
 

	
 
If you need to clone repositories that are protected via basic authentication,
 
you can pass the credentials in the URL, e.g.
 
``http://user:passw@remote.server/repo``. Kallithea will then try to login and
 
``http://user:passw@remote.example.com/repo``. Kallithea will then try to login and
 
clone using the given credentials. Please note that the given credentials will
 
be stored as plaintext inside the database. However, the authentication
 
information will not be shown in the clone URL on the summary page.
 

	
 

	
 
Specific features configurable in the Admin settings
 
----------------------------------------------------
 

	
 
In general, the Admin settings should be self-explanatory and will not be
 
described in more detail in this documentation. However, there are a few
 
features that merit further explanation.
 

	
 
Repository extra fields
 
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
 

	
 
In the *Visual* tab, there is an option "Use repository extra
 
fields", which allows to set custom fields for each repository in the system.
 

	
 
Once enabled site-wide, the custom fields can be edited per-repository under
 
*Options* | *Settings* | *Extra Fields*.
 

	
 
Example usage of such fields would be to define company-specific information
 
into repositories, e.g., defining a ``repo_manager`` key that would give info
 
about a manager of each repository.  There's no limit for adding custom fields.
 
Newly created fields are accessible via the API.
 

	
 
Meta tagging
 
~~~~~~~~~~~~
 

	
 
In the *Visual* tab, option "Stylify recognised meta tags" will cause Kallithea
 
to turn certain text fragments in repository and repository group
 
descriptions into colored tags. Currently recognised tags are::
 

	
 
    [featured]
 
    [stale]
 
    [dead]
 
    [lang => lang]
 
    [license => License]
 
    [requires => Repo]
 
    [recommends => Repo]
 
    [see => URI]
kallithea/__init__.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/>.
 
"""
 
kallithea
 
~~~~~~~~~
 

	
 
Kallithea, a web based repository management based on pylons
 
versioning implementation: http://www.python.org/dev/peps/pep-0386/
 

	
 
This file was forked by the Kallithea project in July 2014.
 
Original author and date, and relevant copyright and licensing information is below:
 
:created_on: Apr 9, 2010
 
:author: marcink
 
:copyright: (c) 2013 RhodeCode GmbH, (C) 2014 Bradley M. Kuhn, and others.
 
:license: GPLv3, see LICENSE.md for more details.
 
"""
 

	
 
import sys
 
import platform
 

	
 
VERSION = (0, 2, 2)
 
VERSION = (0, 3)
 
BACKENDS = {
 
    'hg': 'Mercurial repository',
 
    'git': 'Git repository',
 
}
 

	
 
CELERY_ON = False
 
CELERY_EAGER = False
 

	
 
# link to config for pylons
 
CONFIG = {}
 

	
 
# Linked module for extensions
 
EXTENSIONS = {}
 

	
 
# BRAND controls internal references in database and config to the products
 
# own name.
 
#
 
# NOTE: If you want compatibility with a database that was originally created
 
#  for use with the RhodeCode software product, change BRAND to "rhodecode",
 
#  either by editing here or by creating a new file:
 
#  echo "BRAND = 'rhodecode'" > kallithea/brand.py
 

	
 
BRAND = "kallithea"
 
try:
 
    from kallithea.brand import BRAND
 
except ImportError:
 
    pass
 

	
 
# Prefix for the ui and settings table names
 
DB_PREFIX = (BRAND + "_") if BRAND != "kallithea" else ""
 

	
 
# Users.extern_type and .extern_name value for local users
 
EXTERN_TYPE_INTERNAL = BRAND if BRAND != 'kallithea' else 'internal'
 

	
 
# db_migrate_version.repository_id value, same as kallithea/lib/dbmigrate/migrate.cfg
 
DB_MIGRATIONS = BRAND + "_db_migrations"
 

	
 
try:
 
    from kallithea.lib import get_current_revision
 
    _rev = get_current_revision(quiet=True)
 
    if _rev and len(VERSION) > 3:
 
        VERSION += (_rev[0],)
 
except ImportError:
 
    pass
 

	
 
__version__ = ('.'.join((str(each) for each in VERSION[:3])))
 
__dbversion__ = 31  # defines current db version for migrations
 
__platform__ = platform.system()
kallithea/bin/kallithea_api.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/>.
 
"""
 
kallithea.bin.kallithea_api
 
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
 

	
 
Api CLI client for Kallithea
 

	
 
This file was forked by the Kallithea project in July 2014.
 
Original author and date, and relevant copyright and licensing information is below:
 
:created_on: Jun 3, 2012
 
:author: marcink
 
:copyright: (c) 2013 RhodeCode GmbH, and others.
 
:license: GPLv3, see LICENSE.md for more details.
 
"""
 

	
 
import sys
 
import argparse
 

	
 
from kallithea.bin.base import json, api_call, RcConf, FORMAT_JSON, FORMAT_PRETTY
 

	
 

	
 
def argparser(argv):
 
    usage = (
 
      "kallithea-api [-h] [--format=FORMAT] [--apikey=APIKEY] [--apihost=APIHOST] "
 
      "[--config=CONFIG] [--save-config] "
 
      "METHOD <key:val> <key2:val> ...\n"
 
      "Create config file: kallithea-api --apikey=<key> --apihost=http://your.kallithea.server --save-config"
 
      "Create config file: kallithea-api --apikey=<key> --apihost=http://kallithea.example.com --save-config"
 
    )
 

	
 
    parser = argparse.ArgumentParser(description='Kallithea API cli',
 
                                     usage=usage)
 

	
 
    ## config
 
    group = parser.add_argument_group('config')
 
    group.add_argument('--apikey', help='api access key')
 
    group.add_argument('--apihost', help='api host')
 
    group.add_argument('--config', help='config file')
 
    group.add_argument('--save-config', action='store_true', help='save the given config into a file')
 

	
 
    group = parser.add_argument_group('API')
 
    group.add_argument('method', metavar='METHOD', nargs='?', type=str, default=None,
 
            help='API method name to call followed by key:value attributes',
 
    )
 
    group.add_argument('--format', dest='format', type=str,
 
            help='output format default: `%s` can '
 
                 'be also `%s`' % (FORMAT_PRETTY, FORMAT_JSON),
 
            default=FORMAT_PRETTY
 
    )
 
    args, other = parser.parse_known_args()
 
    return parser, args, other
 

	
 

	
 
def main(argv=None):
 
    """
 
    Main execution function for cli
 

	
 
    :param argv:
 
    """
 
    if argv is None:
 
        argv = sys.argv
 

	
 
    conf = None
 
    parser, args, other = argparser(argv)
 

	
 
    api_credentials_given = (args.apikey and args.apihost)
 
    if args.save_config:
 
        if not api_credentials_given:
 
            raise parser.error('--save-config requires --apikey and --apihost')
 
        conf = RcConf(config_location=args.config,
 
                      autocreate=True, config={'apikey': args.apikey,
 
                                               'apihost': args.apihost})
 
        sys.exit()
 

	
 
    if not conf:
 
        conf = RcConf(config_location=args.config, autoload=True)
kallithea/bin/kallithea_gist.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/>.
 
"""
 
kallithea.bin.kallithea_gist
 
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
 

	
 
Gist CLI client for Kallithea
 

	
 
This file was forked by the Kallithea project in July 2014.
 
