690cebedcd
The examples of pushing a tag in the access control documentation imply that pushing a tag is only possible over SSH, when in fact it is also possible over HTTPS. Reword the examples to also include HTTPS. Change-Id: I561e116c8c1a4ce0912fccdbd77a0848bb2bc060
1291 lines
46 KiB
Plaintext
1291 lines
46 KiB
Plaintext
Gerrit Code Review - Access Controls
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====================================
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Access controls in Gerrit are group based. Every user account is a
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member of one or more groups, and access and privileges are granted
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to those groups. Access rights cannot be granted to individual
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users.
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System Groups
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-------------
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Gerrit comes with 4 system groups, with special access privileges
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and membership management. The identity of these groups is set
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in the `system_config` table within the database, so the groups
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can be renamed after installation if desired.
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[[administrators]]
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Administrators
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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This is the Gerrit "root" identity.
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Users in the 'Administrators' group can perform any action under
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the Admin menu, to any group or project, without further validation
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or any other access controls. In most installations only those
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users who have direct filesystem and database access would be
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placed into this group.
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Membership in the 'Administrators' group does not imply any other
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access rights. Administrators do not automatically get code review
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approval or submit rights in projects. This is a feature designed
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to permit administrative users to otherwise access Gerrit as any
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other normal user would, without needing two different accounts.
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[[anonymous_users]]
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Anonymous Users
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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All users are automatically a member of this group. Users who are
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not signed in are a member of only this group, and no others.
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Any access rights assigned to this group are inherited by all users.
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Administrators and project owners can grant access rights to this
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group in order to permit anonymous users to view project changes,
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without requiring sign in first. Currently it is only worthwhile
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to grant `Read` access to this group as Gerrit requires an account
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identity for all other operations.
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[[non-interactive_users]]
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Non-Interactive Users
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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This is an internal user group, members of this group are not expected
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to perform interactive operations on the Gerrit web frontend.
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However, sometimes such a user may need a separate thread pool in
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order to prevent it from grabbing threads from the interactive users.
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These users live in a second thread pool, which separates operations
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made by the non-interactive users from the ones made by the interactive
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users. This ensures that the interactive users can keep working when
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resources are tight.
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[[project_owners]]
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Project Owners
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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Access rights assigned to this group are always evaluated within the
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context of a project to which the access rights apply. These rights
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therefore apply to all the users who are owners of this project.
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By assigning access rights to this group on a parent project Gerrit
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administrators can define a set of default access rights for
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<<category_owner,project owners>>. Child projects inherit these
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access rights where they are resolved to the users that own the child
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project. Having default access rights for
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<<category_owner,project owners>> assigned on a parent project may
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avoid the need to initially configure access rights for
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newly created child projects.
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[[registered_users]]
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Registered Users
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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All signed-in users are automatically a member of this group (and
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also <<anonymous_users,'Anonymous Users'>>, see above).
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Any access rights assigned to this group are inherited by all
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users as soon as they sign-in to Gerrit. If OpenID authentication
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is being employed, moving from only 'Anonymous Users' into this
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group is very easy. Caution should be taken when assigning any
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permissions to this group.
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It is typical to assign `Code Review -1..+1` to this group,
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allowing signed-in users to vote on a change, but not actually
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cause it to become approved or rejected.
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Registered users are always permitted to make and publish comments
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on any change in any project they have `Read` access to.
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Account Groups
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--------------
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Account groups contain a list of zero or more user account members,
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added individually by a group owner. Any user account listed as
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a group member is given any access rights granted to the group.
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Every group has one other group designated as its owner. Users who
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are members of the owner group can:
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* Add users and other groups to this group
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* Remove users and other groups from this group
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* Change the name of this group
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* Change the description of this group
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* Change the owner of this group, to another group
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It is permissible for a group to own itself, allowing the group
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members to directly manage who their peers are.
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Newly created groups are automatically created as owning themselves,
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with the creating user as the only member. This permits the group
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creator to add additional members, and change the owner to another
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group if desired.
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It is somewhat common to create two groups at the same time,
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for example `Foo` and `Foo-admin`, where the latter group
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`Foo-admin` owns both itself and also group `Foo`. Users who
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are members of `Foo-admin` can thus control the membership of
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`Foo`, without actually having the access rights granted to `Foo`.
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This configuration can help prevent accidental submits when the
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members of `Foo` have submit rights on a project, and the members of
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`Foo-admin` typically do not need to have such rights.
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Project Access Control Lists
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----------------------------
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A system wide access control list affecting all projects is stored in
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project "`All-Projects`". This inheritance can be configured
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through link:cmd-set-project-parent.html[gerrit set-project-parent].
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Per-project access control lists are also supported.
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Users are permitted to use the maximum range granted to any of their
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groups in an approval category. For example, a user is a member of
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`Foo Leads`, and the following ACLs are granted on a project:
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[options="header"]
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|=================================================
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|Group |Reference Name |Category|Range
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|Anonymous Users |refs/heads/*|Code Review|-1..+1
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|Registered Users|refs/heads/*|Code Review|-1..+2
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|Foo Leads |refs/heads/*|Code Review|-2..0
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|=================================================
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Then the effective range permitted to be used by the user is
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`-2..+2`, as the user is a member of all three groups (see above
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about the system groups) and the maximum range is chosen (so the
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lowest value granted to any group, and the highest value granted
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to any group).
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Reference-level access control is also possible.
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Permissions can be set on a single reference name to match one
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branch (e.g. `refs/heads/master`), or on a reference namespace
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(e.g. `refs/heads/*`) to match any branch starting with that
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prefix. So a permission with `refs/heads/*` will match
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`refs/heads/master` and `refs/heads/experimental`, etc.
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Reference names can also be described with a regular expression
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by prefixing the reference name with `^`. For example
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`^refs/heads/[a-z]{1,8}` matches all lower case branch names
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between 1 and 8 characters long. Within a regular expression `.`
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is a wildcard matching any character, but may be escaped as `\.`.
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The link:http://www.brics.dk/automaton/[dk.brics.automaton library]
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is used for evaluation of regular expression access control
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rules. See the library documentation for details on this
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particular regular expression flavor.
