Changeset - d5eaa70e0f2a
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Thomas De Schampheleire - 8 years ago 2018-06-11 21:43:03
thomas.de_schampheleire@nokia.com
remove references to pythonhosted.org (issue #293)

The pythonhosted service is no longer supported.
Update links to point to docs.kallithea-scm.org (which redirects to
kallithea.readthedocs.io)

While at it, fix the whoosh pythonhosted.org reference as well.
4 files changed with 4 insertions and 5 deletions:
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README.rst
Show inline comments
 
================
 
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
 
  file names. Built-in indexing daemons, with optional incremental index build
 
  (no external search servers required all in one application).
 
- Setup project descriptions/tags and info inside built in DB for easy,
 
  non-filesystem operations.
 
- Intelligent cache with invalidation after push or project change, provides
 
  high performance and always up to date data.
 
- RSS/Atom feeds, Gravatar support, downloadable sources as zip/tar/gz.
 
- Optional async tasks for speed and performance using Celery_.
 
- Backup scripts can do backup of whole app and send it over scp to desired
 
  location.
 
- Based on Pylons, SQLAlchemy, SQLite, Whoosh, vcs.
 

	
 

	
 
License
 
-------
 

	
 
**Kallithea** is released under the GPLv3 license. Kallithea is a `Software
 
Freedom Conservancy`_ project and thus controlled by a non-profit organization.
 
No commercial entity can take ownership of the project and change the
 
direction.
 

	
 
Kallithea started out as an effort to make sure the existing GPLv3 codebase
 
would stay available under a legal license. Kallithea thus has to stay GPLv3
 
compatible ... but we are also happy it is GPLv3 and happy to keep it that way.
 
A different license (such as AGPL) could perhaps help attract a different
 
community with a different mix of Free Software people and companies but we are
 
happy with the current focus.
 

	
 

	
 
Community
 
---------
 

	
 
**Kallithea** is maintained by its users who contribute the fixes they would
 
like to see.
 

	
 
Get in touch with the rest of the community:
 

	
 
- Join the mailing list users and developers -- see
 
  http://lists.sfconservancy.org/mailman/listinfo/kallithea-general.
 

	
 
- Use IRC and join #kallithea on FreeNode (irc.freenode.net) or use
 
  http://webchat.freenode.net/?channels=kallithea.
 

	
 
- Follow Kallithea on Twitter, **@KallitheaSCM**.
 

	
 
- 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/.
 
https://docs.kallithea-scm.org/en/stable/. Documentation for the current development
 
version can be found on https://docs.kallithea-scm.org/en/default/.
 

	
 
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`` .
 

	
 

	
 
Migrating from RhodeCode
 
------------------------
 

	
 
Kallithea 0.3.2 and earlier supports migrating from an existing RhodeCode
 
installation. To migrate, install Kallithea 0.3.2 and follow the
 
instructions in the 0.3.2 README to perform a one-time conversion of the
 
database from RhodeCode to Kallithea, before upgrading to this version
 
of Kallithea.
 

	
 

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

	
 
=====
 
Setup
 
=====
 

	
 

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

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

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

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

	
 
Then run::
 

	
 
    npm install
 
    npm run less
 

	
 

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

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

	
 
    gearbox make-config my.ini
 

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

	
 
    gearbox make-config my.ini host=8.8.8.8 "[handler_console]" formatter=color_formatter
 

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

	
 
    gearbox setup-db -c my.ini
 

	
 
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::
 

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

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

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

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

	
 
    gearbox serve -c my.ini
 

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

	
 

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

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

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

	
 

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

	
 

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

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

	
 
.. __: https://pythonhosted.org/Whoosh/
 
.. __: https://whoosh.readthedocs.io/en/latest/
 

	
 
For an incremental index build, run::
 

	
 
    gearbox make-index -c my.ini
 

	
 
For a full index rebuild, run::
 

	
 
    gearbox make-index -c my.ini -f
 

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

	
 
.. _ldap-setup:
 

	
 

	
 
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.com
 
 Account              = <account>
 
 Password             = <password>
 
 Connection Security  = LDAPS
 
 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 : optional
 
    Defaults to 389 for PLAIN un-encrypted LDAP and START_TLS.
 
    Defaults to 636 for LDAPS.
 

	
 
.. _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:
 

	
 
Password : optional
 
    Only required if the LDAP server does not allow anonymous browsing of
 
    records.
 

	
 
.. _Enable LDAPS:
 

	
 
Connection Security : required
 
    Defines the connection to LDAP server
 

	
 
    PLAIN
 
        Plain unencrypted LDAP connection.
 
