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Gerrit Code Review - Quick get started guide
============================================
****
This guide was made with the impatient in mind, ready to try out Gerrit on their
own server but not prepared to make the full installation procedure yet.
Explanation is sparse and you should not use a server installed this way in a
live setup, this is made with proof of concept activities in mind.
It is presumed you install it on a Unix based server such as any of the Linux
flavors or BSD.
It's also presumed that you have access to an OpenID enabled email address.
Examples of OpenID enable email providers are Gmail, Yahoo! Mail and Hotmail.
It's also possible to register a custom email address with OpenID, but that is
outside the scope of this quick installation guide. For testing purposes one of
the above providers should be fine. Please note that network access to the
OpenID provider you choose is necessary for both you and your Gerrit instance.
****
[[requirements]]
Requirements
------------
Most distributions come with Java today. Do you already have Java installed?
----
$ java -version
java version "1.6.0_26"
Java(TM) SE Runtime Environment (build 1.6.0_26-b03-384-10M3425)
Java HotSpot(TM) 64-Bit Server VM (build 20.1-b02-384, mixed mode)
----
If Java isn't installed, get it:
* JDK, minimum version 1.6 http://www.oracle.com/technetwork/java/javase/downloads/index.html[Download]
[[user]]
Create a user to host the Gerrit service
----------------------------------------
We will run the service as a non-privileged user on your system.
First create the user and then become the user:
----
$ sudo adduser gerrit2
$ sudo su gerrit2
----
If you don't have root privileges you could skip this step and run Gerrit
as your own user as well.
[[download]]
Download Gerrit
---------------
It's time to download the archive that contains the Gerrit web and ssh service.
You can choose from different versions to download from here:
* http://code.google.com/p/gerrit/downloads/list[A list of releases available]
This tutorial is based on version 2.2.2, and you can download that from this link
* http://code.google.com/p/gerrit/downloads/detail?name=gerrit-2.2.2.war[Link to the 2.2.2 war archive]
[[initialization]]
Initialize the Site
-------------------
It's time to run the initialization, and with the batch switch enabled, we don't have to answer any questions at all:
----
gerrit2@host:~$ java -jar gerrit.war init --batch -d ~/gerrit_testsite
Generating SSH host key ... rsa(simple)... done
Initialized /home/gerrit2/gerrit_testsite
Executing /home/gerrit2/gerrit_testsite/bin/gerrit.sh start
Starting Gerrit Code Review: OK
gerrit2@host:~$
----
When the init is complete, you can review your settings in the
file `'$site_path/etc/gerrit.config'`.
Note that initialization also starts the server. If any settings changes are
made, the server must be restarted before they will take effect.
----
gerrit2@host:~$ ~/gerrit_testsite/bin/gerrit.sh restart
Stopping Gerrit Code Review: OK
Starting Gerrit Code Review: OK
gerrit2@host:~$
----
The server can be also stopped and started by passing the `stop` and `start`
commands to gerrit.sh.
----
gerrit2@host:~$ ~/gerrit_testsite/bin/gerrit.sh stop
Stopping Gerrit Code Review: OK
gerrit2@host:~$
gerrit2@host:~$ ~/gerrit_testsite/bin/gerrit.sh start
Starting Gerrit Code Review: OK
gerrit2@host:~$
----
[[usersetup]]
The first user
--------------
It's time to exit the gerrit2 account as you now have Gerrit running on your
host and setup your first workspace.
Start a shell with the credentials of the account you will perform
development under.
Check whether there are any ssh keys already. You're looking for two files,
id_rsa and id_rsa.pub.
----
user@host:~$ ls .ssh
authorized_keys config id_rsa id_rsa.pub known_hosts
user@host:~$
----
If you have the files, you may skip the key generating step.
If you don't see the files in your listing, your will have to generate rsa
keys for your ssh sessions:
SSH key generation
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
*Please don't generate new keys if you already have a valid keypair!*
*They will be overwritten!*
----
user@host:~$ ssh-keygen -t rsa
Generating public/private rsa key pair.
