Create a git repository on server side - linux

I have a big problem and I can't understand this topic. I have a server with a website. I created a repository there with git init. Than I made a git add * to add all files from my server to the repository. Than I made a commit to commit all files to the repository.
Than I cloned it with git clone ssh://username#mysite.com/wordpress/.git to my local client.
All worked fine and I got a copy from my project. No I changed something on my local version and made a commit with a push. I looked in FileZilla but the content in the file don't changed. In the other direction when I changed something on the sever and pulled it to the local copy I saw the changes. Do you know why the changes which I made on the local copy are not visible on my sever?
Thank you for your help!

You need to push changes to a central repository that both your local machine and server can pull from (or add them as remotes for each other). A service such as GitHub works nicely for this. Here are instructions for a full workflow that works well for this. Updated instructions can be found in this gist. This workflow uses hooks to do the heavy lifting so that updates to your server are automated.
Using Git to Manage a Live Web Site
Overview
As a freelancer, I build a lot of web sites. That's a lot of code changes to track. Thankfully, a Git-enabled workflow with proper branching makes short work of project tracking. I can easily see development features in branches as well as a snapshot of the sites' production code. A nice addition to that workflow is that ability to use Git to push updates to any of the various sites I work on while committing changes.
You'll need to have Git installed on your development machines as well as on the server or servers where you wish to host your website. This process can even be adapted to work with multiple servers such as mirrors behind a load balancer.
Setting up Passwordless SSH Access
The process for updating a live web server relies on the use of post hooks within the Git environment. Since this is fully automated, there is no opportunity to enter login credentials while establishing the SSH connection to the remote server. To work around this, we are going to set up passwordless SSH access. To begin, you will need to SSH into your server.
ssh user#hostname
Next, you'll need to make sure you have a ~/.ssh in your user's home directory. If not, go ahead and create one now.
mkdir ~/.ssh
On Mac and Linux, you can harness the power of terminal to do both in one go.
if [ ! -d ~/.ssh ]; then mkdir ~/.ssh; fi
Next you'll need to generate a public SSH key if you don't already have one. List the files in your ~/.ssh directory to check.
ls -al ~/.ssh
The file you're looking for is usually named similarly to id_rsa.pub. If you're not sure, you can generate a new one. The command below will create an SSH key using the provided email as a label.
ssh-keygen -t rsa -b 4096 -C "your_email#example.com"
You'll probably want to keep all of the default settings. This will should create a file named id_rsa in the ~/.ssh directory created earlier.
When prompted, be sure to provide a secure SSH passphrase.
If you had to create an SSH key, you'll need to configure the ssh-agent program to use it.
ssh-add ~/.ssh/id_rsa
If you know what you are doing, you can use an existing SSH key in your ~/.ssh directory by providing the private key file to ssh-agent.
If you're still not sure what's going on, you should two files in your ~/.ssh directory that correspond to the private and public key files. Typically, the public key will be a file by the same name with a .pub extension added. An example would be a private key file named id_rsa and a public key file named id_rsa.pub.
Once you have generated an SSH key on your local machine, it's time to put the matching shared key file on the server.
ssh user#hostname 'cat >> ~/.ssh/authorized_keys' < ~/.ssh/id_rsa.pub
This will add your public key to the authorized keys on the remote server. This process can be repeated from each development machine to add as many authorized keys as necessary to the server. You'll know you did it correctly when you close your connection and reconnect without being prompted for a password.
Configuring the Remote Server Repository
The machine you intend to use as a live production server needs to have a Git repository that can write to an appropriate web-accessible directory. The Git metadata (the .git directory) does not need to be in a web-accessible location. Instead, it can be anywhere that is user-writeable by your SSH user.
Setting up a Bare Repository
In order to push files to your web server, you'll need to have a copy of your repository on your web server. You'll want to start by creating a bare repository to house your web site. The repository should be set up somewhere outside of your web root. We'll instruct Git where to put the actual files later. Once you decide on location for your repository, the following commands will create the bare repository.
