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1gitweb.conf(5)
2==============
3
4NAME
5----
2de9b711 6gitweb.conf - Gitweb (Git web interface) configuration file
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7
8SYNOPSIS
9--------
10/etc/gitweb.conf, /etc/gitweb-common.conf, $GITWEBDIR/gitweb_config.perl
11
12DESCRIPTION
13-----------
14
15The gitweb CGI script for viewing Git repositories over the web uses a
16perl script fragment as its configuration file. You can set variables
17using "`our $variable = value`"; text from a "#" character until the
18end of a line is ignored. See *perlsyn*(1) for details.
19
20An example:
21
22 # gitweb configuration file for http://git.example.org
23 #
24 our $projectroot = "/srv/git"; # FHS recommendation
25 our $site_name = 'Example.org >> Repos';
26
27
28The configuration file is used to override the default settings that
29were built into gitweb at the time the 'gitweb.cgi' script was generated.
30
31While one could just alter the configuration settings in the gitweb
32CGI itself, those changes would be lost upon upgrade. Configuration
33settings might also be placed into a file in the same directory as the
34CGI script with the default name 'gitweb_config.perl' -- allowing
35one to have multiple gitweb instances with different configurations by
36the use of symlinks.
37
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38Note that some configuration can be controlled on per-repository rather than
39gitweb-wide basis: see "Per-repository gitweb configuration" subsection on
40linkgit:gitweb[1] manpage.
41
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42
43DISCUSSION
44----------
45Gitweb reads configuration data from the following sources in the
46following order:
47
48 * built-in values (some set during build stage),
49
50 * common system-wide configuration file (defaults to
51 '/etc/gitweb-common.conf'),
52
53 * either per-instance configuration file (defaults to 'gitweb_config.perl'
54 in the same directory as the installed gitweb), or if it does not exists
55 then fallback system-wide configuration file (defaults to '/etc/gitweb.conf').
56
57Values obtained in later configuration files override values obtained earlier
58in the above sequence.
59
60Locations of the common system-wide configuration file, the fallback
61system-wide configuration file and the per-instance configuration file
62are defined at compile time using build-time Makefile configuration
63variables, respectively `GITWEB_CONFIG_COMMON`, `GITWEB_CONFIG_SYSTEM`
64and `GITWEB_CONFIG`.
65
66You can also override locations of gitweb configuration files during
67runtime by setting the following environment variables:
68`GITWEB_CONFIG_COMMON`, `GITWEB_CONFIG_SYSTEM` and `GITWEB_CONFIG`
69to a non-empty value.
70
71
72The syntax of the configuration files is that of Perl, since these files are
73handled by sourcing them as fragments of Perl code (the language that
74gitweb itself is written in). Variables are typically set using the
75`our` qualifier (as in "`our $variable = <value>;`") to avoid syntax
76errors if a new version of gitweb no longer uses a variable and therefore
77stops declaring it.
78
79You can include other configuration file using read_config_file()
80subroutine. For example, one might want to put gitweb configuration
81related to access control for viewing repositories via Gitolite (one
2de9b711 82of Git repository management tools) in a separate file, e.g. in
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83'/etc/gitweb-gitolite.conf'. To include it, put
84
85--------------------------------------------------
86read_config_file("/etc/gitweb-gitolite.conf");
87--------------------------------------------------
88
89somewhere in gitweb configuration file used, e.g. in per-installation
90gitweb configuration file. Note that read_config_file() checks itself
91that the file it reads exists, and does nothing if it is not found.
92It also handles errors in included file.
93
94
95The default configuration with no configuration file at all may work
96perfectly well for some installations. Still, a configuration file is
97useful for customizing or tweaking the behavior of gitweb in many ways, and
98some optional features will not be present unless explicitly enabled using
99the configurable `%features` variable (see also "Configuring gitweb
100features" section below).
