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$ adduser hg $ cd /home/hg $ mkdir repo-name; cd repo-name |
# adduser hg # su - hg $ mkdir /home/hg/repo-name; cd /home/hg/repo-name |
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This will create a repository in {{{/home/hg/repo-name}}}. If you create a directory in {{{/home/hg/.ssh}}} and set up its {{{authorized_keys}}} file appropriately, you will be able to remotely update the repository via the command | This will create a repository in {{{/home/hg/repo-name}}}. If you create a directory {{{/home/hg/.ssh}}} and set up its {{{authorized_keys}}} file appropriately, you will be able to remotely update the repository via the command |
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}}} You should add a bit of information about your hg repository by making sure the following lines in the config file {{{repo-name/.hg/hgrc}}} are set: {{{ [web] description = short description of repo-name author = Example User <hg@example.com> |
Setting up a Mercurial CGI Server
If you would like to publish your repository to the world, it must be made available via a web server. ["Mercurial"] does have a built-in web server which can be used for this, which can be accessed via hg serve. However, it will only allow one connection at a time, and it is not very robust; a broken connection at the wrong time can cause the hg serve to exit. A much better way to do things is to access Mercurial from a CGI script using an Apache web server.
The following example shows you one way of doing making a repository named repo-name available on the host example.org
Create a user for the repository.
This is not strictly necessary, but it will make it easier to update the repository remotely.
# adduser hg # su - hg $ mkdir /home/hg/repo-name; cd /home/hg/repo-name $ hg init
This will create a repository in /home/hg/repo-name. If you create a directory /home/hg/.ssh and set up its authorized_keys file appropriately, you will be able to remotely update the repository via the command
$ hg push ssh://hg@example.org/repo-name
You should add a bit of information about your hg repository by making sure the following lines in the config file repo-name/.hg/hgrc are set:
[web] description = short description of repo-name author = Example User <hg@example.com>
Setup the cgi script to refer to your repository
Most people adding new content to the repository don't need to change the cgi script, so keeping that separate (maybe even protected by root permissions) is best. Copy the hgweb.cgi script from the mercurial sources to /var/www/cgi-hg/index.cgi and change the call to hgweb.hgweb() so that the first argument lists the path to the repository and the second argument gives the name of the repository.
Using the example names as used above, the index.cgi file might look like this:
import cgitb, os, sys cgitb.enable() # sys.path.insert(0, "/path/to/python/lib") # if not a system-wide install from mercurial import hgweb h = hgweb.hgweb("/home/hg/repo-name", "name of repository") h.run()
Make sure the index.cgi file is executable:
$ chmod a+x index.cgi
Edit your apache configuration file
Place the following in your apache configuration file and reload the apache server so that the configuration changes take effect:
Alias /hg /var/www/cgi-hg <Directory "/var/www/cgi-hg"> DirectoryIndex index.cgi AddHandler cgi-script .cgi Options ExecCGI Order allow,deny Allow from all </Directory>
In case you also want to make the repository available as static html files (which should normally not be necessary), you could add:
Alias /hg-static /home/hg/repo-name <Directory "/home/hg/repo-name"> Options Indexes Order allow,deny Allow from all </Directory>
That's it!
Once you have populated the repository, users will be able to access the repositry using the URL: http://example.org/hg/.