mkdir mywebsite.git
cd mywebsite.git
git init --bare
A bare repository contains all of the Git metadata without any HEAD. Essentially, this means that your repository has a .git directory, but does not have any working files checked out. The next step is to create a Git hook that will check out those files any time you instruct it to.
If you wish to run git commands from the detached work tree, you'll need to set the environmental variable GIT_DIR to the path of mywebsite.git before running any commands.
Add a Post-Receive Hook
Create a file named post-receive in the hooks directory of your repository with the following contents.
#!/bin/sh
GIT_WORK_TREE=/path/to/webroot/of/mywebsite git checkout -f
Once you create your hook, go ahead and mark it as executable.
chmod +x hooks/post-receive
GIT_WORK_TREE allows you to instruct Git where the working directory should be for a repository. This allows you to keep the repository outside of the web root with a detached work tree in a web accessible location. Make sure the path you specify exists, Git will not create it for you.
Configuring the Local Development Machine
The local development machine will house the web site repository. Relevant files will be copied to the live server whenever you choose to push those changes. This means you should keep a working copy of the repository on your development machine. You could also employ the use of any centralized repository including cloud-based ones such as GitHub or BitBucket. Your workflow is entirely up to you. Since all changes are pushed from the local repository, this process is not affected by how you choose to handle your project.
Setting up the Working Repository
On your development machine, you should have a working Git repository. If not, you can create on in an existing project directory with the following commands.
git init
git add -A
git commit -m "Initial Commit"
Add a Remote Repository Pointing to the Web Server
Once you have a working repository, you'll need to add a remote pointing to the one you set up on your server.
git remote add live ssh://server1.example.com/home/user/mywebsite.git
Make sure the hostname and path you provide point to the server and repository you set up previously. Finally, it's time to push your current website to the live server for the first time.
git push live +master:refs/head/main
This command instructs Git to push the current main branch to the live remote. (There's no need to send any other branches.) In the future, the server will only check out from the main branch so you won't need to specify that explicitly every time.
Build Something Beautiful
Everything is ready to go. It's time to let the creative juices flow! Your workflow doesn't need to change at all. Whenever you are ready, pushing changes to the live web server is as simple as running the following command.
git push live
Setting receive.denycurrentbranch to "ignore" on the server eliminates a warning issued by recent versions of Git when you push an update to a checked-out branch on the server.
Additional Tips
Here are a few more tips and tricks that you may find useful when employing this style of workflow.
Pushing Changes to Multiple Servers
You may find the need to push to multiple servers. Perhaps you have multiple testing servers or your live site is mirrored across multiple servers behind a load balancer. In any case, pushing to multiple servers is as easy as adding more urls to the [remote "live"] section in .git/config.
[remote "live"]
url = ssh://server1.example.com/home/user/mywebsite.git
url = ssh://server2.example.com/home/user/mywebsite.git
Now issuing the command git push live will update all of the urls you've added at one time. Simple!
Ignoring Local Changes to Tracked Files
From time to time you'll find there are files you want to track in your repository but don't wish to have changed every time you update your website. A good example would be configuration files in your web site that have settings specific to the server the site is on. Pushing updates to your site would ordinarily overwrite these files with whatever version of the file lives on your development machine. Preventing this is easy. SSH into the remote server and navigate into the Git repository. Enter the following command, listing each file you wish to ignore.
git update-index --assume-unchanged <file...>
This instructs Git to ignore any changes to the specified files with any future checkouts. You can reverse this effect on one or more files any time you deem necessary.
git update-index --no-assume-unchanged <file...>
If you want to see a list of ignored files, that's easy too.
git ls-files -v | grep ^[a-z]
References
Deploy Your Website Changes Using Git
A simple Git deployment strategy for static sites
Using Git to manage a website
Ignoring Local Changes to Tracked Files in Git