        This will by default use `Port`_ 389.
 

	
 
    LDAPS
 
        Use secure LDAPS connections according to `Certificate
 
        Checks`_ configuration.
 
        This will by default use `Port`_ 636.
 

	
 
    START_TLS
 
        Use START TLS according to `Certificate Checks`_ configuration on an
 
        apparently "plain" LDAP connection.
 
        This will by default use `Port`_ 389.
 

	
 
.. _Certificate Checks:
 

	
 
Certificate Checks : optional
 
    How SSL certificates verification is handled -- this is only useful when
 
    `Enable LDAPS`_ is enabled.  Only DEMAND or HARD offer full SSL security
 
    with mandatory certificate validation, while the other options are
 
    susceptible to man-in-the-middle attacks.
 

	
 
    NEVER
 
        A serve certificate will never be requested or checked.
 

	
 
    ALLOW
 
        A server certificate is requested.  Failure to provide a
 
        certificate or providing a bad certificate will not terminate the
 
        session.
 

	
 
    TRY
 
        A server certificate is requested.  Failure to provide a
 
        certificate does not halt the session; providing a bad certificate
 
        halts the session.
 

	
 
    DEMAND
 
        A server certificate is requested and must be provided and
 
        authenticated for the session to proceed.
 

	
 
    HARD
 
        The same as DEMAND.
 

	
 
.. _Custom CA Certificates:
 

	
 
Custom CA Certificates : optional
 
    Directory used by OpenSSL to find CAs for validating the LDAP server certificate.
 
    Python 2.7.10 and later default to using the system certificate store, and
 
    this should thus not be necessary when using certificates signed by a CA
 
    trusted by the system.
 
    It can be set to something like `/etc/openldap/cacerts` on older systems or
 
    if using self-signed certificates.
 

	
 
.. _Base DN:
 

	
 
Base DN : required
 
    The Distinguished Name (DN) where searches for users will be performed.
 
    Searches can be controlled by `LDAP Filter`_ and `LDAP Search Scope`_.
 

	
 
.. _LDAP Filter:
 

	
 
LDAP Filter : optional
 
    A LDAP filter defined by RFC 2254.  This is more useful when `LDAP
 
    Search Scope`_ is set to SUBTREE.  The filter is useful for limiting
 
    which LDAP objects are identified as representing Users for
 
    authentication.  The filter is augmented by `Login Attribute`_ below.
 
    This can commonly be left blank.
 

	
 
.. _LDAP Search Scope:
 

	
 
LDAP Search Scope : required
 
    This limits how far LDAP will search for a matching object.
 

	
 
    BASE
 
        Only allows searching of `Base DN`_ and is usually not what you
 
        want.
 

	
 
    ONELEVEL
 
        Searches all entries under `Base DN`_, but not Base DN itself.
 

	
 
    SUBTREE
 
        Searches all entries below `Base DN`_, but not Base DN itself.
 
        When using SUBTREE `LDAP Filter`_ is useful to limit object
 
        location.
 

	
 
.. _Login Attribute:
 

	
 
Login Attribute : required
 
    The LDAP record attribute that will be matched as the USERNAME or
 
    ACCOUNT used to connect to Kallithea.  This will be added to `LDAP
 
    Filter`_ for locating the User object.  If `LDAP Filter`_ is specified as
 
    "LDAPFILTER", `Login Attribute`_ is specified as "uid" and the user has
 
    connected as "jsmith" then the `LDAP Filter`_ will be augmented as below
 
    ::
 

	
 
        (&(LDAPFILTER)(uid=jsmith))
 

	
 
.. _ldap_attr_firstname:
 

	
 
First Name Attribute : required
 
    The LDAP record attribute which represents the user's first name.
 

	
 
.. _ldap_attr_lastname:
 

	
 
Last Name Attribute : required
 
    The LDAP record attribute which represents the user's last name.
 

	
 
.. _ldap_attr_email:
 

	
 
Email Attribute : required
 
    The LDAP record attribute which represents the user's email address.
 

	
 
If all data are entered correctly, and python-ldap_ is properly installed
 
users should be granted access to Kallithea with LDAP accounts.  At this
 
time user information is copied from LDAP into the Kallithea user database.
 
This means that updates of an LDAP user object may not be reflected as a
 
user update in Kallithea.
 

	
 
If You have problems with LDAP access and believe You entered correct
 
information check out the Kallithea logs, any error messages sent from LDAP
 
will be saved there.
 