Enter file in which to save the key (/home/user/.ssh/id_rsa):
Created directory '/home/user/.ssh'.
Enter passphrase (empty for no passphrase):
Enter same passphrase again:
Your identification has been saved in /home/user/.ssh/id_rsa.
Your public key has been saved in /home/user/.ssh/id_rsa.pub.
The key fingerprint is:
00:11:22:00:11:22:00:11:44:00:11:22:00:11:22:99 user@host
The key's randomart image is:
+--[ RSA 2048]----+
| ..+.*=+oo.*E|
| u.OoB.. . +|
| ..*. |
| o |
| . S .. |
| |
| |
| .. |
| |
+-----------------+
user@host:~$
----
Registering your key in Gerrit
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Open a browser and enter the canonical url of your Gerrit server. You can
find the url in the settings file.
----
gerrit2@host:~$ git config -f ~/gerrit_testsite/etc/gerrit.config gerrit.canonicalWebUrl
http://localhost:8080/
gerrit2@host:~$
----
Register a new account in Gerrit through the web interface with the
email address of your choice.
The default authentication type is OpenID. If your Gerrit server is behind a
proxy, and you are using an external OpenID provider, you will need to add the
proxy settings in the configuration file.
----
gerrit2@host:~$ git config -f ~/gerrit_testsite/etc/gerrit.config --add http.proxy http://proxy:8080
gerrit2@host:~$ git config -f ~/gerrit_testsite/etc/gerrit.config --add http.proxyUsername username
gerrit2@host:~$ git config -f ~/gerrit_testsite/etc/gerrit.config --add http.proxyPassword password
----
Refer to the Gerrit configuration guide for more detailed information about
link:config-gerrit.html#auth[authentication] and
link:config-gerrit.html#http.proxy[proxy] settings.
The first user to sign-in and register an account will be
automatically placed into the fully privileged Administrators group,
permitting server management over the web and over SSH. Subsequent
users will be automatically registered as unprivileged users.
Once signed in as your user, you find a little wizard to get you started.
The wizard helps you fill out:
* Real name (visible name in Gerrit)
* Register your email (it must be confirmed later)
* Select a username with which to communicate with Gerrit over ssh+git
* The server will ask you for an RSA public key.
That's the key we generated above, and it's time to make sure that Gerrit knows
about our new key and can identify us by it.
----
user@host:~$ cat .ssh/id_rsa.pub
ssh-rsa AAAAB3NzaC1yc2EAAAABIwAAAQEA5E785mWtMckorP5v40PyFeui9T50dKpaGYw67Mlv2J3aGBG3tS0qBQxKEpiV0J4+W0RgQHbWfNqdUYen9bC5VVH/GatYWkpL9TjjUcHzF1rX3Eyv7PHuHLAyd/8Zdv6R3saF+hNpp1JW0BSa7HXzK7iNCVA3kBuBthxeGh3OoFbaXHn1zwwVQw8I5+Lp9OOIY7sJEsM/kW699XDV6z2zlkByNVEp45j+g26x5rCnGS8GJM7A0uHsaWJddO6TiyR6/2SOBF1VtKw49XLTQcmDInFAZzUsAZSDKlfYloPkpA6YdqeG0eJqau+jtzuigydoVj4j9xidcJ9HtxZcJNuraw== user@host
user@host:~$
----
Copy the string starting with ssh-rsa to your clipboard and then paste it
into the box for RSA keys. Make *absolutely sure* no extra spaces or line feeds
are entered in the middle of the RSA string.
Verify that the ssh connection works for you.
----
user@host:~$ ssh user@localhost -p 29418
The authenticity of host '[localhost]:29418 ([127.0.0.1]:29418)' can't be established.
