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- Installing pagure
- =================
- There are two ways to install pagure:
- * via the RPM package (recommanded if you are using a RPM-based linux distribution)
- * via the setup.py
- Installing pagure via RPM
- -------------------------
- Here as well there are two ways of obtaining the RPM:
- * From the main repositories
- Pagure is packaged for Fedora since Fedora 21 and is available for RHEL and
- its derivative via the `EPEL repository <https://fedoraproject.org/wiki/EPEL>`.
- So installing it is as easy as:
- ::
- dnf install pagure pagure-milters pagure-ev pagure-webhook
- or
- ::
- yum install pagure pagure-milters pagure-ev pagure-webhook
- The ``pagure`` package contains the core of the application and the doc server.
- (See the ``Overview`` page for a global overview of the structure of the
- project).
- The ``pagure-milters`` package contains, as the name says, the milter (a
- mail filter to hook into a MTA).
- The ``pagure-ev`` package contains the eventsource server.
- The ``pagure-webhook`` package contains the web-hook server.
- .. note:: The last three packages are optional, pagure would work fine without
- them but the live-update, the webhook and the comment by email
- services will not work.
- * From the sources
- If you wish to run a newer version of pagure than what is in the repositories
- you can easily rebuild it as RPM.
- Simply follow these steps:
- # Clone the sources::
- git clone https://pagure.io/pagure.git
- # Go to the folder::
- cd pagure
- # Build a tarball of the latest version of pagure::
- python setup.py sdist
- # Build the RPM::
- rpmbuild -ta dist/pagure*.tar.gz
- This will build pagure from the version present in your clone.
- Once, the RPM is installed the services ``pagure_milter`` and ``pagure_ev``
- are ready to be used but the database and the web-application parts still
- need to be configured.
- Installing pagure via setup.py
- ------------------------------
- Pagure includes in its sources a ``setup.py`` automatint the installation
- of the web applications of pagure (ie: the core + the doc server).
- To install pagure via this mechanism simply follow these steps:
- # Clone the sources::
- git clone https://pagure.io/pagure.git
- # Go to the folder::
- cd pagure
- # Install the latest version of pagure::
- python setup.py build
- sudo python setup.py install
- .. note:: To install the eventsource server or the milter, refer to their
- respective documentations.
- # Install the additional files as follow:
- +------------------------------+------------------------------------------+
- | Source | Destination |
- +=============================+===========================================+
- | ``files/pagure.cfg.sample`` | ``/etc/pagure/pagure.cfg`` |
- +------------------------------+------------------------------------------+
- | ``files/alembic.ini`` | ``/etc/pagure/alembic.ini`` |
- +------------------------------+------------------------------------------+
- | ``files/pagure.conf`` | ``/etc/httpd/conf.d/pagure.conf`` |
- +------------------------------+------------------------------------------+
- | ``files/pagure.wsgi`` | ``/usr/share/pagure/pagure.wsgi`` |
- +------------------------------+------------------------------------------+
- | ``createdb.py`` | ``/usr/share/pagure/pagure_createdb.py`` |
- +------------------------------+------------------------------------------+
- Set-up pagure
- -------------
- Once pagure's files are installed, you still need to set up some things.
- * Create the folder release
- This folder is used by project maintainers to upload the tarball of the
- releases of their project.
- This folder must be accessible by the user under which the application is
- running (in our case: ``git``).
- ::
- mkdir -p /var/www/releases
- chown git:git /var/www/releases
- * Create the folders where the repos, forks and checkouts will be stored
- Pagure stores the sources of a project in a git repo, offers a place to
- store the project's documentation in another repo, stores a JSON dump of all
- issues and of all pull-requests in another two repos, and keeps a local
- checkout of remote projects when asked to do remote pull-requests.
- All these repositories are stored in different folders that must be
- created manually.
- For example you can place them under ``/srv/git/repositories/`` which would
- make ``/srv/git`` the home of your gitolite user.