Original author and date, and relevant copyright and licensing information is below:
 
:created_on: May 9, 2013
 
:author: marcink
 
:copyright: (c) 2013 RhodeCode GmbH, and others.
 
:license: GPLv3, see LICENSE.md for more details.
 
"""
 

	
 
import os
 
import sys
 
import stat
 
import argparse
 
import fileinput
 

	
 
from kallithea.bin.base import json, api_call, RcConf, FORMAT_JSON, FORMAT_PRETTY
 

	
 

	
 
def argparser(argv):
 
    usage = (
 
      "kallithea-gist [-h] [--format=FORMAT] [--apikey=APIKEY] [--apihost=APIHOST] "
 
      "[--config=CONFIG] [--save-config] [GIST OPTIONS] "
 
      "[filename or stdin use - for terminal stdin ]\n"
 
      "Create config file: kallithea-gist --apikey=<key> --apihost=http://your.kallithea.server --save-config"
 
      "Create config file: kallithea-gist --apikey=<key> --apihost=http://kallithea.example.com --save-config"
 
    )
 

	
 
    parser = argparse.ArgumentParser(description='Kallithea Gist cli',
 
                                     usage=usage)
 

	
 
    ## config
 
    group = parser.add_argument_group('config')
 
    group.add_argument('--apikey', help='api access key')
 
    group.add_argument('--apihost', help='api host')
 
    group.add_argument('--config', help='config file path DEFAULT: ~/.config/kallithea')
 
    group.add_argument('--save-config', action='store_true',
 
                       help='save the given config into a file')
 

	
 
    group = parser.add_argument_group('GIST')
 
    group.add_argument('-p', '--private', action='store_true',
 
                       help='create private Gist')
 
    group.add_argument('-f', '--filename',
 
                       help='set uploaded gist filename, '
 
                            'also defines syntax highlighting')
 
    group.add_argument('-d', '--description', help='Gist description')
 
    group.add_argument('-l', '--lifetime', metavar='MINUTES',
 
                       help='gist lifetime in minutes, -1 (DEFAULT) is forever')
 
    group.add_argument('--format', dest='format', type=str,
 
                       help='output format DEFAULT: `%s` can '
 
                       'be also `%s`' % (FORMAT_PRETTY, FORMAT_JSON),
 
            default=FORMAT_PRETTY
 
    )
 
    args, other = parser.parse_known_args()
 
    return parser, args, other
 

	
 

	
 
def _run(argv):
 
    conf = None
 
    parser, args, other = argparser(argv)
 

	
 
    api_credentials_given = (args.apikey and args.apihost)
 
    if args.save_config:
 
        if not api_credentials_given:
 
            raise parser.error('--save-config requires --apikey and --apihost')
 
        conf = RcConf(config_location=args.config,
 
                      autocreate=True, config={'apikey': args.apikey,
 
                                               'apihost': args.apihost})
 
        sys.exit()
 

	
 
    if not conf:
 
        conf = RcConf(config_location=args.config, autoload=True)
 
        if not conf:
 
            if not api_credentials_given:
kallithea/bin/ldap_sync.conf
Show inline comments
 
[default]
 
api_url = http://your.kallithea.server:5000/_admin/api
 
api_url = http://kallithea.example.com/_admin/api
 
api_user = admin
 
api_key = XXXXXXXXXXXX
 

	
 
ldap_uri = ldap://your.ldap.server:389
 
ldap_user = cn=kallithea,ou=binders,dc=linaro,dc=org
 
ldap_uri = ldap://ldap.example.com:389
 
ldap_user = cn=kallithea,dc=example,dc=com
 
ldap_key = XXXXXXXXX
 
base_dn = dc=linaro,dc=org
 
base_dn = dc=example,dc=com
 

	
 
sync_users = True
 
\ No newline at end of file
kallithea/bin/template.ini.mako
Show inline comments
 
@@ -6,97 +6,97 @@
 
<%text>################################################################################</%text>
 

	
 
[DEFAULT]
 
debug = true
 
pdebug = false
 

	
 
<%text>################################################################################</%text>
 
<%text>## Email settings                                                             ##</%text>
 
<%text>##                                                                            ##</%text>
 
<%text>## Refer to the documentation ("Email settings") for more details.            ##</%text>
 
<%text>##                                                                            ##</%text>
 
<%text>## It is recommended to use a valid sender address that passes access         ##</%text>
 
<%text>## validation and spam filtering in mail servers.                             ##</%text>
 
<%text>################################################################################</%text>
 

	
 
<%text>## 'From' header for application emails. You can optionally add a name.</%text>
 
<%text>## Default:</%text>
 
#app_email_from = Kallithea
 
<%text>## Examples:</%text>
 
#app_email_from = Kallithea <kallithea-noreply@example.com>
 
#app_email_from = kallithea-noreply@example.com
 

	
 
<%text>## Subject prefix for application emails.</%text>
 
<%text>## A space between this prefix and the real subject is automatically added.</%text>
 
<%text>## Default:</%text>
 
#email_prefix =
 
<%text>## Example:</%text>
 
#email_prefix = [Kallithea]
 

	
 
<%text>## Recipients for error emails and fallback recipients of application mails.</%text>
 
<%text>## Multiple addresses can be specified, space-separated.</%text>
 
<%text>## Only addresses are allowed, do not add any name part.</%text>
 
<%text>## Default:</%text>
 
#email_to =
 
<%text>## Examples:</%text>
 
#email_to = admin@example.com
 
#email_to = admin@example.com another_admin@example.com
 

	
 
<%text>## 'From' header for error emails. You can optionally add a name.</%text>
 
<%text>## Default:</%text>
 
#error_email_from = pylons@yourapp.com
 
<%text>## Examples:</%text>
 
#error_email_from = Kallithea Errors <kallithea-noreply@example.com>
 
#error_email_from = paste_error@example.com
 

	
 
<%text>## SMTP server settings</%text>
 
<%text>## Only smtp_server is mandatory. All other settings take the specified default</%text>
 
<%text>## values.</%text>
 
#smtp_server = mail.server.com
 
#smtp_server = smtp.example.com
 
#smtp_username =
 
#smtp_password =
 
#smtp_port = 25
 
#smtp_use_tls = false
 
#smtp_use_ssl = false
 
<%text>## SMTP authentication parameters to use (e.g. LOGIN PLAIN CRAM-MD5, etc.).</%text>
 
<%text>## If empty, use any of the authentication parameters supported by the server.</%text>
 
#smtp_auth =
 

	
 
[server:main]
 
%if http_server == 'paste':
 
<%text>## PASTE ##</%text>
 
use = egg:Paste#http
 
<%text>## nr of worker threads to spawn</%text>
 
threadpool_workers = 5
 
<%text>## max request before thread respawn</%text>
 
threadpool_max_requests = 10
 
<%text>## option to use threads of process</%text>
 
use_threadpool = true
 

	
 
%elif http_server == 'waitress':
 
<%text>## WAITRESS ##</%text>
 
use = egg:waitress#main
 
<%text>## number of worker threads</%text>
 
threads = 5
 
<%text>## MAX BODY SIZE 100GB</%text>
 
max_request_body_size = 107374182400
 
<%text>## use poll instead of select, fixes fd limits, may not work on old</%text>
 