	
 
Active Directory
 
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
 

	
 
Kallithea can use Microsoft Active Directory for user authentication.  This
 
is done through an LDAP or LDAPS connection to Active Directory.  The
 
following LDAP configuration settings are typical for using Active
 
Directory ::
 

	
 
 Base DN              = OU=SBSUsers,OU=Users,OU=MyBusiness,DC=v3sys,DC=local
 
 Login Attribute      = sAMAccountName
 
 First Name Attribute = givenName
 
 Last Name Attribute  = sn
 
 Email Attribute     = mail
 

	
 
All other LDAP settings will likely be site-specific and should be
 
appropriately configured.
 

	
 

	
 
Authentication by container or reverse-proxy
 
--------------------------------------------
 

	
 
Kallithea supports delegating the authentication
 
of users to its WSGI container, or to a reverse-proxy server through which all
 
clients access the application.
 

	
 
When these authentication methods are enabled in Kallithea, it uses the
 
username that the container/proxy (Apache or Nginx, etc.) provides and doesn't
 
perform the authentication itself. The authorization, however, is still done by
 
Kallithea according to its settings.
 

	
 
When a user logs in for the first time using these authentication methods,
 
a matching user account is created in Kallithea with default permissions. An
 
administrator can then modify it using Kallithea's admin interface.
 

	
 
It's also possible for an administrator to create accounts and configure their
 
permissions before the user logs in for the first time, using the :ref:`create-user` API.
 

	
 
Container-based authentication
 
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
 

	
 
In a container-based authentication setup, Kallithea reads the user name from
 
the ``REMOTE_USER`` server variable provided by the WSGI container.
 

	
 
After setting up your container (see `Apache with mod_wsgi`_), you'll need
 
to configure it to require authentication on the location configured for
 
Kallithea.
 

	
 
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>
 

	
 
Setting metadata in container/reverse-proxy
 
"""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""
 
When a new user account is created on the first login, Kallithea has no information about
 
the user's email and full name. So you can set some additional request headers like in the
 
example below. In this example the user is authenticated via Kerberos and an Apache
 
mod_python fixup handler is used to get the user information from a LDAP server. But you
 
could set the request headers however you want.
 

	
 
.. 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
 

	
 
      AuthName "Kerberos Login"
 
      AuthType Kerberos
 
      Krb5Keytab /etc/apache2/http.keytab
 
      KrbMethodK5Passwd off
 
      KrbVerifyKDC on
 
      Require valid-user
 

	
 
      PythonFixupHandler ldapmetadata
 

	
 
      RequestHeader set X_REMOTE_USER %{X_REMOTE_USER}e
 
      RequestHeader set X_REMOTE_EMAIL %{X_REMOTE_EMAIL}e
 
      RequestHeader set X_REMOTE_FIRSTNAME %{X_REMOTE_FIRSTNAME}e
 
      RequestHeader set X_REMOTE_LASTNAME %{X_REMOTE_LASTNAME}e
 
    </Location>
 

	
 
.. code-block:: python
 

	
 
    from mod_python import apache
 
    import ldap
 

	
 
    LDAP_SERVER = "ldaps://server.mydomain.com:636"
 
    LDAP_USER = ""
 
    LDAP_PASS = ""
 
    LDAP_ROOT = "dc=mydomain,dc=com"
 
    LDAP_FILTER = "sAMAccountName=%s"
 
    LDAP_ATTR_LIST = ['sAMAccountName','givenname','sn','mail']
 

	
 
    def fixuphandler(req):
 
        if req.user is None:
 
            # no user to search for
 
            return apache.OK
 
        else:
 
            try:
 
                if('\\' in req.user):
 
                    username = req.user.split('\\')[1]
 
                elif('@' in req.user):
 
                    username = req.user.split('@')[0]
 
                else:
 
                    username = req.user
 
                l = ldap.initialize(LDAP_SERVER)
 
                l.simple_bind_s(LDAP_USER, LDAP_PASS)
 
                r = l.search_s(LDAP_ROOT, ldap.SCOPE_SUBTREE, LDAP_FILTER % username, attrlist=LDAP_ATTR_LIST)
 

	
 
                req.subprocess_env['X_REMOTE_USER'] = username
 
                req.subprocess_env['X_REMOTE_EMAIL'] = r[0][1]['mail'][0].lower()
 
                req.subprocess_env['X_REMOTE_FIRSTNAME'] = "%s" % r[0][1]['givenname'][0]
 
                req.subprocess_env['X_REMOTE_LASTNAME'] = "%s" % r[0][1]['sn'][0]
 
            except Exception, e:
 
                apache.log_error("error getting data from ldap %s" % str(e), apache.APLOG_ERR)
 

