My git server is all I need to setup to actually kill my other server (I've been moving from servers on these last 2-3 blog entries), that's why I'm already doing this entry. I'm basically following git's guide on setting up a server plus some specific stuff for (btw i use) Arch Linux (Arch Linux Wiki: Git server and Step by step guide on setting up git server in arch linux (pushable)).
Note that this is mostly for personal use, so there's no user/authentication control other than that of SSH. Also, most if not all commands here are run as root.
I might get tired of saying this (it's just copy paste, basically)… but similar as before (check my website and mail entries):
ssh
configured.nginx
and certbot
setup and running.git
already installed (it should be a must have always).If not installed already, install the git
package:
pacman -S git
On Arch Linux, when you install the git
package, a git
user is automatically created, so all you have to do is decide where you want to store the repositories, for me, I like them to be on /home/git
like if git
was a “normal” user. So, create the git
folder (with corresponding permissions) under /home
and set the git
user's home to /home/git
:
mkdir /home/git
chown git:git /home/git
usermod -d /home/git git
Also, the git
user is “expired” by default and will be locked (needs a password), change that with:
chage -E -1 git
passwd git
Give it a strong one and remember to use PasswordAuthentication no
for ssh
(as you should). Create the .ssh/authorized_keys
for the git
user and set the permissions accordingly:
mkdir /home/git/.ssh
chmod 700 /home/git/.ssh
touch /home/git/.ssh/authorized_keys
chmod 600 /home/git/.ssh/authorized_keys
chown -R git:git /home/git
Now is a good idea to copy over your local SSH public keys to this file, to be able to push/pull to the repositories. Do it by either manually copying it or using ssh
's built in ssh-copy-id
(for that you may want to check your ssh
configuration in case you don't let people access your server with user/password).
Next, and almost finally, we need to edit the git-daemon
service, located at /usr/lib/systemd/system/
(called git-daemon@.service
):
...
ExecStart=-/usr/lib/git-core/git-daemon --inetd --export-all --base-path=/home/git --enable=receive-pack
...
I just appended --enable=receive-pack
and note that I also changed the --base-path
to reflect where I want to serve my repositories from (has to match what you set when changing git
user's home).
Now, go ahead and start and enable the git-daemon
socket:
systemctl start git-daemon.socket
systemctl enable git-daemon.socket
You're basically done. Now you should be able to push/pull repositories to your server… except, you haven't created any repository in your server, that's right, they're not created automatically when trying to push. To do so, you have to do the following sequence (assuming you're “cd
'ed” into the /home/git
directory):
mkdir {repo_name}.git
cd {repo_name}.git
Those two lines above will need to be run each time you want to add a new repository to your server (yeah, kinda lame… although there are options to “automate” this, I like it this way).
After that you can already push/pull to your repository. I have my repositories (locally) set up so I can push to more than one remote at the same time (my server, GitHub, GitLab, etc.), which is detailed here.
This bit is optional if you only wanted a git server (really easy to set up), this is so you can have a web application. This is basically a copy paste of Arch Linux Wiki: Cgit so you can go there and get more in-depth configurations.
Install the cgit
and fcgiwrap
packages:
pacman -S cgit fcgiwrap
Now, just start and enable the fcgiwrap
socket:
systemctl start fcgiwrap.socket
systemctl enable fcgiwrap.socket
Next, the way I configure nginx
is creating a separate file {module}.conf
(git.conf
in this case) under /etc/nginx/sites-available
and create a symlink to /etc/nginx/sites-enabled
as stated in my nginx
setup entry. Add the following lines to your git.conf
file:
server {
listen 80;
listen [::]:80;
root /usr/share/webapps/cgit;
server_name {yoursubdomain}.{yourdomain};
try_files $uri @cgit;
location @cgit {
include fastcgi_params;
fastcgi_param SCRIPT_FILENAME $document_root/cgit.cgi;
fastcgi_param PATH_INFO $uri;
fastcgi_param QUERY_STRING $args;
fastcgi_param HTTP_HOST $server_name;
fastcgi_pass unix:/run/fcgiwrap.sock;
}
}
Where the server_name
line depends on you, I have mine setup to git.luevano.xyz
and www.git.luevano.xyz
. Optionally run certbot --nginx
to get a certificate for those domains if you don't have already.
Now, all that's left is to configure cgit
. Create the configuration file /etc/cgitrc
with the following content (my personal options, pretty much the default):
css=/cgit.css
source-filter=/usr/lib/cgit/filters/syntax-highlighting-edited.sh
logo=/cgit.png
enable-http-clone=1
# robots=noindex, nofollow
virtual-root=/
repo.url={url}
repo.path={dir_path}
repo.owner={owner}
repo.desc={short_description}
...
Where you can uncomment the robots
line to let web crawlers (like Google's) to index your git
web app. And at the end keep all your repositories (the ones you want to make public), for example for my dotfiles I have:
...
repo.url=.dots
repo.path=/home/git/.dots.git
repo.owner=luevano
repo.desc=These are my personal dotfiles.
...
Otherwise you could let cgit
to automatically detect your repositories (you have to be careful if you want to keep “private” repos) using the option scan-path
and setup .git/description
for each repository. I will add more to my actual configuration, but for now it is useful as it is. For more, you can check cgitrc(5).
Finally, if you want further support for highlighting, other compressed snapshots or support for markdown, checkout the optional dependencies for cgit
and also the Arch Wiki goes in detail on how to setup highlighting with two different packages.