This is a fairly common need for someone using gitolite, and appears to be a little difficult to tie up loose ends when being not a very advanced user (at leas it was for me).
Following stackoverflow's and gitolite's links back and forth can be a little confusing. These are my conclusions and the path I followed to be able to achieve this.
As @VonC mentioned creating repository specific hooks is already possible since version 3.5.3.1 (github link)
Update/Upgrade Gitolite
The first thing you should do is update your gitolite repo. So ssh into your server that is hosting gitolite and move to the location where gitolite is installed (usually /home/git/gitolite
) as the git user (usually git
)
Example:
$ ssh myusername@devserver.com
$ sudo su - git
$ pwd
/home/git
$ cd gitolite
Then we have to upgrade gitolite. To do so, first we need to update the gitolite repository
$ git pull
Then we have to repeat the install command (make sure you use the same arguments as before)
$ ./install
And finally run the setup again.
$ gitolite setup
If that doesn't work, you probably haven't set up gitolite executable in your PATH
, so you could do something like this:
$ src/gitolite setup
Gitolite Settings (The "RC" file)
This was one of the parts that confused me the most, but it ended up it was pretty straight forward.
The famous "rc" file is located at git's home directory /home/git/.gitolite.rc
. There make sure you have a variable called LOCAL_CODE
, you should see something like this on that file, if not, add it.
LOCAL_CODE => "$ENV{HOME}/.gitolite/local"
And in the "commands an feature to enable" section you should make sure that repo-specific-hooks
is available, if not, add it.
ENABLE => [
# COMMANDS
# These are the commands enabled by default
'help',
'desc',
'info',
...,
...,
...,
'repo-specific-hooks'
...,
...,
...
]
Here is the link to the documentation
Writing Repository Specific Hooks
Finally, in your local gitolite-admin
repository create the following directories hooks/repo-specific
under the directory you just set in the LOCAL_CODE
variable, for example:
gitolite_admin/local/hooks/repo-specific
After that you can actually add your hooks scripts to that location and manage them through the gitolite conf file as stated in the documentation. Make sure the scripts are executable.
repo foo
RW+ = @all
option hook.post-receive = deploy
Again, I hope this helps some of you guys.
Cheers!