CAUTION: Under active development, not suitable for production use for people outside the development team yet.
You configure the container by setting environment variables:
-
DIR
- The directory containing the git repositories -
KEYS_DIR
- The directory containing theauthorized_keys
file -
GIT_DOMAIN
- The SSH domain (optionally including port) to be displayed to users for cloning the repo over SSH e.g.git@example.com:8022
-
GIT_HTTP_URL
- The HTTP/HTTPS base URL (optionally including port) to be displayed to users for cloning the repo over HTTP/HTTPS e.g.https://git.example.com/git
. Should not end with a/
. If not set, this app will attempt to choose a sensible default. -
MUSTACHE_DIRS
- A:
separated list of paths the system should look for mustache templates before using its default ones. -
DISABLE_AUTH
- Defaults tofalse
but can betrue
to make file uploading and downloading work without requiring sign in. Only recommended for development. -
SCRIPT_NAME
- The base URL at which the app is hosted. Defaults to""
and must not end with/
. Usually this is set to something like/upload
-
DEBUG
- The loggers you want to see log output for. e.g.express-git-manage,express-mustache-jwt-signin
. -
PORT
- The port you would like the app to run on. Defaults to 80. -
SECRET
- The secret string used to sign cookies. Make sure this is a long secret that no-one else knows, otherwise they could forge the user information in your cookies. Make sure you set theSECRET
variable to the same value in thesignin
container too, otherwise they won't recognose each other's cookies.
Make sure you have installed Docker and Docker Compose for your platform, and
that you can customise your networking so that www.example.localhost
can
point to 127.0.0.1
.
Also, make sure you have the source code:
git clone https://github.com/thejimmyg/express-git-manage.git
cd express-git-manage
Tip: You can also use the published docker image at https://cloud.docker.com/u/thejimmyg/repository/docker/thejimmyg/express-git-manage if you change the docker-compose.yml
file to use image: thejimmyg/express-git-manage:0.1.0
instead of building from source
OK, let's begin.
For local testing, let's imagine you want to use the domain www.example.localhost
.
You can create certificates as described here:
You'll need to put them in the directory domain/www.example.localhost/sni
in this example. Here's some code that does this:
mkdir -p domain/www.example.localhost/sni
openssl req -x509 -out domain/www.example.localhost/sni/cert.pem -keyout domain/www.example.localhost/sni/key.pem \
-newkey rsa:2048 -nodes -sha256 \
-subj '/CN=www.example.localhost' -extensions EXT -config <( \
printf "[dn]\nCN=www.example.localhost\n[req]\ndistinguished_name = dn\n[EXT]\nsubjectAltName=DNS:www.example.localhost\nkeyUsage=digitalSignature\nextendedKeyUsage=serverAuth")
Now edit your /etc/hosts
so that your domain really points to 127.0.0.1
for local testing. You should have a line that looks like this:
127.0.0.1 localhost www.example.localhost example.localhost
There is already a user file in users/users.yaml
which the signin
container can use. Edit it to change the usernames and passwords as you see fit.
Tip: You can use a hased password too for the password
field. Just visit /user/hash
once the example is running to generarte the hash and then update the file.
Make a directory where you can override the default templates that are in views
:
mkdir -p views-gitmanage
Make an repo
directory where files will be uploaded to:
mkdir -p repo
# Allow other containers to write to it
chmod a+r repo
chmod a+w repo
Make a keys
directory and an empty authorized_keys
file:
mkdir -p keys
touch keys/authorized_keys
Create a hostkeys
directory:
mkdir -p hostkeys
Create an empty git repo named test
inside the repo
directory for the server to find:
git init --bare repo/test.git
Make sure you change the SECRET
variable everywhere, otherwise someone could forge your cookies and gain access to your system. You must use the same value for SECRET
in each of the containers otherwise they won't recognose each other's cookies.
You can now run the containers with:
npm run docker:run:local
Visit https://www.example.localhost/. You'll probably need to get your browser to accept the certficate since it is a self-signed one, then you'll be asked to sign in using the credentials in users/users.yml
.
As long as the user you sign in with has the admin: true
claim in the users/users.yaml
file, you should be able to manage git repos.
Make any tweaks to templates in views-gitmanage
so that the defaults aren't affected. You can copy the defaults in the views
directory as a starting point, but make sure you keep the same names.
You can also check the PUBLIC_FILES_DIRS
overlay at https://www.example.localhost/user/public/hello.txt
When you are finished you can stop the containers with the command below, otherwise Docker will automatically restart them each time you reboot (which is what you want in production, but perhaps not when you are developing):
npm run docker:stop:local
You will need git installed locally. It is used by the post-update hook in the repos that this interface creates to allow git repos to be shared over HTTP(S).
npm install
GIT_DOMAIN=git.example.com:8022 DISABLE_AUTH=true DISABLED_AUTH_USER='{"admin": true, "username": "disableduser"}' SIGN_IN_URL=/user/signin SCRIPT_NAME="" DEBUG=express-git-manage,express-mustache-overlays,express-mustache-jwt-signin DIR=repo KEYS_DIR=keys PORT=8000 SECRET='reallysecret' npm start
Visit http://localhost:8000.
You should be able to make requests to routes restricted with signedIn
middleware as long as you have the cookie, or use the JWT in an `Authorization
header like this:
Authorization: Bearer <JWT goes here>
A good way of organising this is to use gateway-lite
as your gateway proxying
both to express-mustache-jwt-signin
and this module. Then you can use
express-mustache-jwt-signin
to set the cookie that this project can read as
long as the SECRET
environmrnt variables are the same.
If you just enable SECRET
but don't set up the proxy, you'll just get
redirected to the SIGN_IN_URL
(set to /user/signin
in the example) and see
a 404 page.
npm run fix
- Handling SIGTERM
- Support
DISABLED_AUTH_USER
- Ability to edit SSH keys file
- Publish the repos publicaly over HTTPS too
- Support binding on non-privileged ports
- Show the create page when there are no branches yet
- Initial release