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References can have the current user name automatically included,
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creating dynamic access controls that change to match the currently
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logged in user. For example to provide a personal sandbox space
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to all developers, `refs/heads/sandbox/${username}/*` allowing
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the user 'joe' to use 'refs/heads/sandbox/joe/foo'.
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When evaluating a reference-level access right, Gerrit will use
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the full set of access rights to determine if the user
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is allowed to perform a given action. For example, if a user is a
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member of `Foo Leads`, they are reviewing a change destined for
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the `refs/heads/qa` branch, and the following ACLs are granted
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on the project:
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[options="header"]
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|===============================================================
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|Group |Reference Name|Category |Range |Exclusive
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|Registered Users |refs/heads/* |Code Review| -1..+1 |
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|Foo Leads |refs/heads/* |Code Review| -2..+2 |
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|QA Leads |refs/heads/qa |Code Review| -2..+2 |
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|===============================================================
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Then the effective range permitted to be used by the user is
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`-2..+2`, as the user's membership of `Foo Leads` effectively grant
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them access to the entire reference space, thanks to the wildcard.
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Gerrit also supports exclusive reference-level access control.
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It is possible to configure Gerrit to grant an exclusive ref level
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access control so that only users of a specific group can perform
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an operation on a project/reference pair. This is done by ticking
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the exclusive flag when setting the permission for the
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`refs/heads/qa` branch.
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For example, if a user who is a member of `Foo Leads` tries to
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review a change destined for branch `refs/heads/qa` in a project,
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and the following ACLs are granted:
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[options="header"]
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|==============================================================
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|Group |Reference Name|Category |Range |Exclusive
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|Registered Users|refs/heads/* |Code Review| -1..+1 |
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|Foo Leads |refs/heads/* |Code Review| -2..+2 |
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|QA Leads |refs/heads/qa |Code Review| -2..+2 |X
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|==============================================================
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Then this user will not have `Code Review` rights on that change,
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since there is an exclusive access right in place for the
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`refs/heads/qa` branch. This allows locking down access for a
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particular branch to a limited set of users, bypassing inherited
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rights and wildcards.
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In order to grant the ability to `Code Review` to the members of
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`Foo Leads`, in `refs/heads/qa` then the following access rights
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would be needed:
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[options="header"]
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|==============================================================
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|Group |Reference Name|Category |Range |Exclusive
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|Registered Users|refs/heads/* |Code Review| -1..+1 |
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|Foo Leads |refs/heads/* |Code Review| -2..+2 |
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|QA Leads |refs/heads/qa |Code Review| -2..+2 |X
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|Foo Leads |refs/heads/qa |Code Review| -2..+2 |
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|==============================================================
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OpenID Authentication
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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If the Gerrit instance is configured to use OpenID authentication,
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an account's effective group membership will be restricted to only
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the `Anonymous Users` and `Registered Users` groups, unless *all*
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of its OpenID identities match one or more of the patterns listed
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in the `auth.trustedOpenID` list from `gerrit.config`.
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All Projects
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~~~~~~~~~~~~
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Any access right granted to a group within `All-Projects`
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is automatically inherited by every other project in the same
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Gerrit instance. These rights can be seen, but not modified,
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in any other project's `Access` administration tab.
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Only members of the groups with the `Administrate Server` capability
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may edit the access control list for `All-Projects`. By default this
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capability is given to the group `Administrators`, but can be given
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to more groups.
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Ownership of this project cannot be delegated to another group.
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This restriction is by design. Granting ownership to another
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group gives nearly the same level of access as membership in
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`Administrators` does, as group members would be able to alter
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permissions for every managed project including global capabilities.
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Per-Project
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~~~~~~~~~~~
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The per-project ACL is evaluated before the global `All-Projects` ACL,
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permitting some limited override capability to project owners. This
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behavior is generally only useful on the `Read` category when
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granting 'DENY' within a specific project to deny a group access.
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[[access_category]]
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Access Categories
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-----------------
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Gerrit comes pre-configured with several default categories that
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can be granted to groups within projects, enabling functionality
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for that group's members.
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With the release of the Gerrit 2.2.x series, the web GUI for ACL
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configuration was rewritten from scratch. Use this
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<<conversion_table,table>> to better understand the access rights
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conversions from the Gerrit 2.1.x to the Gerrit 2.2.x series.
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[[category_label-Verified]]
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Label: Verified
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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The verified category is one of two default categories that is
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configured upon the creation of a Gerrit instance. It may have
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any meaning the project desires. It was originally invented by
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the Android Open Source Project to mean
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'compiles, passes basic unit tests'.
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The range of values is:
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* -1 Fails
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+
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Tried to compile, but got a compile error, or tried to run tests,
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but one or more tests did not pass. This value is valid
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across all patch sets in the same change, i.e. the reviewer must
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actively change his/her review to something else before the change
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is submittable.
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+
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*Any -1 blocks submit.*
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* 0 No score
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+
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Didn't try to perform the verification tasks.
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* +1 Verified
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+
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Compiled (and ran tests) successfully.
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+
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*Any +1 enables submit.*
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For a change to be submittable, the change must have a `+1 Verified`
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in this category from at least one authorized user, and no `-1 Fails`
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from an authorized user. Thus, `-1 Fails` can block a submit,
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while `+1 Verified` enables a submit.
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If a Gerrit installation does not wish to use this category in any
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project, it can be deleted from the database:
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====
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DELETE FROM approval_categories WHERE category_id = 'VRIF';
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DELETE FROM approval_category_values WHERE category_id = 'VRIF';
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====
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If a Gerrit installation wants to modify the description text
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associated with these category values, the text can be updated
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in the `name` column of the `category_id = 'VRIF'` rows in the
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`approval_category_values` table.
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Additional values could also be added to this category, to allow it
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to behave more like `Code Review` (below). Insert -2 and +2 value
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rows into the `approval_category_values` with `category_id` set to
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`VRIF` to get the same behavior.
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[NOTE]
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A restart is required after making database changes.
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See <<restart_changes,below>>.