<%text>## windows systems.</%text>
 
#asyncore_use_poll = True
 

	
 
%elif http_server == 'gunicorn':
 
<%text>## GUNICORN ##</%text>
 
use = egg:gunicorn#main
 
<%text>## number of process workers. You must set `instance_id = *` when this option</%text>
 
<%text>## is set to more than one worker</%text>
 
workers = 1
 
<%text>## process name</%text>
 
proc_name = kallithea
 
<%text>## type of worker class, one of sync, eventlet, gevent, tornado</%text>
 
<%text>## recommended for bigger setup is using of of other than sync one</%text>
 
worker_class = sync
 
max_requests = 1000
 
<%text>## ammount of time a worker can handle request before it gets killed and</%text>
 
<%text>## restarted</%text>
 
timeout = 3600
 

	
 
%elif http_server == 'uwsgi':
 
@@ -181,146 +181,146 @@ static_files = true
 
<%text>## cs de fr hu ja nl_BE pl pt_BR ru sk zh_CN zh_TW</%text>
 
lang =
 
cache_dir = ${here}/data
 
index_dir = ${here}/data/index
 

	
 
<%text>## perform a full repository scan on each server start, this should be</%text>
 
<%text>## set to false after first startup, to allow faster server restarts.</%text>
 
initial_repo_scan = false
 

	
 
<%text>## uncomment and set this path to use archive download cache</%text>
 
archive_cache_dir = ${here}/tarballcache
 

	
 
<%text>## change this to unique ID for security</%text>
 
app_instance_uuid = ${uuid()}
 

	
 
<%text>## cut off limit for large diffs (size in bytes)</%text>
 
cut_off_limit = 256000
 

	
 
<%text>## use cache version of scm repo everywhere</%text>
 
vcs_full_cache = true
 

	
 
<%text>## force https in Kallithea, fixes https redirects, assumes it's always https</%text>
 
force_https = false
 

	
 
<%text>## use Strict-Transport-Security headers</%text>
 
use_htsts = false
 

	
 
<%text>## number of commits stats will parse on each iteration</%text>
 
commit_parse_limit = 25
 

	
 
<%text>## path to git executable</%text>
 
git_path = git
 

	
 
<%text>## git rev filter option, --all is the default filter, if you need to</%text>
 
<%text>## hide all refs in changelog switch this to --branches --tags</%text>
 
#git_rev_filter = --branches --tags
 

	
 
<%text>## RSS feed options</%text>
 
rss_cut_off_limit = 256000
 
rss_items_per_page = 10
 
rss_include_diff = false
 

	
 
<%text>## options for showing and identifying changesets</%text>
 
show_sha_length = 12
 
show_revision_number = false
 

	
 
<%text>## gist URL alias, used to create nicer urls for gist. This should be an</%text>
 
<%text>## url that does rewrites to _admin/gists/<gistid>.</%text>
 
<%text>## example: http://gist.kallithea.server/{gistid}. Empty means use the internal</%text>
 
<%text>## Kallithea url, ie. http[s]://your.kallithea.server/_admin/gists/<gistid></%text>
 
<%text>## example: http://gist.example.com/{gistid}. Empty means use the internal</%text>
 
<%text>## Kallithea url, ie. http[s]://kallithea.example.com/_admin/gists/<gistid></%text>
 
gist_alias_url =
 

	
 
<%text>## white list of API enabled controllers. This allows to add list of</%text>
 
<%text>## controllers to which access will be enabled by api_key. eg: to enable</%text>
 
<%text>## api access to raw_files put `FilesController:raw`, to enable access to patches</%text>
 
<%text>## add `ChangesetController:changeset_patch`. This list should be "," separated</%text>
 
<%text>## Syntax is <ControllerClass>:<function>. Check debug logs for generated names</%text>
 
<%text>## Recommended settings below are commented out:</%text>
 
api_access_controllers_whitelist =
 
#    ChangesetController:changeset_patch,
 
#    ChangesetController:changeset_raw,
 
#    FilesController:raw,
 
#    FilesController:archivefile
 

	
 
<%text>## default encoding used to convert from and to unicode</%text>
 
<%text>## can be also a comma seperated list of encoding in case of mixed encodings</%text>
 
default_encoding = utf8
 

	
 
<%text>## issue tracker for Kallithea (leave blank to disable, absent for default)</%text>
 
#bugtracker = https://bitbucket.org/conservancy/kallithea/issues
 

	
 
<%text>## issue tracking mapping for commits messages</%text>
 
<%text>## comment out issue_pat, issue_server, issue_prefix to enable</%text>
 

	
 
<%text>## pattern to get the issues from commit messages</%text>
 
<%text>## default one used here is #<numbers> with a regex passive group for `#`</%text>
 
<%text>## {id} will be all groups matched from this pattern</%text>
 

	
 
issue_pat = (?:\s*#)(\d+)
 

	
 
<%text>## server url to the issue, each {id} will be replaced with match</%text>
 
<%text>## fetched from the regex and {repo} is replaced with full repository name</%text>
 
<%text>## including groups {repo_name} is replaced with just name of repo</%text>
 

	
 
issue_server_link = https://myissueserver.com/{repo}/issue/{id}
 
issue_server_link = https://issues.example.com/{repo}/issue/{id}
 

	
 
<%text>## prefix to add to link to indicate it's an url</%text>
 
<%text>## #314 will be replaced by <issue_prefix><id></%text>
 

	
 
issue_prefix = #
 

	
 
<%text>## issue_pat, issue_server_link, issue_prefix can have suffixes to specify</%text>
 
<%text>## multiple patterns, to other issues server, wiki or others</%text>
 
<%text>## below an example how to create a wiki pattern</%text>
 
# wiki-some-id -> https://mywiki.com/some-id
 
# wiki-some-id -> https://wiki.example.com/some-id
 

	
 
#issue_pat_wiki = (?:wiki-)(.+)
 
#issue_server_link_wiki = https://mywiki.com/{id}
 
#issue_server_link_wiki = https://wiki.example.com/{id}
 
#issue_prefix_wiki = WIKI-
 

	
 
<%text>## instance-id prefix</%text>
 
<%text>## a prefix key for this instance used for cache invalidation when running</%text>
 
<%text>## multiple instances of kallithea, make sure it's globally unique for</%text>
 
<%text>## all running kallithea instances. Leave empty if you don't use it</%text>
 
instance_id =
 

	
 
<%text>## alternative return HTTP header for failed authentication. Default HTTP</%text>
 
<%text>## response is 401 HTTPUnauthorized. Currently Mercurial clients have trouble with</%text>
 
<%text>## handling that. Set this variable to 403 to return HTTPForbidden</%text>
 
auth_ret_code =
 

	
 
<%text>## locking return code. When repository is locked return this HTTP code. 2XX</%text>
 
<%text>## codes don't break the transactions while 4XX codes do</%text>
 
lock_ret_code = 423
 

	
 
<%text>## allows to change the repository location in settings page</%text>
 
allow_repo_location_change = True
 

	
 
<%text>## allows to setup custom hooks in settings page</%text>
 
allow_custom_hooks_settings = True
 

	
 
