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TracRepositoryAdmin
::: {.wiki-toc}
- Quick start
- Specifying repositories
- Repository synchronization
- Migration from a single-repository setup (Subversion)
- Migration from a single-repository setup (Mercurial)
- Troubleshooting
- Manage repositories in the "Repository" admin panel, with
trac-admin
or in the[repositories]
section of trac.ini{.wiki}. - Set up a call to
trac-admin $ENV changeset added $REPO $REV
in the post-commit hook of each repository. Additionally, add a call totrac-admin $ENV changeset modified $REPO $REV
in the post-revprop-change hook of repositories allowing revision property changes. - Set the
[trac] repository_sync_per_request
option to an empty value to disable per-request syncing. - Make sure the user under which your Subversion hooks are run has
write access to the Trac environment, or use a tool like
sudo
to temporarily elevate privileges.
Starting with 0.12, Trac can handle more than one repository per
environment. The pre-0.12 way of specifying the repository with the
repository_dir
and repository_type
options in the [trac]
section
of trac.ini{.wiki} is still supported, but two new mechanisms
allow including additional repositories into an environment.
It is also possible to define aliases of repositories, that act as "pointers" to real repositories. This can be useful when renaming a repository, to avoid breaking all the links to the old name.
A number of attributes can be associated with each repository, which define the repository's location, type, name and how it is displayed in the source browser. The following attributes are supported:
+-----------------------------------+-----------------------------------+
| Attribute | Description |
+:==================================+:==================================+
| alias
| A repository having an alias
|
| | attribute is an alias to a real |
| | repository. All |
| | TracLinks{.wiki} |
| | referencing the alias resolve to |
| | the aliased repository. Note that |
| | multiple indirection is not |
| | supported, so an alias must |
| | always point to a real |
| | repository. The alias
and dir
|
| | attributes are mutually |
| | exclusive. |
+-----------------------------------+-----------------------------------+
| description
| The text specified in the |
| | description
attribute is |
| | displayed below the top-level |
| | entry for the repository in the |
| | source browser. It supports |
| | WikiFormatting{ |
| | .wiki}. |
+-----------------------------------+-----------------------------------+
| dir
| The dir
attribute specifies the |
| | location of the repository in the |
| | filesystem. It corresponds to the |
| | value previously specified in the |
| | option [trac] repository_dir
. |
| | The alias
and dir
attributes |
| | are mutually exclusive. |
+-----------------------------------+-----------------------------------+
| hidden
| When set to true
, the |
| | repository is hidden from the |
| | repository index page in the |
| | source browser. Browsing the |
| | repository is still possible, and |
| | links referencing the repository |
| | remain valid. |
+-----------------------------------+-----------------------------------+
| type
| The type
attribute sets the |
| | type of version control system |
| | used by the repository. Trac |
| | supports Subversion and Git |
| | out-of-the-box, and plugins add |
| | support for many other systems. |
| | If type
is not specified, it |
| | defaults to the value of the |
| | [trac] repository_type
option. |
+-----------------------------------+-----------------------------------+
| url
| The url
attribute specifies the |
| | root URL to be used for checking |
| | out from the repository. When |
| | specified, a "Repository URL" |
| | link is added to the context |
| | navigation links in the source |
| | browser, that can be copied into |
| | the tool used for creating the |
| | working copy. |
+-----------------------------------+-----------------------------------+
A repository name
and one of alias
or dir
attributes are
mandatory. All others are optional.
After adding a repository, the cache for that repository must be
re-synchronized once with the trac-admin $ENV repository resync
command.
repository resync <repos>
: Re-synchronize Trac with a repository.
Repositories and repository attributes can be specified in the
[repositories]
section of
trac.ini{.wiki}.
Every attribute consists of a key structured as {name}.{attribute}
and
the corresponding value separated with an equal sign (=
). The name of
the default repository is empty.
The main advantage of specifying repositories in trac.ini
is that they
can be inherited from a global configuration (see the global
configuration{.wiki} section of
TracIni{.wiki}). One drawback is that, due to limitations in
the ConfigParser
class used to parse trac.ini
, the repository name
is always all-lowercase.
