commit | 441bfc9f4c4251f9cd7c41e262c72d58a6f8961d | [log] [tgz] |
---|---|---|
author | William (Weiliang) Yan <wyan@google.com> | Mon Jul 12 10:52:05 2021 -0700 |
committer | William (Weiliang) Yan <wyan@google.com> | Mon Jul 12 13:13:53 2021 -0700 |
tree | 25bed6450393493003516b6bfa46a41ad5c5264f | |
parent | 831819ae3f185b47db84b055f575507112d49252 [diff] |
Add support to Windows Server 2019. Additionally, make some clarifications. Change-Id: Ie9e104b70208d45fd525a1821095211edb797373
The git-cookie-authdaemon
uses the GCE metadata server to acquire an OAuth2 access token and configures git
to always present this OAuth2 token when connecting to googlesource.com or Google Cloud Source Repositories.
Launch the GCE VMs with the gerritcodereview scope requested, for example:
gcloud compute instances create \ --scopes https://www.googleapis.com/auth/gerritcodereview \ ...
To add a scope to an existing GCE instance see this gcloud beta feature.
Install the daemon within the VM image and start it running:
sudo apt-get install git git clone https://gerrit.googlesource.com/gcompute-tools/ ./gcompute-tools/git-cookie-authdaemon
The daemon launches itself into the background and continues to keep the OAuth2 access token fresh.
git-cookie-authdaemon can be started as a systemd service at boot.
# Write the service config $ sudo cat > /etc/systemd/system/git-cookie-authdaemon.service << EOF [Unit] Description=git-cookie-authdaemon required to access git-on-borg from GCE Wants=network.target After=syslog.target network-online.target [Service] User=builder # update to your user Group=builder # update to your group Type=simple ExecStart=/path/to/git-cookie-authdaemon # update the path Restart=on-failure RestartSec=10 KillMode=process [Install] WantedBy=multi-user.target EOF # Reload the service configs $ sudo systemctl daemon-reload # Enable the service $ sudo systemctl enable git-cookie-authdaemon # Start the service sudo systemctl start git-cookie-authdaemon # Check the status of the service systemctl status git-cookie-authdaemon ps -ef | grep git-cookie-authdaemon # Reboot and check status again.
Install Python 2.7 and Git for Windows.
Run git-cookie-authdaemon
in the same environment under the same user git commands will be run, for example in either Command Prompt
or Cygwin bash shell
under user builder
. In Windows Command Prompt
start
can be used to put the process into background.
python git-cookie-authdaemon --nofork
It may be desired in automation to launch git-cookie-authdaemon
at Windows boot. It can be done as a scheduled task. The following is an example on a Jenkins node:
builder
account.How to create a scheduled task.
Task Scheduler
from an Administrator account.Create Task
in the right pane.General
tab:builder
in this example.Run whether user is logged on or not
Trigger
tab. Add a triggerBegin the task
as At startup
.Stop task if it runs longer than
.Enabled
.Actions
tab. Add Start a program
.Program/script
as C:\cygwin64\bin\bash.ext
,Add arguments
as --login -c /home/builder/git-cookie-authdaemon_wrapper.sh
(see note below)Ok
to save it.Enable All Tasks History
in Task Scheduler
's right pane.builder
account to Administrative Tools -> Local Security Policy -> Local Policies -> User Rights Assignment -> Log On As Batch Job
Note: /home/builder/git-cookie-authdaemon_wrapper.sh
is as below:
#!/bin/bash exe=gcompute-tools/git-cookie-authdaemon log=/cygdrive/c/build/git-cookie-autodaemon.log # HOMEPATH and HOMEDRIVE are not set in a task scheduled at machine boot. export HOMEPATH=${HOMEPATH:-'\Users\builder'} export HOMEDRIVE=${HOMEDRIVE:-'C:'} /cygdrive/c/Python27/python $exe --nofork >> $log 2>&1 # option "--debug" is also available.