pushing the code merely updates the remote repository's references.
It doesn't change the checked out working copy.
Consider that you could add a colleague's repository as a remote. If you pushed and the behaviour was that it would auto-checkout that new code, that would affect what they're working on.
It sounds like what you really want is a continuous integration tool, be it something full featured or merely an rsync triggered from a git hook.

you should only ever push to a bare repository (unless you know exactly what you are doing; and even then, you should only ever push to a bare repository).
you shouldn't clone a working copy's .git/ directory.

Related

How to setup a GIT environment for developers locally while the live data is only available on a single server?

We have a scenario in which single server is running, which is getting data from the network span.
Every developer should work on their machine locally but the data to work on is only available in the server. how can I get the data to be replicated into each developers machine so that once they have completed development on their local machine, developers can push it to a GIT in the server.
PS: The network span data is constantly written to the server (data is in size of 100s of GB's).
What we have tried so far:
So we created a GIT server in the server we were getting the data on. But once a developer log in using his username then he creates a new branch in a directory. This works fine until another developer logs into the server with his username and switches to another branch in the same directory which will cause all the developers branch to the new one. which is not what we were expecting.
Probabily this question should go to https://serverfault.com/, but, anyway...
The git advantage is to have local and remotre repositories, so, in the server, you should have "only" the remote repositories, and they should be cloned in localmachines.
to work with that paradigm, or with the one you are asking for, you need a umask of 007 (depending on your distribution edit /etc/login.defs and change there)
You should have diferent groups for the diferent kind of shared projects, and a user to "own all the repositories", for example, git-adm ).
With all the prerequisites, you create with that user the base folder for all the repositories:
sudo -i
mkdir /srv/git
chown git-adm:gitgrp /srv/git
chmod g+s /srv/git
exit
The last line in the "sticky bite", wich allows to mantain the group (and avoid the problems you previously stated), so, in order to cerate a repository should be something like:
sudo su - git-adm
mkdir /srv/git/<group>/<repoName>.git
cd /srv/git/<group>/<repoName>.git
git init --bare
exit
And thats all: if the folder /srv/git/<group>/ we owned for a diferent group, then it'll keep the group.

Git clone / downloads history

I have a problem with GIT logs. Is it possible to view the git-clone history in GIT or OS shell? Where to find the history of clone and downloads GIT repository with information about time, dest. IP?
The 'git clone' gives only a copy of the data, it does not do any change in the repo i.e. logging download history. However, I assume the git is accessed in some cerain way like via SSH or http/https. Then you can use the services which gave the access to the git to getch the data you require. For this reason they should be capable to gather, store and provide it to you.
As an exmple, for http/https you can use the logs of the web server (filtering by URL). For ssh you can use last by the user who clonned the repo. And so on.