The following example defines two Subversion repositories named
project
and lib
, and an alias to project
as the default
repository. This is a typical use case where a Trac environment
previously had a single repository (the project
repository), and was
converted to multiple repositories. The alias ensures that links
predating the change continue to resolve to the project
repository.
::: {.code} [repositories] project.dir = /var/repos/project project.description = This is the ''main'' project repository. project.type = svn project.url = http://example.com/svn/project project.hidden = true
lib.dir = /var/repos/lib
lib.description = This is the secondary library code.
lib.type = svn
lib.url = http://example.com/svn/lib
.alias = project
:::
Note that name.alias = target
makes name
an alias for the target
repo, not the other way around.
Repositories can also be specified in the database, using either the
"Repositories" admin panel under "Version Control", or the
trac-admin $ENV repository
commands.
The admin panel shows the list of all repositories defined in the Trac
environment. It allows adding repositories and aliases, editing
repository attributes and removing repositories. Note that repositories
defined in trac.ini
are displayed but cannot be edited.
The following trac-admin{.wiki} commands can be used to perform repository operations from the command line.
repository add <repos> <dir> [type]
: Add a repository <repos>
located at <dir>
, and optionally
specify its type.
repository alias <name> <target>
: Create an alias <name>
for the repository <target>
.
repository remove <repos>
: Remove the repository <repos>
.
repository set <repos> <key> <value>
: Set the attribute <key>
to <value>
for the repository <repos>
.
Note that the default repository has an empty name, so it will likely
need to be quoted when running trac-admin
from a shell. Alternatively,
the name "(default)
" can be used instead, for example when running
trac-admin
in interactive mode.
Prior to 0.12, Trac synchronized its cache with the repository on every HTTP request. This approach is not very efficient and not practical anymore with multiple repositories. For this reason, explicit synchronization through post-commit hooks was added.
There is also new functionality in the form of a repository listener extension point (IRepositoryChangeListener) that is triggered by the post-commit hook when a changeset is added or modified, and can be used by plugins to perform actions on commit.
Please note that at the time of writing, no initial resynchronization or any hooks are necessary for Mercurial repositories - see []{.icon}#9485{.ext-link} for more information.
This is the preferred method of repository synchronization. It requires
setting the [trac] repository_sync_per_request
option in
trac.ini{.wiki} to
an empty value, and adding a call to trac-admin
in the post-commit
hook of each repository. Additionally, if a repository allows changing
revision metadata, a call to trac-admin
must be added to the
post-revprop-change hook as well.
changeset added <repos> <rev> […]
: Notify Trac that one or more changesets have been added to a
repository.
changeset modified <repos> <rev> […]
: Notify Trac that metadata on one or more changesets in a repository
has been modified.
The <repos>
argument can be either a repository name (use
"(default)
" for the default repository) or the path to the
repository.
Note that you may have to set the environment variable PYTHON_EGG_CACHE to the same value as was used for the web server configuration before calling trac-admin, if you changed it from its default location. See Trac Plugins{.wiki} for more information.
The following examples are complete post-commit and post-revprop-change
scripts for Subversion. They should be edited for the specific
environment, marked executable (where applicable) and placed in the
hooks
directory of each repository. On Unix (post-commit
):
::: {.code} #!/bin/sh export PYTHON_EGG_CACHE="/path/to/dir" /usr/bin/trac-admin /path/to/env changeset added "$1" "$2" :::
Note: Ubuntu doesn't seem to like /usr/bin/trac-admin, so just use:
::: {.code} #!/bin/sh export PYTHON_EGG_CACHE="/path/to/dir" trac-admin /path/to/env/ changeset added "$1" "$2" :::
On Windows (post-commit.cmd
):
::: {.code} @C:\Python26\Scripts\trac-admin.exe C:\path\to\env changeset added "%1" "%2" :::
The post-revprop-change hook for Subversion is very similar. On Unix
(post-revprop-change
):
::: {.code} #!/bin/sh export PYTHON_EGG_CACHE="/path/to/dir" /usr/bin/trac-admin /path/to/env changeset modified "$1" "$2" :::
On Windows (post-revprop-change.cmd
):
::: {.code} @C:\Python26\Scripts\trac-admin.exe C:\path\to\env changeset modified "%1" "%2" :::
The Unix variants above assume that the user running the Subversion
commit has write access to the Trac environment, which is the case in
the standard configuration where both the repository and Trac are served
by the web server. If you access the repository through another means,
for example svn+ssh://
, you may have to run trac-admin
with
different privileges, for example by using sudo
.
