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:
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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,checkouts}
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.