101
102
103CONFIGURATION VARIABLES
104-----------------------
105Some configuration variables have their default values (embedded in the CGI
106script) set during building gitweb -- if that is the case, this fact is put
107in their description. See gitweb's 'INSTALL' file for instructions on building
108and installing gitweb.
109
110
111Location of repositories
112~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
113The configuration variables described below control how gitweb finds
2de9b711 114Git repositories, and how repositories are displayed and accessed.
6d3902b0 115
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116See also "Repositories" and later subsections in linkgit:gitweb[1] manpage.
117
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118$projectroot::
119 Absolute filesystem path which will be prepended to project path;
120 the path to repository is `$projectroot/$project`. Set to
121 `$GITWEB_PROJECTROOT` during installation. This variable has to be
122 set correctly for gitweb to find repositories.
123+
124For example, if `$projectroot` is set to "/srv/git" by putting the following
125in gitweb config file:
126+
127----------------------------------------------------------------------------
128our $projectroot = "/srv/git";
129----------------------------------------------------------------------------
130+
131then
132+
133------------------------------------------------
134http://git.example.com/gitweb.cgi?p=foo/bar.git
135------------------------------------------------
136+
137and its path_info based equivalent
138+
139------------------------------------------------
140http://git.example.com/gitweb.cgi/foo/bar.git
141------------------------------------------------
142+
143will map to the path '/srv/git/foo/bar.git' on the filesystem.
144
145$projects_list::
146 Name of a plain text file listing projects, or a name of directory
147 to be scanned for projects.
148+
149Project list files should list one project per line, with each line
150having the following format
151+
152-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
153<URI-encoded filesystem path to repository> SP <URI-encoded repository owner>
154-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
155+
156The default value of this variable is determined by the `GITWEB_LIST`
157makefile variable at installation time. If this variable is empty, gitweb
158will fall back to scanning the `$projectroot` directory for repositories.
159
160$project_maxdepth::
161 If `$projects_list` variable is unset, gitweb will recursively
2de9b711 162 scan filesystem for Git repositories. The `$project_maxdepth`
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163 is used to limit traversing depth, relative to `$projectroot`
164 (starting point); it means that directories which are further
165 from `$projectroot` than `$project_maxdepth` will be skipped.
166+
167It is purely performance optimization, originally intended for MacOS X,
168where recursive directory traversal is slow. Gitweb follows symbolic
169links, but it detects cycles, ignoring any duplicate files and directories.
170+
171The default value of this variable is determined by the build-time
172configuration variable `GITWEB_PROJECT_MAXDEPTH`, which defaults to
1732007.
174
175$export_ok::
176 Show repository only if this file exists (in repository). Only
177 effective if this variable evaluates to true. Can be set when
178 building gitweb by setting `GITWEB_EXPORT_OK`. This path is
179 relative to `GIT_DIR`. git-daemon[1] uses 'git-daemon-export-ok',
180 unless started with `--export-all`. By default this variable is
181 not set, which means that this feature is turned off.
182
183$export_auth_hook::
184 Function used to determine which repositories should be shown.
185 This subroutine should take one parameter, the full path to
186 a project, and if it returns true, that project will be included
187 in the projects list and can be accessed through gitweb as long
188 as it fulfills the other requirements described by $export_ok,
189 $projects_list, and $projects_maxdepth. Example:
190+
191----------------------------------------------------------------------------
192our $export_auth_hook = sub { return -e "$_[0]/git-daemon-export-ok"; };
193----------------------------------------------------------------------------
194+
195though the above might be done by using `$export_ok` instead
196+
197----------------------------------------------------------------------------
198our $export_ok = "git-daemon-export-ok";
199----------------------------------------------------------------------------
200+
201If not set (default), it means that this feature is disabled.
07ea4df2 202+
2de9b711 203See also more involved example in "Controlling access to Git repositories"
07ea4df2 204subsection on linkgit:gitweb[1] manpage.