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[[category_label-Code-Review]]
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Label: Code Review
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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The code review category is the second of two default categories that
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is configured upon the creation of a Gerrit instance. It may have
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any meaning the project desires. It was originally invented by the
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Android Open Source Project to mean 'I read the code and it seems
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reasonably correct'.
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The range of values is:
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* -2 Do not submit
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+
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The code is so horribly incorrect/buggy/broken that it must not be
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submitted to this project, or to this branch. This value is valid
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across all patch sets in the same change, i.e. the reviewer must
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actively change his/her review to something else before the change
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is submittable.
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+
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*Any -2 blocks submit.*
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* -1 I would prefer that you didn't submit this
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+
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The code doesn't look right, or could be done differently, but
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the reviewer is willing to live with it as-is if another reviewer
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accepts it, perhaps because it is better than what is currently in
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the project. Often this is also used by contributors who don't like
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the change, but also aren't responsible for the project long-term
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and thus don't have final say on change submission.
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+
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Does not block submit.
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* 0 No score
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+
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Didn't try to perform the code review task, or glanced over it but
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don't have an informed opinion yet.
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* +1 Looks good to me, but someone else must approve
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+
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The code looks right to this reviewer, but the reviewer doesn't
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have access to the `+2` value for this category. Often this is
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used by contributors to a project who were able to review the change
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and like what it is doing, but don't have final approval over what
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gets submitted.
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* +2 Looks good to me, approved
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+
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Basically the same as `+1`, but for those who have final say over
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how the project will develop.
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+
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*Any +2 enables submit.*
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For a change to be submittable, the latest patch set must have a
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`+2 Looks good to me, approved` in this category from at least one
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authorized user, and no `-2 Do not submit` from an authorized user.
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Thus `-2` on any patch set can block a submit, while `+2` on the
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latest patch set can enable it.
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If a Gerrit installation does not wish to use this category in any
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project, it can be deleted from the database:
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====
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DELETE FROM approval_categories WHERE category_id = 'CRVW';
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DELETE FROM approval_category_values WHERE category_id = 'CRVW';
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====
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If a Gerrit installation wants to modify the description text
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associated with these category values, the text can be updated
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in the `name` column of the `category_id = 'CRVW'` rows in the
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`approval_category_values` table.
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Additional values could be inserted into `approval_category_values`
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to further extend the negative and positive range, but there is
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likely little value in doing so as this only expands the middle
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region. This category is a `MaxWithBlock` type, which means that
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the lowest negative value if present blocks a submit, while the
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highest positive value is required to enable submit.
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[[function_MaxNoBlock]]
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There is also a `MaxNoBlock` category which still requires the
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highest positive value to submit, but the lowest negative value will
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not block the change, and does not carry over between patch sets.
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This level is mostly useful for automated code-reviews that may
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have false-negatives that shouldn't block the change.
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[NOTE]
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A restart is required after making database changes.
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See <<restart_changes,below>>.
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[[category_abandon]]
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Abandon
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~~~~~~~
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This category controls whether users are allowed to abandon changes
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to projects in Gerrit. It can give permission to abandon a specific
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change to a given ref.
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This also grants the permission to restore a change if the change
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can be uploaded.
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[[category_create]]
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Create reference
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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The create reference category controls whether it is possible to
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create new references, branches or tags. This implies that the
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reference must not already exist, it's not a destructive permission
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in that you can't overwrite or remove any previously existing
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references (and also discard any commits in the process).
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It's probably most common to either permit the creation of a single
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branch in many gits (by granting permission on a parent project), or
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to grant this permission to a name pattern of branches.
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This permission is often given in conjunction with regular push
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branch permissions, allowing the holder of both to create new branches
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as well as bypass review for new commits on that branch.
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To push lightweight (non-annotated) tags, grant
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`Create Reference` for reference name `refs/tags/*`, as lightweight
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tags are implemented just like branches in Git.
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For example, to grant the possibility to create new branches under the
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namespace `foo`, you have to grant this permission on
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`refs/heads/foo/*` for the group that should have it.
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Finally, if you plan to grant each user a personal namespace in
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where they are free to create as many branches as they wish, you
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should grant the create reference permission so it's possible
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to create new branches. This is done by using the special
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`${username}` keyword in the reference pattern, e.g.
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`refs/heads/sandbox/${username}/*`. If you do, it's also recommended
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you grant the users the push force permission to be able to clean up
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stale branches.
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[[category_forge_author]]
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Forge Author
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~~~~~~~~~~~~
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Normally Gerrit requires the author and the committer identity
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lines in a Git commit object (or tagger line in an annotated tag) to
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match one of the registered email addresses of the uploading user.
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This permission allows users to bypass parts of that validation, which
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may be necessary when mirroring changes from an upstream project.
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Permits the use of an unverified author line in commit objects.
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This can be useful when applying patches received by email from
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3rd parties, when cherry-picking changes written by others across
|
|
branches, or when amending someone else's commit to fix up a minor
|
|
problem before submitting.
|
|
|
|
By default this is granted to `Registered Users` in all projects,
|
|
but a site administrator may disable it if verified authorship
|
|
is required.
|
|
|
|
|
|
[[category_forge_committer]]
|
|
Forge Committer
|
|
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
|
|
|
|
Normally Gerrit requires the author and the committer identity
|
|
lines in a Git commit object (or tagger line in an annotated tag) to
|
|
match one of the registered email addresses of the uploading user.
|
|
This permission allows users to bypass parts of that validation, which
|
|
may be necessary when mirroring changes from an upstream project.
|
|
|
|
Allows the use of an unverified committer line in commit objects, or an
|
|
unverified tagger line in annotated tag objects. Typically this is only
|
|
required when mirroring commits from an upstream project repository.
|
|
|
|
|
|
[[category_forge_server]]
|
|
Forge Server
|
|
~~~~~~~~~~~~
|
|
|
|
Normally Gerrit requires the author and the committer identity
|
|
lines in a Git commit object (or tagger line in an annotated tag) to
|
|
match one of the registered email addresses of the uploading user.