<%text>####################################</%text>
 
<%text>###        CELERY CONFIG        ####</%text>
 
<%text>####################################</%text>
 

	
 
use_celery = false
 
broker.host = localhost
 
broker.vhost = rabbitmqhost
 
broker.port = 5672
 
broker.user = rabbitmq
 
broker.password = qweqwe
 

	
 
celery.imports = kallithea.lib.celerylib.tasks
 

	
 
celery.result.backend = amqp
 
celery.result.dburi = amqp://
 
celery.result.serialier = json
 

	
 
#celery.send.task.error.emails = true
 
#celery.amqp.task.result.expires = 18000
 

	
 
celeryd.concurrency = 2
 
#celeryd.log.file = celeryd.log
 
celeryd.log.level = DEBUG
 
celeryd.max.tasks.per.child = 1
 

	
kallithea/config/deployment.ini_tmpl
Show inline comments
 
@@ -7,97 +7,97 @@
 
################################################################################
 

	
 
[DEFAULT]
 
debug = true
 
pdebug = false
 

	
 
################################################################################
 
## Email settings                                                             ##
 
##                                                                            ##
 
## Refer to the documentation ("Email settings") for more details.            ##
 
##                                                                            ##
 
## It is recommended to use a valid sender address that passes access         ##
 
## validation and spam filtering in mail servers.                             ##
 
################################################################################
 

	
 
## 'From' header for application emails. You can optionally add a name.
 
## Default:
 
#app_email_from = Kallithea
 
## Examples:
 
#app_email_from = Kallithea <kallithea-noreply@example.com>
 
#app_email_from = kallithea-noreply@example.com
 

	
 
## Subject prefix for application emails.
 
## A space between this prefix and the real subject is automatically added.
 
## Default:
 
#email_prefix =
 
## Example:
 
#email_prefix = [Kallithea]
 

	
 
## Recipients for error emails and fallback recipients of application mails.
 
## Multiple addresses can be specified, space-separated.
 
## Only addresses are allowed, do not add any name part.
 
## Default:
 
#email_to =
 
## Examples:
 
#email_to = admin@example.com
 
#email_to = admin@example.com another_admin@example.com
 

	
 
## 'From' header for error emails. You can optionally add a name.
 
## Default:
 
#error_email_from = pylons@yourapp.com
 
## Examples:
 
#error_email_from = Kallithea Errors <kallithea-noreply@example.com>
 
#error_email_from = paste_error@example.com
 

	
 
## SMTP server settings
 
## Only smtp_server is mandatory. All other settings take the specified default
 
## values.
 
#smtp_server = mail.server.com
 
#smtp_server = smtp.example.com
 
#smtp_username =
 
#smtp_password =
 
#smtp_port = 25
 
#smtp_use_tls = false
 
#smtp_use_ssl = false
 
## SMTP authentication parameters to use (e.g. LOGIN PLAIN CRAM-MD5, etc.).
 
## If empty, use any of the authentication parameters supported by the server.
 
#smtp_auth =
 

	
 
[server:main]
 
## PASTE ##
 
#use = egg:Paste#http
 
## nr of worker threads to spawn
 
#threadpool_workers = 5
 
## max request before thread respawn
 
#threadpool_max_requests = 10
 
## option to use threads of process
 
#use_threadpool = true
 

	
 
## WAITRESS ##
 
use = egg:waitress#main
 
## number of worker threads
 
threads = 5
 
## MAX BODY SIZE 100GB
 
max_request_body_size = 107374182400
 
## use poll instead of select, fixes fd limits, may not work on old
 
## windows systems.
 
#asyncore_use_poll = True
 

	
 
## GUNICORN ##
 
#use = egg:gunicorn#main
 
## number of process workers. You must set `instance_id = *` when this option
 
## is set to more than one worker
 
#workers = 1
 
## process name
 
#proc_name = kallithea
 
## type of worker class, one of sync, eventlet, gevent, tornado
 
## recommended for bigger setup is using of of other than sync one
 
#worker_class = sync
 
#max_requests = 1000
 
## ammount of time a worker can handle request before it gets killed and
 
## restarted
 
#timeout = 3600
 

	
 
## UWSGI ##
 
## run with uwsgi --ini-paste-logged <inifile.ini>
 
#[uwsgi]
 
#socket = /tmp/uwsgi.sock
 
@@ -177,146 +177,146 @@ static_files = true
 
## cs de fr hu ja nl_BE pl pt_BR ru sk zh_CN zh_TW
 
lang =
 
cache_dir = %(here)s/data
 
index_dir = %(here)s/data/index
 

	
 
## perform a full repository scan on each server start, this should be
 
## set to false after first startup, to allow faster server restarts.
 
initial_repo_scan = false
 

	
 
## uncomment and set this path to use archive download cache
 
archive_cache_dir = %(here)s/tarballcache
 

	
 
## change this to unique ID for security
 
app_instance_uuid = ${app_instance_uuid}
 

	
 
## cut off limit for large diffs (size in bytes)
 
cut_off_limit = 256000
 

	
 
## use cache version of scm repo everywhere
 
vcs_full_cache = true
 

	
 
## force https in Kallithea, fixes https redirects, assumes it's always https
 
force_https = false
 

	
 
## use Strict-Transport-Security headers
 
use_htsts = false
 

	
 
## number of commits stats will parse on each iteration
 
commit_parse_limit = 25
 

	
 
## path to git executable
 
git_path = git
 

	
 
## git rev filter option, --all is the default filter, if you need to
 
## hide all refs in changelog switch this to --branches --tags
 
#git_rev_filter = --branches --tags
 

	
 
## RSS feed options
 
rss_cut_off_limit = 256000
 
rss_items_per_page = 10
 
rss_include_diff = false
 

	
 
## options for showing and identifying changesets
 
show_sha_length = 12
 
show_revision_number = false
 

	
 
## gist URL alias, used to create nicer urls for gist. This should be an
 
## url that does rewrites to _admin/gists/<gistid>.
 
## example: http://gist.kallithea.server/{gistid}. Empty means use the internal
 
## Kallithea url, ie. http[s]://your.kallithea.server/_admin/gists/<gistid>
 
## example: http://gist.example.com/{gistid}. Empty means use the internal
 
## Kallithea url, ie. http[s]://kallithea.example.com/_admin/gists/<gistid>
 
gist_alias_url =
 

	
 
## white list of API enabled controllers. This allows to add list of
 
## controllers to which access will be enabled by api_key. eg: to enable
 
## api access to raw_files put `FilesController:raw`, to enable access to patches
 
## add `ChangesetController:changeset_patch`. This list should be "," separated
 
## Syntax is <ControllerClass>:<function>. Check debug logs for generated names
 
## Recommended settings below are commented out:
 
api_access_controllers_whitelist =
 
#    ChangesetController:changeset_patch,
 
#    ChangesetController:changeset_raw,
 
#    FilesController:raw,
 
#    FilesController:archivefile
 

	
 
## default encoding used to convert from and to unicode
 
## can be also a comma seperated list of encoding in case of mixed encodings
 
default_encoding = utf8
 

	
 
## issue tracker for Kallithea (leave blank to disable, absent for default)
 
#bugtracker = https://bitbucket.org/conservancy/kallithea/issues
 

	
 
## issue tracking mapping for commits messages
 
## comment out issue_pat, issue_server, issue_prefix to enable
 

	
 