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205
206$strict_export::
207 Only allow viewing of repositories also shown on the overview page.
208 This for example makes `$gitweb_export_ok` file decide if repository is
209 available and not only if it is shown. If `$gitweb_list` points to
210 file with list of project, only those repositories listed would be
211 available for gitweb. Can be set during building gitweb via
212 `GITWEB_STRICT_EXPORT`. By default this variable is not set, which
213 means that you can directly access those repositories that are hidden
214 from projects list page (e.g. the are not listed in the $projects_list
215 file).
216
217
218Finding files
219~~~~~~~~~~~~~
220The following configuration variables tell gitweb where to find files.
221The values of these variables are paths on the filesystem.
222
223$GIT::
224 Core git executable to use. By default set to `$GIT_BINDIR/git`, which
2de9b711 225 in turn is by default set to `$(bindir)/git`. If you use Git installed
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226 from a binary package, you should usually set this to "/usr/bin/git".
227 This can just be "git" if your web server has a sensible PATH; from
228 security point of view it is better to use absolute path to git binary.
2de9b711 229 If you have multiple Git versions installed it can be used to choose
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230 which one to use. Must be (correctly) set for gitweb to be able to
231 work.
232
233$mimetypes_file::
234 File to use for (filename extension based) guessing of MIME types before
235 trying '/etc/mime.types'. *NOTE* that this path, if relative, is taken
2de9b711 236 as relative to the current Git repository, not to CGI script. If unset,
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237 only '/etc/mime.types' is used (if present on filesystem). If no mimetypes
238 file is found, mimetype guessing based on extension of file is disabled.
239 Unset by default.
240
241$highlight_bin::
242 Path to the highlight executable to use (it must be the one from
243 http://www.andre-simon.de[] due to assumptions about parameters and output).
244 By default set to 'highlight'; set it to full path to highlight
245 executable if it is not installed on your web server's PATH.
246 Note that 'highlight' feature must be set for gitweb to actually
b4ab1980 247 use syntax highlighting.
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249*NOTE*: for a file to be highlighted, its syntax type must be detected
250and that syntax must be supported by "highlight". The default syntax
251detection is minimal, and there are many supported syntax types with no
252detection by default. There are three options for adding syntax
253detection. The first and second priority are `%highlight_basename` and
254`%highlight_ext`, which detect based on basename (the full filename, for
255example "Makefile") and extension (for example "sh"). The keys of these
256hashes are the basename and extension, respectively, and the value for a
257given key is the name of the syntax to be passed via `--syntax <syntax>`
258to "highlight". The last priority is the "highlight" configuration of
259`Shebang` regular expressions to detect the language based on the first
260line in the file, (for example, matching the line "#!/bin/bash"). See
261the highlight documentation and the default config at
262/etc/highlight/filetypes.conf for more details.
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263+
264For example if repositories you are hosting use "phtml" extension for
265PHP files, and you want to have correct syntax-highlighting for those
266files, you can add the following to gitweb configuration:
267+
268---------------------------------------------------------
269our %highlight_ext;
270$highlight_ext{'phtml'} = 'php';
271---------------------------------------------------------
272
273
274Links and their targets
275~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
276The configuration variables described below configure some of gitweb links:
277their target and their look (text or image), and where to find page
278prerequisites (stylesheet, favicon, images, scripts). Usually they are left
279at their default values, with the possible exception of `@stylesheets`
280variable.
281
282@stylesheets::
283 List of URIs of stylesheets (relative to the base URI of a page). You
284 might specify more than one stylesheet, for example to use "gitweb.css"
285 as base with site specific modifications in a separate stylesheet
286 to make it easier to upgrade gitweb. For example, you can add
287 a `site` stylesheet by putting
288+
289----------------------------------------------------------------------------
290push @stylesheets, "gitweb-site.css";
291----------------------------------------------------------------------------
292+
293in the gitweb config file. Those values that are relative paths are
294relative to base URI of gitweb.