|
|
This permission allows users to bypass parts of that validation, which
|
|
may be necessary when mirroring changes from an upstream project.
|
|
|
|
Allows the use of the server's own name and email on the committer
|
|
line of a new commit object. This should only be necessary when force
|
|
pushing a commit history which has been rewritten by 'git filter-branch'
|
|
and that contains merge commits previously created by this Gerrit Code
|
|
Review server.
|
|
|
|
|
|
[[category_owner]]
|
|
Owner
|
|
~~~~~
|
|
|
|
The `Owner` category controls which groups can modify the project's
|
|
configuration. Users who are members of an owner group can:
|
|
|
|
* Change the project description
|
|
* Create/delete a branch through the web UI (not SSH)
|
|
* Grant/revoke any access rights, including `Owner`
|
|
|
|
Note that project owners implicitly have branch creation or deletion
|
|
through the web UI, but not through SSH. To get SSH branch access
|
|
project owners must grant an access right to a group they are a
|
|
member of, just like for any other user.
|
|
|
|
Ownership over a particular branch subspace may be delegated by
|
|
entering a branch pattern. To delegate control over all branches
|
|
that begin with `qa/` to the QA group, add `Owner` category
|
|
for reference `refs/heads/qa/*`. Members of the QA group can
|
|
further refine access, but only for references that begin with
|
|
`refs/heads/qa/`. See <<project_owners,project owners>> to find
|
|
out more about this role.
|
|
|
|
|
|
[[category_push]]
|
|
Push
|
|
~~~~
|
|
|
|
This category controls how users are allowed to upload new commits
|
|
to projects in Gerrit. It can either give permission to push
|
|
directly into a branch, bypassing any code review process
|
|
that would otherwise be used. Or it may give permission to upload
|
|
new changes for code review, this depends on which namespace the
|
|
permission is granted to.
|
|
|
|
|
|
[[category_push_direct]]
|
|
Direct Push
|
|
^^^^^^^^^^^
|
|
|
|
Any existing branch can be fast-forwarded to a new commit.
|
|
Creation of new branches is controlled by the
|
|
link:access-control.html#category_create['Create Reference']
|
|
category. Deletion of existing branches is rejected. This is the
|
|
safest mode as commits cannot be discarded.
|
|
|
|
* Force option
|
|
+
|
|
Allows an existing branch to be deleted. Since a force push is
|
|
effectively a delete immediately followed by a create, but performed
|
|
atomically on the server and logged, this option also permits forced
|
|
push updates to branches. Enabling this option allows existing commits
|
|
to be discarded from a project history.
|
|
|
|
The push category is primarily useful for projects that only want to
|
|
take advantage of Gerrit's access control features and do not need
|
|
its code review functionality. Projects that need to require code
|
|
reviews should not grant this category.
|
|
|
|
|
|
[[category_push_review]]
|
|
Upload To Code Review
|
|
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
|
|
|
|
The `Push` access right granted on the namespace
|
|
`refs/for/refs/heads/BRANCH` permits the user to upload a non-merge
|
|
commit to the project's `refs/for/BRANCH` namespace, creating a new
|
|
change for code review.
|
|
|
|
A user must be able to clone or fetch the project in order to create
|
|
a new commit on their local system, so in practice they must also
|
|
have the `Read` access granted to upload a change.
|
|
|
|
For an open source, public Gerrit installation, it is common to
|
|
grant `Read` and `Push` for `refs/for/refs/heads/*`
|
|
to `Registered Users` in the `All-Projects` ACL. For more
|
|
private installations, its common to simply grant `Read` and
|
|
`Push` for `refs/for/refs/heads/*` to all users of a project.
|
|
|
|
* Force option
|
|
+
|
|
The force option has no function when granted to a branch in the
|
|
`refs/for/refs/heads/*` namespace.
|
|
|
|
|
|
[[category_push_merge]]
|
|
Push Merge Commits
|
|
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
|
|
|
|
The `Push Merge Commit` access right permits the user to upload merge
|
|
commits. It's an addon to the <<category_push,Push>> access right, and
|
|
so it won't be sufficient with only `Push Merge Commit` granted for a
|
|
push to happen. Some projects wish to restrict merges to being created
|
|
by Gerrit. By granting `Push` without `Push Merge Commit`, the only
|
|
merges that enter the system will be those created by Gerrit.
|
|
|
|
The reference name connected to a `Push Merge Commit` entry must always
|
|
be prefixed with `refs/for/`, for example `refs/for/refs/heads/BRANCH`.
|
|
This applies even for an entry that complements a `Push` entry for
|
|
`refs/heads/BRANCH` that allows direct pushes of non-merge commits, and
|
|
the intention of the `Push Merge Commit` entry is to allow direct pushes
|
|
of merge commits.
|
|
|
|
[[category_push_annotated]]
|
|
Push Annotated Tag
|
|
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
|
|
|
|
This category permits users to push an annotated tag object into the
|
|
project's repository. Typically this would be done with a command line
|
|
such as:
|
|
|
|
====
|
|
git push ssh://USER@HOST:PORT/PROJECT tag v1.0
|
|
====
|
|
|
|
Or:
|
|
|
|
====
|
|
git push https://HOST/PROJECT tag v1.0
|
|
====
|
|
|
|
Tags must be annotated (created with `git tag -a`), should exist in
|
|
the `refs/tags/` namespace, and should be new.
|
|
|
|
This category is intended to be used to publish tags when a project
|
|
reaches a stable release point worth remembering in history.
|
|
|
|
It allows for a new annotated (unsigned) tag to be created. The
|
|
tagger email address must be verified for the current user.
|
|
|
|
To push tags created by users other than the current user (such
|
|
as tags mirrored from an upstream project), `Forge Committer Identity`
|
|
must be also granted in addition to `Push Annotated Tag`.
|
|
|
|
To push lightweight (non annotated) tags, grant
|
|
<<category_create,`Create Reference`>> for reference name
|
|
`refs/tags/*`, as lightweight tags are implemented just like
|
|
branches in Git.