## pattern to get the issues from commit messages
 
## default one used here is #<numbers> with a regex passive group for `#`
 
## {id} will be all groups matched from this pattern
 

	
 
issue_pat = (?:\s*#)(\d+)
 

	
 
## server url to the issue, each {id} will be replaced with match
 
## fetched from the regex and {repo} is replaced with full repository name
 
## including groups {repo_name} is replaced with just name of repo
 

	
 
issue_server_link = https://myissueserver.com/{repo}/issue/{id}
 
issue_server_link = https://issues.example.com/{repo}/issue/{id}
 

	
 
## prefix to add to link to indicate it's an url
 
## #314 will be replaced by <issue_prefix><id>
 

	
 
issue_prefix = #
 

	
 
## issue_pat, issue_server_link, issue_prefix can have suffixes to specify
 
## multiple patterns, to other issues server, wiki or others
 
## below an example how to create a wiki pattern
 
# wiki-some-id -> https://mywiki.com/some-id
 
# wiki-some-id -> https://wiki.example.com/some-id
 

	
 
#issue_pat_wiki = (?:wiki-)(.+)
 
#issue_server_link_wiki = https://mywiki.com/{id}
 
#issue_server_link_wiki = https://wiki.example.com/{id}
 
#issue_prefix_wiki = WIKI-
 

	
 
## instance-id prefix
 
## a prefix key for this instance used for cache invalidation when running
 
## multiple instances of kallithea, make sure it's globally unique for
 
## all running kallithea instances. Leave empty if you don't use it
 
instance_id =
 

	
 
## alternative return HTTP header for failed authentication. Default HTTP
 
## response is 401 HTTPUnauthorized. Currently Mercurial clients have trouble with
 
## handling that. Set this variable to 403 to return HTTPForbidden
 
auth_ret_code =
 

	
 
## locking return code. When repository is locked return this HTTP code. 2XX
 
## codes don't break the transactions while 4XX codes do
 
lock_ret_code = 423
 

	
 
## allows to change the repository location in settings page
 
allow_repo_location_change = True
 

	
 
## allows to setup custom hooks in settings page
 
allow_custom_hooks_settings = True
 

	
 
####################################
 
###        CELERY CONFIG        ####
 
####################################
 

	
 
use_celery = false
 
broker.host = localhost
 
broker.vhost = rabbitmqhost
 
broker.port = 5672
 
broker.user = rabbitmq
 
broker.password = qweqwe
 

	
 
celery.imports = kallithea.lib.celerylib.tasks
 

	
 
celery.result.backend = amqp
 
celery.result.dburi = amqp://
 
celery.result.serialier = json
 

	
 
#celery.send.task.error.emails = true
 
#celery.amqp.task.result.expires = 18000
 

	
 
celeryd.concurrency = 2
 
#celeryd.log.file = celeryd.log
 
celeryd.log.level = DEBUG
 
celeryd.max.tasks.per.child = 1
 

	
kallithea/controllers/changelog.py
Show inline comments
 
@@ -53,97 +53,96 @@ def _load_changelog_summary():
 

	
 
    def url_generator(**kw):
 
        return url('changelog_summary_home',
 
                   repo_name=c.db_repo.repo_name, size=size, **kw)
 

	
 
    collection = c.db_repo_scm_instance
 

	
 
    c.repo_changesets = RepoPage(collection, page=p,
 
                                 items_per_page=size,
 
                                 url=url_generator)
 
    page_revisions = [x.raw_id for x in list(c.repo_changesets)]
 
    c.comments = c.db_repo.get_comments(page_revisions)
 
    c.statuses = c.db_repo.statuses(page_revisions)
 

	
 

	
 
class ChangelogController(BaseRepoController):
 

	
 
    def __before__(self):
 
        super(ChangelogController, self).__before__()
 
        c.affected_files_cut_off = 60
 

	
 
    @staticmethod
 
    def __get_cs(rev, repo):
 
        """
 
        Safe way to get changeset. If error occur fail with error message.
 

	
 
        :param rev: revision to fetch
 
        :param repo: repo instance
 
        """
 

	
 
        try:
 
            return c.db_repo_scm_instance.get_changeset(rev)
 
        except EmptyRepositoryError as e:
 
            h.flash(h.literal(_('There are no changesets yet')),
 
                    category='error')
 
        except RepositoryError as e:
 
            log.error(traceback.format_exc())
 
            h.flash(safe_str(e), category='error')
 
        raise HTTPBadRequest()
 

	
 
    @LoginRequired()
 
    @HasRepoPermissionAnyDecorator('repository.read', 'repository.write',
 
                                   'repository.admin')
 
    def index(self, repo_name, revision=None, f_path=None):
 
        # Fix URL after page size form submission via GET
 
        # TODO: Somehow just don't send this extra junk in the GET URL
 
        if request.GET.get('set'):
 
            request.GET.pop('set', None)
 
            request.GET.pop('_authentication_token', None)
 
            if revision is None:
 
                return redirect(url('changelog_home', repo_name=repo_name, **request.GET))
 
            return redirect(url('changelog_file_home', repo_name=repo_name, revision=revision, f_path=f_path, **request.GET))
 

	
 
        limit = 2000
 
        default = 100
 
        if request.GET.get('size'):
 
            c.size = max(min(safe_int(request.GET.get('size')), limit), 1)
 
            session['changelog_size'] = c.size
 
            session.save()
 
        else:
 
            c.size = int(session.get('changelog_size', default))
 
        # min size must be 1
 
        c.size = max(c.size, 1)
 
        p = safe_int(request.GET.get('page', 1), 1)
 
        branch_name = request.GET.get('branch', None)
 
        if (branch_name and
 
            branch_name not in c.db_repo_scm_instance.branches and
 
            branch_name not in c.db_repo_scm_instance.closed_branches and
 
            not revision):
 
            return redirect(url('changelog_file_home', repo_name=c.repo_name,
 
                                    revision=branch_name, f_path=f_path or ''))
 

	
 
        if revision == 'tip':
 
            revision = None
 

	
 
        c.changelog_for_path = f_path
 
        try:
 

	
 
            if f_path:
 
                log.debug('generating changelog for path %s', f_path)
 
                # get the history for the file !
 
                tip_cs = c.db_repo_scm_instance.get_changeset()
 
                try:
 
                    collection = tip_cs.get_file_history(f_path)
 
                except (NodeDoesNotExistError, ChangesetError):
 
                    #this node is not present at tip !
 
                    try:
 
                        cs = self.__get_cs(revision, repo_name)
 
                        collection = cs.get_file_history(f_path)
 
                    except RepositoryError as e:
 
                        h.flash(safe_str(e), category='warning')
 
                        redirect(h.url('changelog_home', repo_name=repo_name))
 
                collection = list(reversed(collection))
 
            else:
 
                collection = c.db_repo_scm_instance.get_changesets(start=0, end=revision,
 
                                                        branch_name=branch_name)
 
            c.total_cs = len(collection)
kallithea/controllers/login.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/>.
 
"""
 
kallithea.controllers.login
 
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
 

	
 
Login controller for Kallithea
 

	
 
This file was forked by the Kallithea project in July 2014.
 
