gerrit/Documentation/config-project-config.txt
Stefan Lay 08ba473e22 Fix inconsistency in documentation
The page with the title "Project Configuration" was referred to as
"Project Setup". Moreover, it was contained in a file with the name
"project-setup.txt".

Change-Id: Iab834981893967bfbcba8214e118689ea348b93b
Signed-off-by: Stefan Lay <stefan.lay@sap.com>
2014-05-07 14:51:17 +02:00

234 lines
8.3 KiB
Plaintext

= Gerrit Code Review - Project Configuration File Format
This page explains the storage format of Gerrit's project configuration
and access control models.
The web UI access control panel is a front end for human-readable
configuration files under the +refs/meta/config+ namespace in the
affected project. Direct manipulation of these files is mainly
relevant in an automation scenario of the access controls.
== The +refs/meta/config+ namespace
The namespace contains three different files that play different
roles in the permission model. With read permission to that reference,
it is possible to fetch the +refs/meta/config+ reference to a local
repository. A nice side effect is that you can also upload changes
to project permissions and review them just like with regular code
changes. The preview changes option is also provided on the UI. Please note
that you will have to configure push rights for the +refs/meta/config+ name
space if you'd like to use the possibility to automate permission updates.
[[file-project_config]]
== The file +project.config+
The +project.config+ file contains the link between groups and their
permitted actions on reference patterns in this project and any projects
that inherit its permissions.
The format in this file corresponds to the Git config file format, so
if you want to automate your permissions it is a good idea to use the
+git config+ command when writing to the file. This way you know you
don't accidentally break the format of the file.
Here follows a +git config+ command example:
----
$ git config -f project.config project.description "Rights inherited by all other projects"
----
Below you will find an example of the +project.config+ file format:
----
[project]
description = Rights inherited by all other projects
[access "refs/*"]
read = group Administrators
[capability]
administrateServer = group Administrators
[receive]
requireContributorAgreement = false
----
As you can see, there are several sections.
The link:#project-section[+project+ section] appears once per project.
The link:#access-section[+access+ section] appears once per reference pattern,
such as `refs/*` or `refs/heads/*`. Only one access section per pattern is
allowed. You will find examples of keys and values in each category section
<<access_category,below>>.
The link:#receive-section[+receive+ section] appears once per project.
The link:#submit-section[+submit+ section] appears once per project.
The link:#capability-section[+capability+] section only appears once, and only
in the +All-Projects+ repository. It controls core features that are configured
on a global level. You can find examples of these
<<capability_category,below>>.
[[project-section]]
=== Project section
The project section includes configuration of project settings.
These are the keys:
- Description
[[receive-section]]
=== Receive section
The receive section includes configuration of project-specific
receive settings:
[[receive.requireContributorAgreement]]receive.requireContributorAgreement::
+
Controls whether or not a user must complete a contributor agreement before
they can upload changes. Default is `INHERIT`. If `All-Project` enables this
option then the dependent project must set it to false if users are not
required to sign a contributor agreement prior to submitting changes for that
specific project. To use that feature the global option in `gerrit.config`
must be enabled:
link:config-gerrit.html#auth.contributorAgreements[auth.contributorAgreements].
[[receive.requireSignedOffBy]]receive.requireSignedOffBy::
+
Sign-off can be a requirement for some projects (for example Linux kernel uses
it). Sign-off is a line at the end of the commit message which certifies who
is the author of the commit. Its main purpose is to improve tracking of who
did what, especially with patches. Default is `INHERIT`, which means that this
property is inherited from the parent project.
[[receive.requireChangeId]]receive.requireChangeId::
+
Controls whether or not the Change-Id must be included in the commit message
in the last paragraph. Default is `INHERIT`, which means that this property
is inherited from the parent project.
[[receive.maxObjectSizeLimit]]receive.maxObjectSizeLimit::
+
Maximum allowed Git object size that receive-pack will accept. If an object
is larger than the given size the pack-parsing will abort and the push
operation will fail. If set to zero then there is no limit.
+
Project owners can use this setting to prevent developers from pushing
objects which are too large to Gerrit. This setting can also be set it
`gerrit.config` globally link:config-gerrit.html#receive.maxObjectSizeLimit[
receive.maxObjectSizeLimit].
+
The project specific setting in `project.config` is only honored when it
further reduces the global limit.
+
Default is zero.
+
Common unit suffixes of k, m, or g are supported.
[[receive.checkReceivedObjects]]receive.checkReceivedObjects::
+
Controls whether or not the JGit functionality for checking received objects
is enabled.
+
By default Gerrit checks the validity of git objects. Setting this variable to
false should not be used unless a project with history containing invalid
objects needs to be pushed into a Gerrit repository.
+
This functionality is provided as some other git implementations have allowed
bad history to be written into git repositories. If these repositories need pushing
up to Gerrit then the JGit checks need to be disabled.
+
The default value for this is true, false disables the checks.
[[submit-section]]
=== Submit section
The submit section includes configuration of project-specific
submit settings:
- 'mergeContent': Defines whether to automatically merge changes. Valid values
are 'true', 'false', or 'INHERIT'. Default is 'INHERIT'.
- 'action': defines the link:project-configuration.html#submit_type[submit type]. Valid
values are 'fast forward only', 'merge if necessary', 'rebase if necessary',
'merge always' and 'cherry pick'. The default is 'merge if necessary'.
Merge strategy
[[access-section]]
=== Access section
Each +access+ section includes a reference and access rights connected
to groups. Each group listed must exist in the link:#file-groups[+groups+ file].
Please refer to the
link:access-control.html#access_categories[Access Categories]
documentation for a full list of available access rights.
[[capability-section]]
=== Capability section
The +capability+ section only appears once, and only in the +All-Projects+
repository. It controls Gerrit administration capabilities that are configured
on a global level.
Please refer to the
link:access-control.html#global_capabilities[Global Capabilities]
documentation for a full list of available capabilities.
[[file-groups]]
== The file +groups+
Each group in this list is linked with its UUID so that renaming of
groups is possible without having to rewrite every +groups+ file
in every repository where it's used.
This is what the default groups file for +All-Projects.git+ looks like:
----
# UUID Group Name
#
3d6da7dc4e99e6f6e5b5196e21b6f504fc530bba Administrators
global:Anonymous-Users Anonymous Users
global:Project-Owners Project Owners
global:Registered-Users Registered Users
----
This file can't be written to by the +git config+ command.
In order to reference a group in +project.config+, it must be listed in
the +groups+ file. When editing permissions through the web UI this
file is maintained automatically, but when pushing updates to
+refs/meta/config+ this must be dealt with by hand. Gerrit will refuse
+project.config+ files that refer to groups not listed in +groups+.
The UUID of a group can be found on the General tab of the group's page
in the web UI or via the +-v+ option to
link:cmd-ls-groups.html[the +ls-groups+ SSH command].
[[file-rules_pl]]
== The file +rules.pl+
The +rules.pl+ files allows you to replace or amend the default Prolog
rules that control e.g. what conditions need to be fulfilled for a
change to be submittable. This file content should be
interpretable by the 'Prolog Cafe' interpreter.
You can read more about the +rules.pl+ file and the prolog rules on
link:prolog-cookbook.html[the Prolog cookbook page].
GERRIT
------
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