|
|
|
|
To delete or overwrite an existing tag, grant `Push` with the force
|
|
option enabled for reference name `refs/tags/*`, as deleting a tag
|
|
requires the same permission as deleting a branch.
|
|
|
|
|
|
[[category_push_signed]]
|
|
Push Signed Tag
|
|
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
|
|
|
|
This category permits users to push a PGP signed tag object into the
|
|
project's repository. Typically this would be done with a command
|
|
line such as:
|
|
|
|
====
|
|
git push ssh://USER@HOST:PORT/PROJECT tag v1.0
|
|
====
|
|
|
|
Or:
|
|
|
|
====
|
|
git push https://HOST/PROJECT tag v1.0
|
|
====
|
|
|
|
Tags must be signed (created with `git tag -s`), should exist in the
|
|
`refs/tags/` namespace, and should be new.
|
|
|
|
|
|
[[category_read]]
|
|
Read
|
|
~~~~
|
|
|
|
The `Read` category controls visibility to the project's
|
|
changes, comments, code diffs, and Git access over SSH or HTTP.
|
|
A user must have this access granted in order to see a project, its
|
|
changes, or any of its data.
|
|
|
|
This category has a special behavior, where the per-project ACL is
|
|
evaluated before the global all projects ACL. If the per-project
|
|
ACL has granted `Read` with 'DENY', and does not otherwise grant
|
|
`Read` with 'ALLOW', then a `Read` in the all projects ACL
|
|
is ignored. This behavior is useful to hide a handful of projects
|
|
on an otherwise public server.
|
|
|
|
For an open source, public Gerrit installation it is common to grant
|
|
`Read` to `Anonymous Users` in the `All-Projects` ACL, enabling
|
|
casual browsing of any project's changes, as well as fetching any
|
|
project's repository over SSH or HTTP. New projects can be
|
|
temporarily hidden from public view by granting `Read` with 'DENY'
|
|
to `Anonymous Users` and granting `Read` to the project owner's
|
|
group within the per-project ACL.
|
|
|
|
For a private Gerrit installation using a trusted HTTP authentication
|
|
source, granting `Read` to `Registered Users` may be more
|
|
typical, enabling read access only to those users who have been
|
|
able to authenticate through the HTTP access controls. This may
|
|
be suitable in a corporate deployment if the HTTP access control
|
|
is already restricted to the correct set of users.
|
|
|
|
|
|
[[category_rebase]]
|
|
Rebase
|
|
~~~~~~
|
|
|
|
This category permits users to rebase changes via the web UI by pushing
|
|
the `Rebase Change` button.
|
|
|
|
The change owner and submitters can always rebase changes in the web UI
|
|
(even without having the `Rebase` access right assigned).
|
|
|
|
Users without this access right who are able to upload new patch sets
|
|
can still do the rebase locally and upload the rebased commit as a new
|
|
patch set.
|
|
|
|
[[category_remove_reviewer]]
|
|
Remove Reviewer
|
|
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
|
|
|
|
This category permits users to remove other users from the list of
|
|
reviewers on a change.
|
|
|
|
The change owner, project owner and site administrator can always
|
|
remove reviewers (even without having the `Remove Reviewer` access
|
|
right assigned).
|
|
|
|
Users without this access right can only remove themselves from the
|
|
reviewer list on a change.
|
|
|
|
|
|
[[category_submit]]
|
|
Submit
|
|
~~~~~~
|
|
|
|
This category permits users to push the `Submit Patch Set n` button
|
|
on the web UI.
|
|
|
|
Submitting a change causes it to be merged into the destination
|
|
branch as soon as possible, making it a permanent part of the
|
|
project's history.
|
|
|
|
In order to submit, all approval categories (such as `Verified` and
|
|
`Code Review`, above) must enable submit, and also must not block it.
|
|
See above for details on each category.
|
|
|
|
|
|
[[category_view_drafts]]
|
|
View Drafts
|
|
~~~~~~~~~~~
|
|
|
|
This category permits users to view draft changes uploaded by other
|
|
users.
|
|
|
|
The change owner and any explicitly added reviewers can always see
|
|
draft changes (even without having the `View Drafts` access right
|
|
assigned).
|
|
|
|
|
|
[[category_publish_drafts]]
|
|
Publish Drafts
|
|
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
|
|
|
|
This category permits users to publish draft changes uploaded by other
|
|
users.
|
|
|
|
The change owner can always publish draft changes (even without having
|
|
the `Publish Drafts` access right assigned).
|
|
|
|
|
|
[[category_delete_drafts]]
|
|
Delete Drafts
|
|
~~~~~~~~~~~~~
|
|
|
|
This category permits users to delete draft changes uploaded by other
|
|
users.
|
|
|
|
The change owner can always delete draft changes (even without having
|
|
the `Delete Drafts` access right assigned).
|
|
|
|
|
|
[[category_edit_topic_name]]
|
|
Edit Topic Name
|
|
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
|
|
|
|
This category permits users to edit the topic name of a change that
|
|
is uploaded for review.
|
|
|
|
The change owner, branch owners, project owners, and site administrators
|
|
can always edit the topic name (even without having the `Edit Topic Name`
|
|
access right assigned).
|
|
|
|
|
|
[[category_makeoneup]]
|
|
Your Category Here
|
|
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
|
|
|
|
Gerrit administrators can also make up their own categories.
|
|
|
|
See above for descriptions of how <<category_verified,`Verified`>>
|
|
and <<category_review,`Code Review`>> work, and insert your own
|
|
category with `function_name = 'MaxWithBlock'` to get the same
|
|
behavior over your own range of values, in any category you desire.
|
|
|
|
Ensure `category_id` is unique within your `approval_categories`
|
|
table. The default values `VRIF` and `CVRF` used for the categories
|
|
described above are simply that, defaults, and have no special
|
|
meaning to Gerrit.
|
|
|
|
The `position` column of `approval_categories` controls which column
|
|
of the 'Approvals' table the category appears in, providing some
|
|
layout control to the administrator.
|
|
|
|
All `MaxWithBlock` categories must have at least one positive value
|
|
in the `approval_category_values` table, or else submit will never
|
|
be enabled.