Original author and date, and relevant copyright and licensing information is below:
 
:created_on: Apr 22, 2010
 
:author: marcink
 
:copyright: (c) 2013 RhodeCode GmbH, and others.
 
:license: GPLv3, see LICENSE.md for more details.
 
"""
 

	
 

	
 
import logging
 
import re
 
import formencode
 
import urlparse
 

	
 
from formencode import htmlfill
 
from webob.exc import HTTPFound, HTTPBadRequest
 
from pylons.i18n.translation import _
 
from pylons.controllers.util import redirect
 
from pylons import request, session, tmpl_context as c, url
 

	
 
import kallithea.lib.helpers as h
 
from kallithea.lib.auth import AuthUser, HasPermissionAnyDecorator
 
from kallithea.lib.base import BaseController, log_in_user, render
 
from kallithea.lib.exceptions import UserCreationError
 
from kallithea.lib.utils2 import safe_str
 
from kallithea.model.db import User, Setting
 
from kallithea.model.forms import \
 
    LoginForm, RegisterForm, PasswordResetRequestForm, PasswordResetConfirmationForm
 
from kallithea.model.user import UserModel
 
from kallithea.model.meta import Session
 

	
 

	
 
log = logging.getLogger(__name__)
 

	
 

	
 
class LoginController(BaseController):
 

	
 
    def __before__(self):
 
        super(LoginController, self).__before__()
 

	
 
    def _validate_came_from(self, came_from):
 
        """Return True if came_from is valid and can and should be used"""
 
        if not came_from:
 
            return False
 
    def _validate_came_from(self, came_from,
 
            _re=re.compile(r"/(?!/)[-!#$%&'()*+,./:;=?@_~0-9A-Za-z]*$")):
 
        """Return True if came_from is valid and can and should be used.
 

	
 
        Determines if a URI reference is valid and relative to the origin;
 
        or in RFC 3986 terms, whether it matches this production:
 

	
 
        parsed = urlparse.urlparse(came_from)
 
        server_parsed = urlparse.urlparse(url.current())
 
        allowed_schemes = ['http', 'https']
 
        if parsed.scheme and parsed.scheme not in allowed_schemes:
 
            log.error('Suspicious URL scheme detected %s for url %s',
 
                     parsed.scheme, parsed)
 
            return False
 
        if server_parsed.netloc != parsed.netloc:
 
            log.error('Suspicious NETLOC detected %s for url %s server url '
 
                      'is: %s' % (parsed.netloc, parsed, server_parsed))
 
            return False
 
        return True
 
          origin-relative-ref = path-absolute [ "?" query ] [ "#" fragment ]
 

	
 
    def _redirect_to_origin(self, origin):
 
        '''redirect to the original page, preserving any get arguments given'''
 
        request.GET.pop('came_from', None)
 
        raise HTTPFound(location=url(origin, **request.GET))
 
        with the exception that '%' escapes are not validated and '#' is
 
        allowed inside the fragment part.
 
        """
 
        return _re.match(came_from) is not None
 

	
 
    def index(self):
 
        c.came_from = safe_str(request.GET.get('came_from', ''))
 
        if not self._validate_came_from(c.came_from):
 
        if c.came_from:
 
            if not self._validate_came_from(c.came_from):
 
                log.error('Invalid came_from (not server-relative): %r', c.came_from)
 
                raise HTTPBadRequest()
 
        else:
 
            c.came_from = url('home')
 

	
 
        not_default = self.authuser.username != User.DEFAULT_USER
 
        ip_allowed = AuthUser.check_ip_allowed(self.authuser, self.ip_addr)
 

	
 
        # redirect if already logged in
 
        if self.authuser.is_authenticated and not_default and ip_allowed:
 
            return self._redirect_to_origin(c.came_from)
 
            raise HTTPFound(location=c.came_from)
 

	
 
        if request.POST:
 
            # import Login Form validator class
 
            login_form = LoginForm()
 
            try:
 
                c.form_result = login_form.to_python(dict(request.POST))
 
                # form checks for username/password, now we're authenticated
 
                username = c.form_result['username']
 
                user = User.get_by_username(username, case_insensitive=True)
 
            except formencode.Invalid as errors:
 
                defaults = errors.value
 
                # remove password from filling in form again
 
                del defaults['password']
 
                return htmlfill.render(
 
                    render('/login.html'),
 
                    defaults=errors.value,
 
                    errors=errors.error_dict or {},
 
                    prefix_error=False,
 
                    encoding="UTF-8",
 
                    force_defaults=False)
 
            except UserCreationError as e:
 
                # container auth or other auth functions that create users on
 
                # the fly can throw this exception signaling that there's issue
 
                # with user creation, explanation should be provided in
 
                # Exception itself
 
                h.flash(e, 'error')
 
            else:
 
                log_in_user(user, c.form_result['remember'],
 
                    is_external_auth=False)
 
                return self._redirect_to_origin(c.came_from)
 
                raise HTTPFound(location=c.came_from)
 

	
 
        return render('/login.html')
 

	
 
    @HasPermissionAnyDecorator('hg.admin', 'hg.register.auto_activate',
 
                               'hg.register.manual_activate')
 
    def register(self):
 
        c.auto_active = 'hg.register.auto_activate' in User.get_default_user()\
 
            .AuthUser.permissions['global']
 

	
 
        settings = Setting.get_app_settings()
 
        captcha_private_key = settings.get('captcha_private_key')
 
        c.captcha_active = bool(captcha_private_key)
 
        c.captcha_public_key = settings.get('captcha_public_key')
 

	
 
        if request.POST:
 
            register_form = RegisterForm()()
 
            try:
 
                form_result = register_form.to_python(dict(request.POST))
 
                form_result['active'] = c.auto_active
 

	
 
                if c.captcha_active:
 
                    from kallithea.lib.recaptcha import submit
 
                    response = submit(request.POST.get('recaptcha_challenge_field'),
 
                                      request.POST.get('recaptcha_response_field'),
 
                                      private_key=captcha_private_key,
 
                                      remoteip=self.ip_addr)
 
                    if c.captcha_active and not response.is_valid:
 
                        _value = form_result
 
                        _msg = _('Bad captcha')
 
                        error_dict = {'recaptcha_field': _msg}
 
                        raise formencode.Invalid(_msg, _value, None,
 
                                                 error_dict=error_dict)
 

	
 
                UserModel().create_registration(form_result)
 
                h.flash(_('You have successfully registered into Kallithea'),
 
                        category='success')
 
                Session().commit()
 
                return redirect(url('login_home'))
 

	
 
            except formencode.Invalid as errors:
 
                return htmlfill.render(
 
                    render('/register.html'),
 
                    defaults=errors.value,
 
                    errors=errors.error_dict or {},
 
                    prefix_error=False,
 
                    encoding="UTF-8",
 
                    force_defaults=False)
 
            except UserCreationError as e:
kallithea/controllers/pullrequests.py
Show inline comments
 
@@ -457,212 +457,214 @@ class PullrequestsController(BaseRepoCon
 
                    category='error')
 
            log.error(traceback.format_exc())
 
            return redirect(old_pull_request.url())
 

	
 
        ChangesetCommentsModel().create(
 
            text=_('Closed, replaced by %s .') % pull_request.url(canonical=True),
 
            repo=old_pull_request.other_repo.repo_id,
 
            user=c.authuser.user_id,
 
            pull_request=old_pull_request.pull_request_id,
 
            closing_pr=True)
 