Git push to cPanel account - Push did not update modified file

SOLUTION BELOW - How to use git to push to cpanel server
I finally got somewhere with setting up Git between my localhost (WAMP setup on Windows 8.1) and my Linux server (CentOS 6.6 x64 with cPanel 11.46.2).
Locally I created a bare clone: git clone --bare my_project my_project.git
NOTE: my_project is an example name, not the real name, and from this doc here: http://git-scm.com/book/en/v2/Git-on-the-Server-Getting-Git-on-a-Server
I copied the my_project.git folder to my server's root directory /home/myuser/public_html/
so now in the root directory I have:
cgi-bin
my_project.git
This is one area I am unsure of. Do I have to do an init (using putty) on my server in the public_html directory? I read something about a bare init? I just want to push (from my PC) the website I already have under Git control, to the server. When I make a change to 1 file, push that change to the server so it's updated live with a push. The website is DONE and ready to be live. I have already manually moved back and forth for live testing on the server. My last step is to get the Git setup correctly, so any further changes I can just push them to the server without the need of FTP.
I added a remote origin: git remote add origin ssh://myuser#thedomain.com/home/myuser/public_html/my_project.git
I tried to push to it, and got "Permission denied (publickey)". I already had an id_rsa and id_rsa.pub key locally on my PC, so I copied them and renamed them to id_rsa.myname id_rsa.myname.pub (where myname is my first name). I then copied them to the .ssh folder through FTP (FTP as cpanel user, and it's the directory your dumped into, above public_html), same as /home/myuser/.ssh/ directory.
Once they where there, I added them to 'authorized_keys' using Putty logged in as the cpanel user (my private ppk) by doing:
cd .ssh
cat id_rsa.myname >> ~/.ssh/authorized_keys
cat id_rsa.myname.pub >> ~/.ssh/authorized_keys
After doing that, a push appeared to work. Because I was having a key/auth issue, I used Git Gui version, which was setup and worked fine locally. I added the origins through Git Bash though. When I did "Remote > Push" in the Gui version, I got:
Pushing to ssh://theregistrybank#theregistrybank.com/home/theregistrybank/public_html/yiire gistrybank.git
stdin: is not a tty
To ssh://myuser#thedomain.com/home/myuser/public_html/my_project.git
44ae034..0388a05 master -> master
updating local tracking ref 'refs/remotes/origin/master'
Before doing the push, the only file modified (diff from the bare clone I transferred to the server) was my .gitignore file. I added 2 more exclusions to it, and committed it locally. So I was trying to push the change in that file. After I did the push, it said "success" in green and appeared to work. However, when I check the file in FileZilla, the .gitignore file is not the updated one that I just committed locally.
I think I am close, but missed a step somewhere. I tried to be as descriptive as possible.
And putting the source on GitHub is not an option as the client does not want the source public, and does not want to pay for the private repos. I should be able to push from my local setup to the cPanel server so I don't have to transfer thousands of files every time. I actually transfer a zip file, and unzip on the server lol.
Server Info
cPanel 11.46.2 build 0
CentOS 6.6 x86_64 kvm build01
Yes, Git is setup on the server, and working, and git --version reports:git version 1.7.1
Git on my PC: git version 1.9.4.msysgit.2
Thank you in advance.
SOLUTION
Thanks to #VonC I was able to get this to work :)
You need somewhere for your git repo to sit. I created a 'git-repos' folder in '/home/cpaneluser/git-repos' to house my repos for this cpanel user.
First step is to create a bare repo: http://git-scm.com/book/en/v2/Git-on-the-Server-Getting-Git-on-a-Server - I only followed the first step, basically created the bare repo 'my-project.git'
Before putting it on your server, rename 'my-project.git/hooks/post-receive.sample' to just 'post-receive' so it will be ran. Edit it with your editor, and add the line that #VonC gave us in his chosen answer:
#!/bin/sh
umask 0022
GIT_WORK_TREE=/home/cpaneluser/public_html GIT_DIR=/home/cpaneluser/git-repos/my-project.git git checkout -f
Note: I am using cpanel, so your path's may be different, and your umask could be different. 0022 is for 0644 file permissions. Without the umask, I was getting 500 Internal Server Errors, because the files were created with 0664 permissions instead.
Using FTP or whatever you like, copy the 'my-project.git' bare repo to your server to '/home/cpaneluser/git-repos'. Then go into 'my-project.git/hooks' and change the permissions of post-receive to have execute permissions. For me, 0744 worked fine. This was the magic sauce :)
Locally, add your remote (must be in your git project): git remote set-url origin ssh://cpaneluser#yourdomain.com/home/cpaneluser/git-repos/my-project.git
Now if you try to push now, it won't put the files in 'public_html' because the git tree (terminology?) matches and is up to date. If they are up to date, it seems to skip over executing your 'post-receive' hook. That means your bash script never ran, and it never checked out the files to your working tree.
We need to manually run the 'post-receive' bash script to create all the files of our project in the 'public_html' directory.
cd to '/home/cpaneluser/git-repos/my-project.git/hooks'
Run: ./post-receive
Boom, all your files are in 'public_html'. Now you can work locally, then push to your cpanel server as expected :)
I had a similar problem with my cPanel account, git was set up but for some reason I couldn't push to it. After a lot of head-banging I realized that the root of the problem is like you pointed out that although git is set up, the repo is empty so there's nothing for it to track.
This happens when you set up an empty repo in cPanel and then try pushing a local repo that you've already created, as opposed to cloning it first from github or your local repo (which is what happened to me because for some reason I couldn't access my github from the cPanel git interface even though I had set up a SSH key)
The simple solution that I found is to manually clone the repo using the terminal in your cPanel account
On your cPanel dashboard, under the "advanced" section, you'll find the terminal. You'll get a warning saying that you could mess up your server if you don't know what you're doing, click ok and you're in.
Now you just have to clone your repo the same way you would if you're cloning onto a local machine.
Navigate to where git was set up in your cPanel
cd repositories/<nameOfYourRepo>
And run the clone command
git clone <URLofYourGithubReop>
You'll be asked for your github username and password if it's a private repository
And that's it, you're good to go
What you have copied (my_project.git) is a bare repo, meaning one without a working tree (the actual checked out files).
Read for instance "Git workflow - Setting up a build process".
That means pushing to if won't change anything in /home/myuser/public_html/
The missing piece is a post-receive hook (in /home/myuser/public_html/my_project.git/hooks/post-receive, make sure it is executable: chmod +x), in order to checkout the repo in /home/myuser/public_html/.
#!/bin/sh
GIT_WORK_TREE=/home/myuser/public_html GIT_DIR=/home/myuser/public_html/my_project.git git checkout -f

How to connect local and remote Mercurial repos?