- You would then create the folders with:
- ::
- mkdir /srv/git/repositories/{docs,forks,tickets,requests,remotes}
- * Configure apache
- If installed by RPM, you will find an example apache configuration file
- at: ``/etc/httpd/conf.d/pagure.conf``.
- If not installed by RPM, the example files is present in the sources at:
- ``files/pagure.conf``.
- Adjust it for your needs.
- * Configure the WSGI file
- If you installed by RPM, you will find an example WSGI file at:
- ``/usr/share/pagure/pagure.wsgi`` and ``/usr/share/pagure/docs_pagure.wsgi``
- for the doc server.
- If you did not install by RPM, these files are present in the sources at:
- ``files/pagure.wsgi`` and ``files/doc_pagure.wsgi``.
- Adjust them for your needs
- * Give apache permission to read the repositories owned by the ``git`` user.
- For the sake of this document, we assume that the web application runs under
- the ``git`` user, the same user as your gitolite user, but apache itself
- runs under the ``httpd`` (or ``apache2``) user. So by default, apache
- will not be allowed to read git repositories created and managed by gitolite.
- To give apache this permission (required to make git clone via http work),
- we use file access control lists (aka FACL):
- ::
- setfacl -m user:apache:rx --default
- setfacl -Rdm user:apache:rx /srv/git
- setfacl -Rm user:apache:rx /srv/git
- Where ``/srv/git`` is the home of your gitolite user (which will thus need
- to be adjusted for your configuration).
- * Set up the configuration file of pagure
- This is an important step which concerns the file ``/etc/pagure/pagure.cfg``.
- If you have installed pagure by RPM, this file is already there, otherwise
- you can find an example one in the sources at: ``files/pagure.cfg.sample``
- that you will have to copy to the right location.
- Confer the ``Configuration`` section of this documentation for a full
- explanation of all the options of pagure.
- * Create the database
- You first need to create the database itself. For this, since pagure can
- work with: `PostgreSQL <http://www.postgresql.org/>`_,
- `MySQL <http://www.mysql.com/>`_ or `MariaDB <http://mariadb.org/>`_, we
- would like to invite you to consult the documentation of your database system
- for this operation.
- Once you have specified in the configuration file the to url used to connect
- to the database, and create the database itself, you can now create the
- tables, the database scheme.
- To create the database tables, you need to run the script
- ``/usr/share/pagure/pagure_createdb.py`` and specify it the configuration
- file to use via an environment variable.
- For example:
- ::
- PAGURE_CONFIG=/etc/pagure/pagure.cfg python /usr/share/pagure/pagure_createdb.py
- This will tell ``/usr/share/pagure/pagure_createdb.py`` to use the database
- information specified in the file ``/etc/pagure/pagure.cfg``.
- .. warning:: Pagure's default configuration is using sqlite. This is fine
- for development purpose but not for production use as sqlite does
- not support all the operations needed when updating the database
- schema. Do use PostgreSQL, MySQL or MariaDB in production.
- * Stamp the alembic revision
- For changes to existing tables, we rely on `Alembic <http://alembic.readthedocs.org/>`_.
- It uses `revisions` to perform the upgrades, but to know which upgrades are
- needed and which are already done, the current revision needs to be saved
- in the database. This will allow alembic to know apply the new revision when
- running it.
- You can save the current revision in the database using the following command:
- ::
- cd /etc/pagure
- alembic stamp $(alembic heads |awk '{ print $1 }')
- The ``cd /etc/pagure`` is needed as the command must be run in the folder
- where the file ``alembic.ini`` is. This file contains two important pieces
- of information:
- * ``sqlalchemy.url`` which is the URL used to connect to the database, likely
- the same URL as the one in ``pagure.cfg``.
- * ``script_location`` which is the path to the ``versions`` folder containing
- all the alembic migration files.
- The ``alembic stamp`` command is the one actually saving the current revision
- into the database. This current revision is found using ``alembic heads``
- which returns the most recent revision found by alembic, and since the
- database was just created, it is at the latest revision.
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