        PullRequestModel().close_pull_request(old_pull_request.pull_request_id)
 

	
 
        Session().commit()
 
        h.flash(_('Pull request update created'),
 
                category='success')
 

	
 
        return redirect(pull_request.url())
 

	
 
    # pullrequest_post for PR editing
 
    @LoginRequired()
 
    @NotAnonymous()
 
    @HasRepoPermissionAnyDecorator('repository.read', 'repository.write',
 
                                   'repository.admin')
 
    def post(self, repo_name, pull_request_id):
 
        pull_request = PullRequest.get_or_404(pull_request_id)
 
        if pull_request.is_closed():
 
            raise HTTPForbidden()
 
        assert pull_request.other_repo.repo_name == repo_name
 
        #only owner or admin can update it
 
        owner = pull_request.owner.user_id == c.authuser.user_id
 
        repo_admin = h.HasRepoPermissionAny('repository.admin')(c.repo_name)
 
        if not (h.HasPermissionAny('hg.admin') or repo_admin or owner):
 
            raise HTTPForbidden()
 

	
 
        _form = PullRequestPostForm()().to_python(request.POST)
 
        reviewers_ids = [int(s) for s in _form['review_members']]
 

	
 
        if _form['updaterev']:
 
            return self.create_update(pull_request,
 
                                      _form['updaterev'],
 
                                      _form['pullrequest_title'],
 
                                      _form['pullrequest_desc'],
 
                                      reviewers_ids)
 

	
 
        old_description = pull_request.description
 
        pull_request.title = _form['pullrequest_title']
 
        pull_request.description = _form['pullrequest_desc'].strip() or _('No description')
 
        pull_request.owner = User.get_by_username(_form['owner'])
 
        user = User.get(c.authuser.user_id)
 
        try:
 
            PullRequestModel().mention_from_description(pull_request, old_description)
 
            PullRequestModel().update_reviewers(pull_request_id, reviewers_ids)
 
            PullRequestModel().mention_from_description(user, pull_request, old_description)
 
            PullRequestModel().update_reviewers(user, pull_request_id, reviewers_ids)
 
        except UserInvalidException as u:
 
            h.flash(_('Invalid reviewer "%s" specified') % u, category='error')
 
            raise HTTPBadRequest()
 

	
 
        Session().commit()
 
        h.flash(_('Pull request updated'), category='success')
 

	
 
        return redirect(pull_request.url())
 

	
 
    @LoginRequired()
 
    @NotAnonymous()
 
    @HasRepoPermissionAnyDecorator('repository.read', 'repository.write',
 
                                   'repository.admin')
 
    @jsonify
 
    def delete(self, repo_name, pull_request_id):
 
        pull_request = PullRequest.get_or_404(pull_request_id)
 
        #only owner can delete it !
 
        if pull_request.owner.user_id == c.authuser.user_id:
 
            PullRequestModel().delete(pull_request)
 
            Session().commit()
 
            h.flash(_('Successfully deleted pull request'),
 
                    category='success')
 
            return redirect(url('my_pullrequests'))
 
        raise HTTPForbidden()
 

	
 
    @LoginRequired()
 
    @HasRepoPermissionAnyDecorator('repository.read', 'repository.write',
 
                                   'repository.admin')
 
    def show(self, repo_name, pull_request_id, extra=None):
 
        repo_model = RepoModel()
 
        c.users_array = repo_model.get_users_js()
 
        c.user_groups_array = repo_model.get_user_groups_js()
 
        c.pull_request = PullRequest.get_or_404(pull_request_id)
 
        c.allowed_to_change_status = self._get_is_allowed_change_status(c.pull_request)
 
        cc_model = ChangesetCommentsModel()
 
        cs_model = ChangesetStatusModel()
 

	
 
        # pull_requests repo_name we opened it against
 
        # ie. other_repo must match
 
        if repo_name != c.pull_request.other_repo.repo_name:
 
            raise HTTPNotFound
 

	
 
        # load compare data into template context
 
        c.cs_repo = c.pull_request.org_repo
 
        (c.cs_ref_type,
 
         c.cs_ref_name,
 
         c.cs_rev) = c.pull_request.org_ref.split(':')
 

	
 
        c.a_repo = c.pull_request.other_repo
 
        (c.a_ref_type,
 
         c.a_ref_name,
 
         c.a_rev) = c.pull_request.other_ref.split(':') # other_rev is ancestor
 

	
 
        org_scm_instance = c.cs_repo.scm_instance # property with expensive cache invalidation check!!!
 
        c.cs_repo = c.cs_repo
 
        c.cs_ranges = [org_scm_instance.get_changeset(x) for x in c.pull_request.revisions]
 
        c.cs_ranges_org = None # not stored and not important and moving target - could be calculated ...
 
        revs = [ctx.revision for ctx in reversed(c.cs_ranges)]
 
        c.jsdata = json.dumps(graph_data(org_scm_instance, revs))
 

	
 
        c.is_range = False
 
        if c.a_ref_type == 'rev': # this looks like a free range where target is ancestor
 
            cs_a = org_scm_instance.get_changeset(c.a_rev)
 
            root_parents = c.cs_ranges[0].parents
 
            c.is_range = cs_a in root_parents
 
            #c.merge_root = len(root_parents) > 1 # a range starting with a merge might deserve a warning
 

	
 
        avail_revs = set()
 
        avail_show = []
 
        c.cs_branch_name = c.cs_ref_name
 
        other_scm_instance = c.a_repo.scm_instance
 
        c.update_msg = ""
 
        c.update_msg_other = ""
 
        if org_scm_instance.alias == 'hg' and c.a_ref_name != 'ancestor':
 
            if c.cs_ref_type != 'branch':
 
                c.cs_branch_name = org_scm_instance.get_changeset(c.cs_ref_name).branch # use ref_type ?
 
            c.a_branch_name = c.a_ref_name
 
            if c.a_ref_type != 'branch':
 
                try:
 
                    c.a_branch_name = other_scm_instance.get_changeset(c.a_ref_name).branch # use ref_type ?
 
                except EmptyRepositoryError:
 
                    c.a_branch_name = 'null' # not a branch name ... but close enough
 
            # candidates: descendants of old head that are on the right branch
 
            #             and not are the old head itself ...
 
            #             and nothing at all if old head is a descendant of target ref name
 
            if other_scm_instance._repo.revs('present(%s)::&%s', c.cs_ranges[-1].raw_id, c.a_branch_name):
 
            if not c.is_range and other_scm_instance._repo.revs('present(%s)::&%s', c.cs_ranges[-1].raw_id, c.a_branch_name):
 
                c.update_msg = _('This pull request has already been merged to %s.') % c.a_branch_name
 
            elif c.pull_request.is_closed():
 
                c.update_msg = _('This pull request has been closed and can not be updated.')
 
            else: # look for descendants of PR head on source branch in org repo
 
                avail_revs = org_scm_instance._repo.revs('%s:: & branch(%s)',
 
                                                         revs[0], c.cs_branch_name)
 
                if len(avail_revs) > 1: # more than just revs[0]
 
                    # also show changesets that not are descendants but would be merged in
 
                    targethead = other_scm_instance.get_changeset(c.a_branch_name).raw_id
 
                    if org_scm_instance.path != other_scm_instance.path:
 
                        # Note: org_scm_instance.path must come first so all
 
                        # valid revision numbers are 100% org_scm compatible
 
                        # - both for avail_revs and for revset results
 
                        hgrepo = unionrepo.unionrepository(org_scm_instance.baseui,
 
                                                           org_scm_instance.path,
 
                                                           other_scm_instance.path)
 
                    else:
 
                        hgrepo = org_scm_instance._repo
 
                    show = set(hgrepo.revs('::%ld & !::%s & !::%s',
 
                                           avail_revs, revs[0], targethead))
 
                    c.update_msg = _('This pull request can be updated with changes on %s:') % c.cs_branch_name
 
                else:
 
                    show = set()
 
                    avail_revs = set() # drop revs[0]
 
                    c.update_msg = _('No changesets found for updating this pull request.')
 

