darcs repository web UI and hosting app. This is the main darcsden trunk, which also runs hub.darcs.net. (fork of simon's darcsden) (http://hub.darcs.net)
root
- darcsden-cli
- manifests
- post-hook
- public
- src
- ssh-server
- test-harness
- test-http
- test-http-data
- tests
- web-server
- .authorspellings
- .boring
- ANNOUNCE.md
- CHANGES.md
- HCAR.tex
- LICENSE
- Makefile
- README.md
- Setup.hs
- Vagrantfile
- darcsden.cabal
- darcsden.conf.example
- darcsden.god
- stack.yaml
darcsden is a darcs repository hosting platform, providing a web application for browsing and managing repos, users, and issues, and a SSH server for push/pull and quick repository creation.
Home: http://hackage.haskell.org/package/darcsden
To install:
Installation should go something like this, please send corrections:
Using stack:
# download stack, see http://haskell.org/downloads
stack install hsx2hs
stack install [--flag darcsden:cli] [--flag darcsden:ssh] [--flag darcsden:closing]
This will install the darcsden
executable in ~/.local/bin
or the windows equivalent.
Using cabal:
cabal install hsx2hs
cabal install [-fcli] [-fssh] [-fclosing]
This will install executables in ~/.cabal/bin
or the windows equivalent.
The optional flags can also install: - the den
command-line tool which helps with local darcsden use - the darcsden-ssh
daemon which allows push/pull via SSH - the darcsden-post-hook
for automatically closing issues mentioned in commit messages.
Note, currently it is recommended to build darcsden-ssh with GHC 7.6 to avoid http://hub.darcs.net/ganesh/ssh/issue/3 . Eg:
cabal configure -fssh -w ghc-7.6.3
cabal build
cp dist/build/darcsden-ssh/darcsden-ssh ...
In darcsden.cabal there are some more optional flags, which can assist with building on windows.
To run darcsden you also need:
- Redis (for storing web session data)
- CouchDB (for storing user/repo/repository data)
Both should be running on their default port, or you can change that in Settings.hs. You should configure them by running:
darcsden --install
You should have a "darcsden" user account (for running the app and owning the files), with a ssh key:
adduser --system --home /home/darcsden --shell /bin/bash --group --gecos DarcsDen darcsden
sudo -u darcsden ssh-keygen
To avoid obscure errors due to mixed file ownership in ~/.darcs/cache, always run darcsden as the darcsden user, with $HOME set properly. So if using sudo, include the -H flag, like this:
sudo -Hu darcsden COMMAND...
The directory where you start the web app should contain darcsden's public/ directory. Or you can run it behind a web server that'll serve /public/* requests from that directory.
To configure:
Darcsden's can be configured via "darcsden.conf" from the current working directory or by specifying the config file location via
darcsden --config /path/to/darcsden.conf
The configuration file has the following format (includes all currently available options from the default settings). Note that you do not need to set all options, but only those that are different from the default configuration.
# for logs and user repositories, also important for the ssh key locations
homeDir = .
# for serving the page (if not specified, this is automatically detected
# from the cabal install destination)
publicDir = ./public
# log file locations
accessLog = ./log/access.log
errorLog = ./log/error.log
# Enable user registration?
multiuser = True
# Enable optional issue trackers?
issuetrackers = True
# Delete repos from the filesystem when deleted in the web UI?
deletefiles = True
# Support darcs-1 repositories?
supportdarcs1 = True
# resource limits
# granularity is 5s, precision is +/-5s
maxRequestTime = 30
maxFileDisplaySize = 200000
maxPatchDisplaySize = 200000
# Enable github integration, also needs githubAppIdVarName
# and githubAppPwdVarName.
githubOAuth = True
# Enable Google integration, also needs googleAppIdVarName
# and googleAppPwdVarName.
googleOAuth = True
# To configure github integration, register an application at github.
# Store the client id and client secret as environment variables.
githubAppIdVarName = GITHUB_CLIENT_ID
githubAppPwdVarName = GITHUB_CLIENT_SECRET
# To configure google integration, register an application at google.
# Store the client id and client secret as environment variables.
googleAppIdVarName = GOOGLE_CLIENT_ID
googleAppPwdVarName = GOOGLE_CLIENT_SECRET
# send address: you need to be able to send mails from
# this address using the default sendmail executable
sendName = darcdsden
sendEmail = darcsden@localhost
# this name/email is shown to users for contact information
adminName = admin
adminEmail = webmaster@localhost
# canonical public url of the web app
# this is important eg for loading stylesheets and js
# it must end with a slash /
baseUrl = http://localhost:8900/
hostname = localhost
# port on which the http server listens
httpPort = 8900
# port for ssh connections
sshPort = 22
# where the couchDB server is
couchHost = 127.0.0.1
# port of the couchDB server
couchPort = 5984
# where the redis server is
redisHost = 127.0.0.1
# port of the redis server
redisPort = 6379
Some features require extra configuration to work:
OAuth:
- Create developer applications for the oauth services:
- Github: https://github.com/settings/applications
- Google: https://code.google.com/apis/console
- Set callback urls:
- Github: same as your baseUrl
- Google: multiple callbacks:
- baseUrl ++ "register/google/response"
- baseUrl ++ "login/google/response"
- baseUrl ++ "sync/google/response"
- Enter Client ID and Client secret into environment variables:
- Github: Add these lines to your shell startup export GITHUB_CLIENT_ID=your_client_id export GITHUB_CLIENT_SECRET=your_client_secret
- Google: Add these lines to your shell startup export GOOGLE_CLIENT_ID=your_client_id export GOOGLE_CLIENT_SECRET=your_client_secret
- Forgot Password:
- Configure your default sendmail to be able to send emails
- Edit sendEmail, and sendName to the email address you can use
- Webdriver Tests:
- Download and start selenium server from http://docs.seleniumhq.org/download/
- run ./dist/build/darcsden-test/darcsden-test
- If you wish to run oauth tests:
- Configure oauth
- Add a test google and github account by adding the appropriate environment variables:
- export GOOGLE_USERNAME, GOOGLE_PASSWORD, GITHUB_USERNAME, GITHUB_PASSWORD.