|
|
|
|
To permit blocking submits, ensure a negative value is defined for
|
|
your new category. If you do not wish to have a blocking submit
|
|
level for your category, do not define values less than 0.
|
|
|
|
Keep in mind that category definitions are currently global to
|
|
the entire Gerrit instance, and affect all projects hosted on it.
|
|
Any change to a category definition affects everyone.
|
|
|
|
For example, to define a new 3-valued category that behaves exactly
|
|
like `Verified`, but has different names/labels:
|
|
|
|
====
|
|
INSERT INTO approval_categories
|
|
(name
|
|
,position
|
|
,function_name
|
|
,category_id)
|
|
VALUES
|
|
('Copyright Check'
|
|
,3
|
|
,'MaxWithBlock'
|
|
,'copy');
|
|
|
|
INSERT INTO approval_category_values
|
|
(category_id,value,name)
|
|
VALUES
|
|
('copy', -1, 'Do not have copyright');
|
|
|
|
INSERT INTO approval_category_values
|
|
(category_id,value,name)
|
|
VALUES
|
|
('copy', 0, 'No score');
|
|
|
|
INSERT INTO approval_category_values
|
|
(category_id,value,name)
|
|
VALUES
|
|
('copy', 1, 'Copyright clear');
|
|
====
|
|
|
|
The new column will appear at the end of the table (in position 3),
|
|
and `-1 Do not have copyright` will block submit, while `+1 Copyright
|
|
clear` is required to enable submit.
|
|
|
|
link:config-gerrit.html#commentlink[Comment link] processing is applied to the
|
|
text description of the approval categories (the `name` column). This can be
|
|
used to display HTML links in the approval category value descriptions.
|
|
|
|
[[restart_changes]]
|
|
[NOTE]
|
|
Restart the Gerrit web application and reload all browsers after
|
|
making any database changes to approval categories. Browsers are
|
|
sent the list of known categories when they first visit the site,
|
|
and don't notice changes until the page is closed and opened again,
|
|
or is reloaded.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Examples of typical roles in a project
|
|
--------------------------------------
|
|
|
|
Below follows a set of typical roles on a server and which access
|
|
rights these roles typically should be granted. You may see them as
|
|
general guidelines for a typical way to set up your project on a
|
|
brand new Gerrit instance.
|
|
|
|
[[examples_contributor]]
|
|
Contributor
|
|
~~~~~~~~~~~
|
|
|
|
This is the typical user on a public server. They are able to read
|
|
your project and upload new changes to it. They are able to give
|
|
feedback on other changes as well, but are unable to block or approve
|
|
any changes.
|
|
|
|
Suggested access rights to grant:
|
|
|
|
* <<category_read,`Read`>> on 'refs/heads/\*' and 'refs/tags/*'
|
|
* <<category_push,`Push`>> to 'refs/for/refs/heads/*'
|
|
* <<category_label-Code-Review,`Code review`>> with range '-1' to '+1' for 'refs/heads/*'
|
|
|
|
|
|
[[examples_developer]]
|
|
Developer
|
|
~~~~~~~~~
|
|
|
|
This is the typical core developer on a public server. They are able
|
|
to read the project, upload changes to a branch. They are allowed to
|
|
push merge commits to merge branches together. Also, they are allowed
|
|
to forge author identity, thus handling commits belonging to others
|
|
than themselves, effectively allowing them to transfer commits
|
|
between different branches.
|
|
|
|
They are furthermore able to code review and verify commits, and
|
|
eventually submit them. If you have an automated CI system that
|
|
builds all uploaded patch sets you might want to skip the
|
|
verification rights for the developer and let the CI system do that
|
|
exclusively.
|
|
|
|
Suggested access rights to grant:
|
|
|
|
* <<category_read,`Read`>> on 'refs/heads/\*' and 'refs/tags/*'
|
|
* <<category_push,`Push`>> to 'refs/for/refs/heads/*'
|
|
* <<category_push_merge,`Push merge commit`>> to 'refs/for/refs/heads/*'
|
|
* <<category_forge_author,`Forge Author Identity`>> to 'refs/heads/*'
|
|
* <<category_label-Code-Review,`Label: Code review`>> with range '-2' to '+2' for 'refs/heads/*'
|
|
* <<category_label-Verified,`Label: Verify`>> with range '-1' to '+1' for 'refs/heads/*'
|
|
* <<category_submit,`Submit`>>
|
|
|
|
If the project is small or the developers are seasoned it might make
|
|
sense to give them the freedom to push commits directly to a branch.
|
|
|
|
Optional access rights to grant:
|
|
|
|
* <<category_push,`Push`>> to 'refs/heads/*'
|
|
* <<category_push_merge,`Push merge commit`>> to 'refs/heads/*'
|
|
|
|
|
|
[[examples_cisystem]]
|
|
CI system
|
|
~~~~~~~~~
|
|
|
|
A typical Continous Integration system should be able to download new changes
|
|
to build and then leave a verdict somehow.
|
|
|
|
As an example, the popular
|
|
link:https://wiki.jenkins-ci.org/display/JENKINS/Gerrit+Trigger[gerrit-trigger plugin]
|
|
for Jenkins/Hudson can set labels at:
|
|
|
|
* The start of a build
|
|
* A successful build
|
|
* An unstable build (tests fails)
|
|
* A failed build
|
|
|
|
Usually the range chosen for this verdict is the verify label. Depending on
|
|
the size of your project and discipline of involved developers you might want
|
|
to limit access right to the +1 `Verify` label to the CI system only. That
|
|
way it's guaranteed that submitted commits always get built and pass tests
|
|
successfully.
|
|
|
|
If the build doesn't complete successfully the CI system can set the
|
|
`Verify` label to -1. However that means that a failed build will block
|
|
submit of the change even if someone else sets `Verify` +1. Depending on the
|
|
project and how much the CI system can be trusted for accurate results, a
|
|
blocking label might not be feasible. A recommended alternative is to set the
|
|
label `Code-review` to -1 instead, as it isn't a blocking label but still
|
|
shows a red label in the Gerrit UI. Optionally, to enable the possibility to
|
|
deliver different results (build error vs unstable for instance), it's also
|
|
possible to set `Code-review` +1 as well.