Typically, in Mercurial, I create a new project by:
Create a new remote repo
Clone the repo locally
Make changes to the local repo
Push those changes to the remote repo
The "remote repo" here is actually our "central/originating" DVCS server (http://ourhg.ourorg.example.com, etc.).
I am now in a situation where I had to use a code generation tool to produce the source code for a simple web app. So the source code exists before the remote repo exists on our hg server. I'm looking for the exact shell commands I need to execute to get this properly pushed to the remote repo.
I believe it should be something like this:
Use the code generator to generate the code, say, at /home/myuser/myapp.
Initialize an hg repo for myapp locally on my machine (hg init)
Add the generated source code for myapp to this local repo (hg add, then hg commit)
On ourhg.ourorg.example.com, create the new remote repo (manual steps)
???
Push the changes sitting in my local repo to the remote repo (hg push)
I know there is something missing in between Step #4 (creation of the remote repo) and Step #6 (pushing to the remote repo). There surely needs to be some "connection" step where my local repo and the remote repo realize they represent the same project/source code/etc. This is my hangup here, so I ask: what is Step #5?
what is Step #5?
Discover URL of this repo. Because it's empty repo, you can don't worry about "related|unrelated"
There's nothing you need to do to associate them. You can do hg push URL_OF_REMOTE on your local and it will work. If you don't want to have to provide the URL each time you can edit (creating if necessary) .hg/hgrc in the repo and set the default= value in the [paths] section. Something like this
[paths]
default=URL_OF_REMOTE
That's optional though.
Just use your origial steps, with caveat:
Create a new remote repo
Clone the repo locally (this will set default path of local to remote).
Make changes to the local repo (Use the code generator app to generate the code in the local repo).
Push those changes to the remote repo.
With this flow, you don't have to manually update the path to the remote repo.

How to setup and clone a remote git repo on Windows?

Anybody know how to checkout, clone, or fetch project or code from a git remote repository on a Windows server?
Repository IP is: xxx.xx.xxx.xx, source file directory is c:\repos\project.git
I am used to the command line interface from a SUSE Linux terminal. I have tried the same kind of method but it always replies that
fatal: ''/repo/project.git'' does not appear to be a git repository
fatal: Could not read from remote repository..
Please make sure you have the correct access rights
Can anyone tell me how to setup and clone?
You have to set up some kind of sharing from the windows machine, that you can access with git. Git supports 3 access methods: ssh, remote filesystem or http. The last one is probably most complicated, so I won't detail it. The first two are:
Set up ssh server on windows.
You can try this guide: http://www.timdavis.com.au/git/setting-up-a-msysgit-server-with-copssh-on-windows/. See also this question for some more options.
Than you clone by git clone username#xxx.xx.xxx.xx:/c/git/path/to/repo (you will be asked for password).
Advantage of this method is that it's secure (connection is encrypted and ssh server is trustworthy), so you can use it over internet. Since git server is running on the windows machine during access, you can set up hooks for advanced security policy, controlling other processes and such.
Share the repository using windows sharing.
Than on the linux host, you need to mount the share with smbmount. That might require username and password, depending on how you set the permissions.
Than you clone by git clone /share/mountpoint/path/to/repo.
This is probably easier to set up, but it is not very secure, so it shouldn't be used outside local network. Also in this case hooks on the windows machine won't be executed (in fact git will try to execute them on the Linux machine, but they either won't run there or can be bypassed anyway), so you can't apply advanced security.
A particular file is not relevant, you need to give path to the directory containing .git subdirectory or to the directory that is a bare repository (path/to/repo above).
First of all, the git repository is just a bunch of files you need to access. You wrote about cloning and fetching repository, and this is easy part - you just need to access the files (and have read rights).
It can be done by direct access to filesystem, by http(s) protocol, or by ssh connection. Actually, there is even a way to do it by ftp server.
What you can do:
1) set the ssh server, then access the git files via ssh server - actually, the path you should use depends on the ssh server you use on windows: source
2) set the web server to access the file:
git clone http://host/path/to/repo
3) mount filesystem from windows on your linux machine and clone repo:
git clone /mnt/filesystem/path/to/repo
Despite the method you choose I suggest to consult the apropriate chapter from Pro Git Book

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