- run ./dist/build/darcsden-test/darcsden-test --oauth
To start:
For a quick test, run:
sudo -Hu darcsden darcsden
and visit http://localhost:8900 (or other url configured in Settings.hs) in your web browser.
This package provides separate executables for the web and SSH servers, darcsden
and darcsden-ssh
respectively. You could run them manually while logged in as the darcsden
user via screen or dtach. Or, configure them as daemons. See darcsden.god
, or these sample supervisord.conf entries:
[program:darcsden]
command=sudo -EHu darcsden /path/to/darcsden
directory=/home/darcsden
priority=3
redirect_stderr=true
autostart=true
autorestart=true
environment=LANG="en_US.UTF-8"
[program:darcsden-ssh]
command=sudo -EHu darcsden /path/to/darcsden-ssh
directory=/home/darcsden
priority=3
redirect_stderr=true
autostart=true
autorestart=true
environment=LANG="en_US.UTF-8"
Here are some web server config examples.
Apache vhost:
<VirtualHost *:80>
ServerName my.host.name
RewriteEngine on
ProxyPreserveHost On
ProxyErrorOverride On
RewriteRule ^/(.*) http://127.0.0.1:8900/$1 [P]
</VirtualHost>
Nginx:
server {
listen 0.0.0.0:80;
server_name my.host.name;
location / {
proxy_set_header Host $host;
proxy_pass http://127.0.0.1:8900;
}
}
Lighttpd (requires enabling mod_proxy
):
$HTTP["host"] == "my.host.name" {
proxy.server = (
"" => (
( "host" => "127.0.0.1", "port" => "8900" )
)
)
}
Windows:
darcsden indirectly depends on two external libraries: OpenSSL and pcre.
The -f-ssh flag can be used to disable the ssh server and remove the dependency on OpenSSL.
The -f-closing flag disables the ability for checkins to automatically close issues, removing the dependency on pcre.
OpenSSL can be installed from http://slproweb.com/products/Win32OpenSSL.html - download "Win32 OpenSSL v1.0.1e" or whatever similar version is current. [At the time of writing, darcs doesn't work with 64 bit Windows, but if this changes then a 64 bit version can be downloaded from the same location.]
Pick a directory to install it to, e.g. c:/OpenSSL-Win32 - and install HsOpenSSL with cabal install HsOpenSSL --extra-include-dirs="c:/OpenSSL-Win32/include" --extra-lib-dirs="c:/Win32OpenSSL"
Running as a Windows service:
darcsden depends on having CouchDB and redis running, so it also makes sense to install these as services, though it's not essential.
redis can be setup as a Windows service using https://github.com/kcherenkov/redis-windows-service
The redis service name is redis-instance.
CouchDB comes as a service already.
The CouchDB service name is something like "Apache CouchDB01cd861ad1dbd850", look for "CouchDB" in the output of "sc query" to get the exact name.
To install darcsden as a Windows service given the above names for the redis and CouchDB services, identify the path to darcsden.exe and to the darcsden source tree. Then alter the following command appropriately and run it all on one line:
sc create DarcsDen binPath= "c:.exe --service" start= auto depend= redis-instance/"Apache CouchDB01cd861ad1dbd850"
To uninstall the service, use "sc delete DarcsDen".
Contributing:
darcsden is a small, clean codebase that is fun to hack on. Discussion takes place on the #darcs IRC channel, and useful changes will quickly be deployed at hub.darcs.net, providing a tight dogfooding/feedback loop. Here's how to contribute a patch there:
- register at hub.darcs.net
- add your ssh key in settings so you can push
- fork your own branch: http://hub.darcs.net/simon/darcsden , fork
- copy to your machine: darcs get http://hub.darcs.net/yourname/darcsden
- make changes, darcs record
- push to hub: darcs push yourname@hub.darcs.net:darcsden --set-default
- your change will appear at http://hub.darcs.net/simon/darcsden/patches
- discuss on #darcs, or ping me (sm, simon@joyful.com) to merge it
Credits:
Alex Suraci created darcsden. Simon Michael led this release, which includes contributions from Alp Mestanogullari, Jeffrey Chu, Ganesh Sittampalam, and BSRK Aditya (sponsored by Google's Summer of Code). And last time I forgot to mention two 1.0 contributors: Bertram Felgenhauer and Alex Suraci.
darcsden depends on Darcs, Snap, GHC, and other fine projects from the Haskell ecosystem, as well as Twitter Bootstrap, JQuery, and many more.