|
|
|
|
If pushing new changes is granted, it's possible to automate cherry-pick of
|
|
submitted changes for upload to other branches under certain conditions. This
|
|
is probably not the first step of what a project wants to automate however,
|
|
and so the push right can be found under the optional section.
|
|
|
|
Suggested access rights to grant, that won't block changes:
|
|
|
|
* <<category_read,`Read`>> on 'refs/heads/\*' and 'refs/tags/*'
|
|
* <<category_label-Code-Review,`Label: Code review`>> with range '-1' to '0' for 'refs/heads/*'
|
|
* <<category_label-Verified,`Label: Verify`>> with range '0' to '+1' for 'refs/heads/*'
|
|
|
|
Optional access rights to grant:
|
|
|
|
* <<category_label-Code-Review,`Label: Code review`>> with range '-1' to '+1' for 'refs/heads/*'
|
|
* <<category_push,`Push`>> to 'refs/for/refs/heads/*'
|
|
|
|
|
|
[[examples_integrator]]
|
|
Integrator
|
|
~~~~~~~~~~
|
|
|
|
Integrators are like developers but with some additional rights granted due
|
|
to their administrative role in a project. They can upload or push any commit
|
|
with any committer email (not just their own) and they can also create new
|
|
tags and branches.
|
|
|
|
Suggested access rights to grant:
|
|
|
|
* <<examples_developer,Developer rights>>
|
|
* <<category_push,`Push`>> to 'refs/heads/*'
|
|
* <<category_push_merge,`Push merge commit`>> to 'refs/heads/*'
|
|
* <<category_forge_committer,`Forge Committer Identity`>> to 'refs/for/refs/heads/*'
|
|
* <<category_create,`Create Reference`>> to 'refs/heads/*'
|
|
* <<category_push_annotated,`Push Annotated Tag`>> to 'refs/tags/*'
|
|
|
|
|
|
[[examples_project-owner]]
|
|
Project owner
|
|
~~~~~~~~~~~~~
|
|
|
|
The project owner is almost like an integrator but with additional destructive
|
|
power in the form of being able to delete branches. Optionally these users
|
|
also have the power to configure access rights in gits assigned to them.
|
|
|
|
[WARNING]
|
|
These users should be really knowledgable about git, for instance knowing why
|
|
tags never should be removed from a server. This role is granted potentially
|
|
destructive access rights and cleaning up after such a mishap could be time
|
|
consuming!
|
|
|
|
Suggested access rights to grant:
|
|
|
|
* <<examples_integrator,Integrator rights>>
|
|
* <<category_push,`Push`>> with the force option to 'refs/heads/\*' and 'refs/tags/*'
|
|
|
|
Optional access right to grant:
|
|
|
|
* <<category_owner,`Owner`>> in the gits they mostly work with.
|
|
|
|
[[examples_administrator]]
|
|
Administrator
|
|
~~~~~~~~~~~~~
|
|
|
|
The administrator role is the most powerful role known in the Gerrit universe.
|
|
This role may grant itself (or others) any access right, and it already has
|
|
all capabilities granted as well. By default the
|
|
<<administrators,`Administrators` group>> is the group that has this role.
|
|
|
|
Mandatory access rights:
|
|
|
|
* <<capability_administrateServer,The `Administrate Server` capability>>
|
|
|
|
Suggested access rights to grant:
|
|
|
|
* <<examples_project-owner,Project owner rights>>
|
|
|
|
|
|
[[conversion_table]]
|
|
Conversion table from 2.1.x series to 2.2.x series
|
|
--------------------------------------------------
|
|
|
|
[options="header"]
|
|
|=================================================================================
|
|
|Gerrit 2.1.x |Gerrit 2.2.x
|
|
|Code review |<<category_label-Code-Review,Label: Code review>>
|
|
|Verify |<<category_label-Verified,Label: Verify>>
|
|
|Forge Identity +1 |Forge <<category_forge_author,author>> identity
|
|
|Forge Identity +2 |Forge <<category_forge_committer,committer>> & <<category_forge_author,author>> identity
|
|
|Forge Identity +3 |Forge <<category_forge_server,server>> & <<category_forge_committer,committer>> & <<category_forge_author,author>> identity
|
|
|Owner |<<category_owner,Owner>>
|
|
|Push branch +1 |<<category_push_direct,Push>>
|
|
|Push branch +2 |<<category_create,Create reference>> & <<category_push_direct,Push>>
|
|
|Push branch +3 |<<category_push_direct,Push>> (with force) & <<category_create,Create reference>>
|
|
|Push tag +1 & Push Branch +2 |No support to limit to push signed tag
|
|
|Push tag +2 & Push Branch +2 |<<category_push_annotated,Push annotated tag>>
|
|
|Push Branch +2 (refs/tags/*) |<<category_create,Create reference>> (refs/tags/...)
|
|
|Push Branch +3 (refs/tags/*) |<<category_push_direct,Push>> (with force on refs/tags/...)
|
|
|Read +1 |<<category_read,Read>>
|
|
|Read +2 |<<category_read,Read>> & <<category_push_review,Push>> (refs/for/refs/...)
|
|
|Read +3 |<<category_read,Read>> & <<category_push_review,Push>> (refs/for/refs/...) & <<category_push_merge,Push Merge Commit>>
|
|
|Submit |<<category_submit,Submit>>
|
|
|=================================================================================
|
|
|
|
|
|
[NOTE]
|
|
In Gerrit 2.2.x, the way to set permissions for upload has changed entirely.
|
|
To upload a change for review is no longer a separate permission type,
|
|
instead you grant ordinary push permissions to the actual
|
|
recieving reference. In practice this means that you set push permissions
|
|
on `refs/for/refs/heads/<branch>` rather than permissions to upload changes
|
|
on `refs/heads/<branch>`.
|
|
|
|
|
|
System capabilities
|
|
-------------------
|
|
|
|
The system capabilities control actions that the administrators of
|
|
the server can perform which usually affect the entire
|
|
server in some way. The administrators may delegate these
|
|
capabilities to trusted groups of users.