	
 
                # TODO: handle branch heads that not are tip-most
 
                brevs = org_scm_instance._repo.revs('%s - %ld', c.cs_branch_name, avail_revs)
 
                brevs = org_scm_instance._repo.revs('%s - %ld - %s', c.cs_branch_name, avail_revs, revs[0])
 
                if brevs:
 
                    # also show changesets that are on branch but neither ancestors nor descendants
 
                    show.update(org_scm_instance._repo.revs('::%ld - ::%ld - ::%s', brevs, avail_revs, c.a_branch_name))
 
                    show.add(revs[0]) # make sure graph shows this so we can see how they relate
 
                    c.update_msg_other = _('Note: Branch %s has another head: %s.') % (c.cs_branch_name,
 
                        h.short_id(org_scm_instance.get_changeset((max(brevs))).raw_id))
 

	
 
                avail_show = sorted(show, reverse=True)
 

	
 
        elif org_scm_instance.alias == 'git':
 
            c.update_msg = _("Git pull requests don't support updates yet.")
 

	
 
        c.avail_revs = avail_revs
 
        c.avail_cs = [org_scm_instance.get_changeset(r) for r in avail_show]
 
        c.avail_jsdata = json.dumps(graph_data(org_scm_instance, avail_show))
 

	
 
        raw_ids = [x.raw_id for x in c.cs_ranges]
 
        c.cs_comments = c.cs_repo.get_comments(raw_ids)
 
        c.statuses = c.cs_repo.statuses(raw_ids)
 

	
 
        ignore_whitespace = request.GET.get('ignorews') == '1'
 
        line_context = request.GET.get('context', 3)
 
        c.ignorews_url = _ignorews_url
 
        c.context_url = _context_url
 
        c.fulldiff = request.GET.get('fulldiff')
 
        diff_limit = self.cut_off_limit if not c.fulldiff else None
 

	
 
        # we swap org/other ref since we run a simple diff on one repo
 
        log.debug('running diff between %s and %s in %s',
 
                  c.a_rev, c.cs_rev, org_scm_instance.path)
 
        txtdiff = org_scm_instance.get_diff(rev1=safe_str(c.a_rev), rev2=safe_str(c.cs_rev),
 
                                      ignore_whitespace=ignore_whitespace,
 
                                      context=line_context)
 

	
 
        diff_processor = diffs.DiffProcessor(txtdiff or '', format='gitdiff',
 
                                             diff_limit=diff_limit)
 
        _parsed = diff_processor.prepare()
 

	
 
        c.limited_diff = False
 
        if isinstance(_parsed, LimitedDiffContainer):
 
            c.limited_diff = True
 

	
 
        c.files = []
 
        c.changes = {}
 
        c.lines_added = 0
 
        c.lines_deleted = 0
 

	
 
        for f in _parsed:
kallithea/controllers/summary.py
Show inline comments
 
@@ -150,79 +150,80 @@ class SummaryController(BaseRepoControll
 

	
 
            c.trending_languages = json.dumps(
 
                sorted(lang_stats, reverse=True, key=lambda k: k[1])[:10]
 
            )
 
        else:
 
            c.no_data = True
 
            c.trending_languages = json.dumps([])
 

	
 
        c.enable_downloads = c.db_repo.enable_downloads
 
        c.readme_data, c.readme_file = \
 
            self.__get_readme_data(c.db_repo)
 
        return render('summary/summary.html')
 

	
 
    @LoginRequired()
 
    @NotAnonymous()
 
    @HasRepoPermissionAnyDecorator('repository.read', 'repository.write',
 
                                   'repository.admin')
 
    @jsonify
 
    def repo_size(self, repo_name):
 
        if request.is_xhr:
 
            return c.db_repo._repo_size()
 
        else:
 
            raise HTTPBadRequest()
 

	
 
    @LoginRequired()
 
    @HasRepoPermissionAnyDecorator('repository.read', 'repository.write',
 
                                   'repository.admin')
 
    def statistics(self, repo_name):
 
        if c.db_repo.enable_statistics:
 
            c.show_stats = True
 
            c.no_data_msg = _('No data ready yet')
 
        else:
 
            c.show_stats = False
 
            c.no_data_msg = _('Statistics are disabled for this repository')
 

	
 
        td = date.today() + timedelta(days=1)
 
        td_1m = td - timedelta(days=calendar.mdays[td.month])
 
        td_1y = td - timedelta(days=365)
 

	
 
        ts_min_m = mktime(td_1m.timetuple())
 
        ts_min_y = mktime(td_1y.timetuple())
 
        ts_max_y = mktime(td.timetuple())
 
        c.ts_min = ts_min_m
 
        c.ts_max = ts_max_y
 

	
 
        stats = self.sa.query(Statistics)\
 
            .filter(Statistics.repository == c.db_repo)\
 
            .scalar()
 
        c.stats_percentage = 0
 
        if stats and stats.languages:
 
            c.no_data = False is c.db_repo.enable_statistics
 
            lang_stats_d = json.loads(stats.languages)
 
            c.commit_data = stats.commit_activity
 
            c.overview_data = stats.commit_activity_combined
 

	
 
            lang_stats = ((x, {"count": y,
 
                               "desc": LANGUAGES_EXTENSIONS_MAP.get(x)})
 
                          for x, y in lang_stats_d.items())
 

	
 
            c.trending_languages = json.dumps(
 
                sorted(lang_stats, reverse=True, key=lambda k: k[1])[:10]
 
            )
 
            last_rev = stats.stat_on_revision + 1
 
            c.repo_last_rev = c.db_repo_scm_instance.count()\
 
                if c.db_repo_scm_instance.revisions else 0
 
            if last_rev == 0 or c.repo_last_rev == 0:
 
                pass
 
            else:
 
                c.stats_percentage = '%.2f' % ((float((last_rev)) /
 
                                                c.repo_last_rev) * 100)
 
        else:
 
            c.commit_data = json.dumps({})
 
            c.overview_data = json.dumps([[ts_min_y, 0], [ts_max_y, 10]])
 
            c.trending_languages = json.dumps({})
 
            c.no_data = True
 

	
 
        recurse_limit = 500  # don't recurse more than 500 times when parsing
 
        run_task(get_commits_stats, c.db_repo.repo_name, ts_min_y,
 
                 ts_max_y, recurse_limit)
 
        return render('summary/statistics.html')

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