295+
296This list should contain the URI of gitweb's standard stylesheet. The default
297URI of gitweb stylesheet can be set at build time using the `GITWEB_CSS`
298makefile variable. Its default value is 'static/gitweb.css'
299(or 'static/gitweb.min.css' if the `CSSMIN` variable is defined,
300i.e. if CSS minifier is used during build).
301+
302*Note*: there is also a legacy `$stylesheet` configuration variable, which was
303used by older gitweb. If `$stylesheet` variable is defined, only CSS stylesheet
304given by this variable is used by gitweb.
305
306$logo::
307 Points to the location where you put 'git-logo.png' on your web
308 server, or to be more the generic URI of logo, 72x27 size). This image
309 is displayed in the top right corner of each gitweb page and used as
310 a logo for the Atom feed. Relative to the base URI of gitweb (as a path).
311 Can be adjusted when building gitweb using `GITWEB_LOGO` variable
312 By default set to 'static/git-logo.png'.
313
314$favicon::
315 Points to the location where you put 'git-favicon.png' on your web
316 server, or to be more the generic URI of favicon, which will be served
317 as "image/png" type. Web browsers that support favicons (website icons)
318 may display them in the browser's URL bar and next to the site name in
319 bookmarks. Relative to the base URI of gitweb. Can be adjusted at
320 build time using `GITWEB_FAVICON` variable.
321 By default set to 'static/git-favicon.png'.
322
323$javascript::
324 Points to the location where you put 'gitweb.js' on your web server,
325 or to be more generic the URI of JavaScript code used by gitweb.
326 Relative to the base URI of gitweb. Can be set at build time using
327 the `GITWEB_JS` build-time configuration variable.
328+
329The default value is either 'static/gitweb.js', or 'static/gitweb.min.js' if
330the `JSMIN` build variable was defined, i.e. if JavaScript minifier was used
331at build time. *Note* that this single file is generated from multiple
332individual JavaScript "modules".
333
334$home_link::
335 Target of the home link on the top of all pages (the first part of view
336 "breadcrumbs"). By default it is set to the absolute URI of a current page
337 (to the value of `$my_uri` variable, or to "/" if `$my_uri` is undefined
338 or is an empty string).
339
340$home_link_str::
341 Label for the "home link" at the top of all pages, leading to `$home_link`
342 (usually the main gitweb page, which contains the projects list). It is
343 used as the first component of gitweb's "breadcrumb trail":
344 `<home link> / <project> / <action>`. Can be set at build time using
345 the `GITWEB_HOME_LINK_STR` variable. By default it is set to "projects",
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346 as this link leads to the list of projects. Another popular choice is to
347 set it to the name of site. Note that it is treated as raw HTML so it
348 should not be set from untrusted sources.
349
350@extra_breadcrumbs::
351 Additional links to be added to the start of the breadcrumb trail before
352 the home link, to pages that are logically "above" the gitweb projects
353 list, such as the organization and department which host the gitweb
354 server. Each element of the list is a reference to an array, in which
355 element 0 is the link text (equivalent to `$home_link_str`) and element
356 1 is the target URL (equivalent to `$home_link`).
357+
358For example, the following setting produces a breadcrumb trail like
359"home / dev / projects / ..." where "projects" is the home link.
360----------------------------------------------------------------------------
361 our @extra_breadcrumbs = (
362 [ 'home' => 'https://www.example.org/' ],
363 [ 'dev' => 'https://dev.example.org/' ],
364 );
365----------------------------------------------------------------------------
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366
367$logo_url::
368$logo_label::
369 URI and label (title) for the Git logo link (or your site logo,
370 if you chose to use different logo image). By default, these both
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371 refer to Git homepage, https://git-scm.com[]; in the past, they pointed
372 to Git documentation at https://www.kernel.org[].
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373
374
375Changing gitweb's look
376~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
377You can adjust how pages generated by gitweb look using the variables described
378below. You can change the site name, add common headers and footers for all
379pages, and add a description of this gitweb installation on its main page
380(which is the projects list page), etc.