Note that calling trac-admin
in your Subversion hooks can slow down
the commit and log editing operations on the client side. You might want
to use the
[]{.icon}contrib/trac-svn-hook{.ext-link}
script which starts trac-admin
in an asynchronous way. The script also
comes with a number of safety checks and usage advices which should make
it easier to set up and test your hooks. There's no equivalent
trac-svn-hook.bat
for Windows yet, but the script can be run by
Cygwin's bash.
See the []{.icon}section about hooks{.ext-link} in the Subversion book for more information. Other repository types will require different hook setups.
Git hooks can be used in the same way for explicit syncing of git
repositories. Add the following to .git/hooks/post-commit
:
::: {.code} REV=$(git rev-parse HEAD) trac-admin /path/to/env changeset added $REV :::
For Mercurial, add the following entries to the .hgrc
file of each
repository accessed by Trac (if
[]{.icon}TracMercurial{.ext-link}
is installed in a Trac plugins
directory, download
[]{.icon}hooks.py{.ext-link}
and place it somewhere accessible):
::: {.code} [hooks] ; If mercurial-plugin is installed globally commit = python:tracext.hg.hooks.add_changesets changegroup = python:tracext.hg.hooks.add_changesets
; If mercurial-plugin is installed in a Trac plugins directory
commit = python:/path/to/hooks.py:add_changesets
changegroup = python:/path/to/hooks.py:add_changesets
[trac]
env = /path/to/env
trac-admin = /path/to/trac-admin
:::
If the post-commit hooks are not available, the environment can be set
up for per-request synchronization. In that case, the
[trac] repository_sync_per_request
option in
trac.ini{.wiki}
must be set to a comma-separated list of repository names to be
synchronized.
Note that in this case, the changeset listener extension point is not called, and therefore plugins using it will not work correctly.
The following procedure illustrates a typical migration from a Subversion single-repository setup to multiple repositories.
- Remove the default repository specification from the
[trac] repository_dir
option. - Add the main repository as a named repository.
- Re-synchronize the main repository.
- Set up post-commit and post-revprop-change hooks on the "main"
repository, and set
[trac] repository_sync_per_request
to an empty value. - Add an alias to the main repository as the default repository (by
leaving out the the
name
, e.g..alias = main
). This ensures that all links predating the migration still resolve to the main repository. - Repeat steps 2, 3 and 4 to add other "named" repositories as needed.
The following procedure illustrates a typical migration from a Mercurial single-repository setup to multiple repositories. Please note that at the time of writing, no initial resynchronization or any hooks are necessary for Mercurial repositories - see []{.icon}#9485{.ext-link} for more information.
- Upgrade to the latest version of the TracMercurial?{.missing .wiki} plugin.
- Remove the default repository specification from the
[trac] repository_dir
option. - Add the main repository as a named repository.
- Add an alias to the main repository as the default repository (by
leaving out the the
name
, e.g..alias = main
). This ensures that all links predating the migration still resolve to the main repository. - Repeat step 3 to add other "named" repositories as needed.
You must now use the optional components from
tracopt.ticket.commit_updater.*
, which you can activate through the
Plugins panel in the Administrative part of the web interface, or by
directly modifying the
[components]{.wiki}
section in the trac.ini. Be sure to use explicit
synchronization{.wiki} as explained
above.