|
|
|
|
Delegation of capabilities allows groups to be granted a subset of
|
|
administrative capabilities without being given complete
|
|
administrative control of the server. This makes it possible to
|
|
keep fewer users in the administrators group, even while spreading
|
|
much of the server administration burden out to more users.
|
|
|
|
Below you find a list of capabilities available:
|
|
|
|
|
|
[[capability_administrateServer]]
|
|
Administrate Server
|
|
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
|
|
|
|
This is in effect the owner and administrator role of the Gerrit
|
|
instance. Any members of a group granted this capability will be
|
|
able to grant any access right to any group. They will also have all
|
|
capabilities granted to them automatically.
|
|
|
|
|
|
[[capability_createAccount]]
|
|
Create Account
|
|
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
|
|
|
|
Allow link:cmd-create-account.html[account creation over the ssh prompt].
|
|
This capability allows the granted group members to create non-interactive
|
|
service accounts. These service accounts are generally used for automation
|
|
and made to be members of the
|
|
link:access-control.html#non-interactive_users['Non-Interactive users'] group.
|
|
|
|
|
|
[[capability_createGroup]]
|
|
Create Group
|
|
~~~~~~~~~~~~
|
|
|
|
Allow group creation. Groups are used to grant users access to different
|
|
actions in projects. This capability allows the granted group members to
|
|
either link:cmd-create-group.html[create new groups via ssh] or via the web UI.
|
|
|
|
|
|
[[capability_createProject]]
|
|
Create Project
|
|
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
|
|
|
|
Allow project creation. This capability allows the granted group to
|
|
either link:cmd-create-project.html[create new git projects via ssh]
|
|
or via the web UI.
|
|
|
|
[[capability_emailReviewers]]
|
|
Email Reviewers
|
|
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
|
|
|
|
Allow or deny sending email to change reviewers and watchers. This can be used
|
|
to deny build bots from emailing reviewers and people who watch the change.
|
|
Instead, only the authors of the change and those who starred it will be
|
|
emailed. The allow rules are evaluated before deny rules, however the default
|
|
is to allow emailing, if no explicit rule is matched.
|
|
|
|
[[capability_flushCaches]]
|
|
Flush Caches
|
|
~~~~~~~~~~~~
|
|
|
|
Allow the flushing of Gerrit's caches. This capability allows the granted
|
|
group to link:cmd-flush-caches.html[flush some or all Gerrit caches via ssh].
|
|
|
|
[NOTE]
|
|
This capability doesn't imply permissions to the show-caches command. For that
|
|
you need the <<capability_viewCaches,view caches capability>>.
|
|
|
|
|
|
[[capability_kill]]
|
|
Kill Task
|
|
~~~~~~~~~
|
|
|
|
Allow the operation of the link:cmd-kill.html[kill command over ssh]. The
|
|
kill command ends tasks that currently occupy the Gerrit server, usually
|
|
a replication task or a user initiated task such as an upload-pack or
|
|
recieve-pack.
|
|
|
|
|
|
[[capability_priority]]
|
|
Priority
|
|
~~~~~~~~
|
|
|
|
This capability allows users to use
|
|
link:config-gerrit.html#sshd.batchThreads[the thread pool reserved] for
|
|
link:access-control.html#non-interactive_users['Non-Interactive Users'].
|
|
It's a binary value in that granted users either have access to the thread
|
|
pool, or they don't.
|
|
|
|
There are three modes for this capability and they're listed by rising
|
|
priority:
|
|
|
|
No capability configured.::
|
|
The user isn't a member of a group with any priority capability granted. By
|
|
default the user is then in the 'INTERACTIVE' thread pool.
|
|
|
|
'BATCH'::
|
|
If there's a thread pool configured for 'Non-Interactive Users' and a user is
|
|
granted the priority capability with the 'BATCH' mode selected, the user ends
|
|
up in the separate batch user thread pool. This is true unless the user is
|
|
also granted the below 'INTERACTIVE' option.
|
|
|
|
'INTERACTIVE'::
|
|
If a user is granted the priority capability with the 'INTERACTIVE' option,
|
|
regardless if they also have the 'BATCH' option or not, they are in the
|
|
'INTERACTIVE' thread pool.
|
|
|
|
|
|
[[capability_queryLimit]]
|
|
Query Limit
|
|
~~~~~~~~~~~
|
|
|
|
Allow site administrators to configure the query limit for users to
|
|
be above the default hard-coded value of 500. Administrators can add
|
|
a global block to `All-Projects` with group(s) that
|
|
should have different limits:
|
|
|
|
When applying a query limit to a user the largest value granted by
|
|
any of their groups is used.
|
|
|
|
This limit applies not only to the link:cmd-query.html[`gerrit query`]
|
|
command, but also to the web UI results pagination size.
|
|
|
|
|
|
[[capability_startReplication]]
|
|
Start Replication
|
|
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
|
|
|
|
Allow access to execute `replication start` command, if the
|
|
replication plugin is installed on the server.
|
|
|
|
|
|
[[capability_viewCaches]]
|
|
View Caches
|
|
~~~~~~~~~~~
|
|
|
|
Allow querying for status of Gerrit's internal caches. This capability allows
|
|
the granted group to
|
|
link:cmd-show-caches.html[look at some or all Gerrit caches via ssh].
|
|
|
|
|
|
[[capability_viewConnections]]
|
|
View Connections
|
|
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
|
|
|
|
Allow querying for status of Gerrit's current client connections. This
|
|
capability allows the granted group to
|
|
link:cmd-show-connections.html[look at Gerrit's current connections via ssh].
|
|
|
|
|
|
[[capability_viewQueue]]
|
|
View Queue
|
|
~~~~~~~~~~
|
|
|
|
Allow querying for status of Gerrit's internal task queue. This capability
|
|
allows the granted group to
|
|
link:cmd-show-queue.html[look at the Gerrit task queue via ssh].
|
|
|
|
|
|
GERRIT
|
|
------
|
|
Part of link:index.html[Gerrit Code Review]
|