	
 
            return apache.OK
 

	
 
.. 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
kallithea/lib/dbmigrate/__init__.py
Show inline comments
 
from gearbox.command import Command
 

	
 

	
 
class UpgradeDb(Command):
 
    '''(removed)'''
 

	
 
    deprecated = True
 

	
 
    def run(self, args):
 
        raise SystemExit(
 
            'The "paster upgrade-db" command has been removed; please see the docs:\n'
 
            '    https://kallithea.readthedocs.io/en/default/upgrade.html'
 
            '    https://docs.kallithea-scm.org/en/default/upgrade.html'
 
        )
scripts/make-release
Show inline comments
 
#!/bin/bash
 
set -e
 
set -x
 

	
 
cleanup()
 
{
 
  echo "Removing venv $venv"
 
  rm  -rf "$venv"
 
}
 

	
 
echo "Checking that you are NOT inside a virtualenv"
 
[ -z "$VIRTUAL_ENV" ]
 

	
 
venv=$(mktemp -d --tmpdir kallithea-release-XXXXX)
 
trap cleanup EXIT
 

	
 
echo "Setting up a fresh virtualenv in $venv"
 
virtualenv -p python2 "$venv"
 
. "$venv/bin/activate"
 

	
 
echo "Install/verify tools needed for building and uploading stuff"
 
pip install --upgrade -e .
 
pip install --upgrade -r dev_requirements.txt Sphinx Sphinx-PyPI-upload
 

	
 
echo "Cleanup and update copyrights ... and clean checkout"
 
scripts/run-all-cleanup
 
scripts/update-copyrights.py
 
hg up -cr .
 

	
 
echo "Make release build from clean checkout in build/"
 
rm -rf build dist
 
hg archive build
 
cd build
 

	
 
echo "Check MANIFEST.in"
 
sed -e 's/[^ ]*[ ]*\([^ ]*\).*/\1/g' MANIFEST.in | grep -v '^node_modules/bootstrap\|^kallithea/public/css/style.css' | xargs ls -lad
 

	
 
echo "Build dist"
 
python2 setup.py compile_catalog
 
python2 setup.py sdist
 

	
 
echo "Verify VERSION from kallithea/__init__.py"
 
namerel=$(cd dist && echo Kallithea-*.tar.gz)
 
namerel=${namerel%.tar.gz}
 
version=${namerel#Kallithea-}
 
ls -l $(pwd)/dist/$namerel.tar.gz
 
echo "Releasing Kallithea $version in directory $namerel"
 

	
 
echo "Verify dist file content"
 
diff -u <((hg mani | grep -v '^\.hg') | LANG=C sort) <(tar tf dist/Kallithea-$version.tar.gz | sed "s|^$namerel/||" | grep . | grep -v '^kallithea/i18n/.*/LC_MESSAGES/kallithea.mo$\|^Kallithea.egg-info/\|^PKG-INFO$\|/$' | LANG=C sort)
 
! tar tf dist/Kallithea-$version.tar.gz | grep "$namerel/node_modules/bootstrap/\$"
 

	
 
echo "Verify docs build"
 
python2 setup.py build_sphinx # not used yet ... but we want to make sure it builds
 

	
 
cat - << EOT
 

	
 
Now, make sure
 
* all tests are passing
 
* release note is ready
 
* announcement is ready
 
* source has been pushed to https://kallithea-scm.org/repos/kallithea
 

	
 
EOT
 

	
 
echo "Verify current revision is tagged for $version"
 
hg log -r "'$version'&." | grep .
 

	
 
echo -n "Enter \"pypi\" to upload Kallithea $version to pypi: "
 
read answer
 
[ "$answer" = "pypi" ]
 

	
 
echo "Upload docs to pypi"
 
# See https://wiki.python.org/moin/PyPiDocumentationHosting
 
python2 setup.py build_sphinx upload_sphinx
 
xdg-open https://pythonhosted.org/Kallithea/
 
xdg-open http://packages.python.org/Kallithea/installation.html
 

	
 
echo "Rebuild readthedocs for docs.kallithea-scm.org"
 
xdg-open https://readthedocs.org/projects/kallithea/
 
curl -X POST http://readthedocs.org/build/kallithea
 
xdg-open https://readthedocs.org/builds/kallithea/
 
xdg-open http://docs.kallithea-scm.org/en/latest/ # or whatever the branch is
 

	
 
extraargs=${EMAIL:+--identity=$EMAIL}
 
python2 setup.py sdist upload --sign $extraargs
 
xdg-open https://pypi.python.org/pypi/Kallithea
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