RSA key fingerprint is db:07:3d:c2:94:25:b5:8d:ac:bc:b5:9e:2f:95:5f:4a.
Are you sure you want to continue connecting (yes/no)? yes
Warning: Permanently added '[localhost]:29418' (RSA) to the list of known hosts.
**** Welcome to Gerrit Code Review ****
Hi user, you have successfully connected over SSH.
Unfortunately, interactive shells are disabled.
To clone a hosted Git repository, use:
git clone ssh://user@localhost:29418/REPOSITORY_NAME.git
user@host:~$
----
Project creation
----------------
Your base Gerrit server is now running and you have a user that's ready
to interact with it. You now have two options, either you create a new
test project to work with or you already have a git with history that
you would like to import into Gerrit and try out code review on.
New project from scratch
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
If you choose to create a new repository from scratch, it's easier for
you to create a project with an initial commit in it. That way first
time setup between client and server is easier.
This is done via the SSH port:
----
user@host:~$ ssh -p 29418 user@localhost gerrit create-project --empty-commit --name demo-project
user@host:~$
----
This will create a repository that you can clone to work with.
Already existing project
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
The other alternative is if you already have a git project that you
want to try out Gerrit on.
First you have to create the project. This is done via the SSH port:
----
user@host:~$ ssh -p 29418 user@localhost gerrit create-project --name demo-project
user@host:~$
----
You need to make sure that at least initially your account is granted
"Create Reference" privileges for the refs/heads/* reference.
This is done via the web interface in the Admin/Projects/Access page
that correspond to your project.
After that it's time to upload the previous history to the server:
----
user@host:~/my-project$ git push ssh://user@localhost:29418/demo-project *:*
Counting objects: 2011, done.
Writing objects: 100% (2011/2011), 456293 bytes, done.
Total 2011 (delta 0), reused 0 (delta 0)
To ssh://user@localhost:29418/demo-project
* [new branch] master -> master
user@host:~/my-project$
----
This will create a repository that you can clone to work with.
My first change
---------------
Download a local clone of the repository and move into it
----
user@host:~$ git clone ssh://user@host:29418/demo-project
Cloning into demo-project...
remote: Counting objects: 2, done
remote: Finding sources: 100% (2/2)
remote: Total 2 (delta 0), reused 0 (delta 0)
user@host:~$ cd demo-project
user@host:~/demo-project$
----
Then make a change to it and upload it as a reviewable change in Gerrit.
----
user@host:~/demo-project$ date > testfile.txt
user@host:~/demo-project$ git add testfile.txt
user@host:~/demo-project$ git commit -m "My pretty test commit"
[master ff643a5] My pretty test commit
1 files changed, 1 insertions(+), 0 deletions(-)
create mode 100644 testfile.txt
user@host:~/demo-project$
----
Usually when you push to a remote git, you push to the reference
`'/refs/heads/branch'`, but when working with Gerrit you have to push to a
virtual branch representing "code review before submission to branch".
This virtual name space is known as /refs/for/<branch>
----
user@host:~/demo-project$ git push origin HEAD:refs/for/master
Counting objects: 4, done.
Writing objects: 100% (3/3), 293 bytes, done.
Total 3 (delta 0), reused 0 (delta 0)
remote:
remote: New Changes:
remote: http://localhost:8080/1
remote:
To ssh://user@localhost:29418/demo-project
* [new branch] HEAD -> refs/for/master
user@host:~/demo-project$
----
You should now be able to access your change by browsing to the http URL
suggested above, http://localhost:8080/1
Quick Installation Complete
---------------------------
This covers the scope of getting Gerrit started and your first change uploaded.
It doesn't give any clue as to how the review workflow works, please read
link:http://source.android.com/submit-patches/workflow[Default Workflow] to
learn more about the workflow of Gerrit.
To read more on the installation of Gerrit please see link:install.html[the detailed
installation page].
GERRIT
------
Part of link:index.html[Gerrit Code Review]