381
382$site_name::
383 Name of your site or organization, to appear in page titles. Set it
384 to something descriptive for clearer bookmarks etc. If this variable
385 is not set or is, then gitweb uses the value of the `SERVER_NAME`
47d81b5c 386 `CGI` environment variable, setting site name to "$SERVER_NAME Git",
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387 or "Untitled Git" if this variable is not set (e.g. if running gitweb
388 as standalone script).
389+
390Can be set using the `GITWEB_SITENAME` at build time. Unset by default.
391
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392$site_html_head_string::
393 HTML snippet to be included in the <head> section of each page.
394 Can be set using `GITWEB_SITE_HTML_HEAD_STRING` at build time.
395 No default value.
396
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397$site_header::
398 Name of a file with HTML to be included at the top of each page.
399 Relative to the directory containing the 'gitweb.cgi' script.
400 Can be set using `GITWEB_SITE_HEADER` at build time. No default
401 value.
402
403$site_footer::
404 Name of a file with HTML to be included at the bottom of each page.
405 Relative to the directory containing the 'gitweb.cgi' script.
406 Can be set using `GITWEB_SITE_FOOTER` at build time. No default
407 value.
408
409$home_text::
410 Name of a HTML file which, if it exists, is included on the
411 gitweb projects overview page ("projects_list" view). Relative to
412 the directory containing the gitweb.cgi script. Default value
413 can be adjusted during build time using `GITWEB_HOMETEXT` variable.
414 By default set to 'indextext.html'.
415
416$projects_list_description_width::
417 The width (in characters) of the "Description" column of the projects list.
418 Longer descriptions will be truncated (trying to cut at word boundary);
419 the full description is available in the 'title' attribute (usually shown on
420 mouseover). The default is 25, which might be too small if you
421 use long project descriptions.
422
423$default_projects_order::
424 Default value of ordering of projects on projects list page, which
425 means the ordering used if you don't explicitly sort projects list
426 (if there is no "o" CGI query parameter in the URL). Valid values
427 are "none" (unsorted), "project" (projects are by project name,
428 i.e. path to repository relative to `$projectroot`), "descr"
429 (project description), "owner", and "age" (by date of most current
430 commit).
431+
432Default value is "project". Unknown value means unsorted.
433
434
435Changing gitweb's behavior
436~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
437These configuration variables control _internal_ gitweb behavior.
438
439$default_blob_plain_mimetype::
440 Default mimetype for the blob_plain (raw) view, if mimetype checking
441 doesn't result in some other type; by default "text/plain".
442 Gitweb guesses mimetype of a file to display based on extension
443 of its filename, using `$mimetypes_file` (if set and file exists)
444 and '/etc/mime.types' files (see *mime.types*(5) manpage; only
445 filename extension rules are supported by gitweb).
446
447$default_text_plain_charset::
448 Default charset for text files. If this is not set, the web server
449 configuration will be used. Unset by default.
450
451$fallback_encoding::
452 Gitweb assumes this charset when a line contains non-UTF-8 characters.
453 The fallback decoding is used without error checking, so it can be even
454 "utf-8". The value must be a valid encoding; see the *Encoding::Supported*(3pm)
455 man page for a list. The default is "latin1", aka. "iso-8859-1".
456
457@diff_opts::
458 Rename detection options for git-diff and git-diff-tree. The default is
459 (\'-M'); set it to (\'-C') or (\'-C', \'-C') to also detect copies,
460 or set it to () i.e. empty list if you don't want to have renames
461 detection.
462+
463*Note* that rename and especially copy detection can be quite
2de9b711 464CPU-intensive. Note also that non Git tools can have problems with
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465patches generated with options mentioned above, especially when they
466involve file copies (\'-C') or criss-cross renames (\'-B').
467
468
469Some optional features and policies
470~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
471Most of features are configured via `%feature` hash; however some of extra
472gitweb features can be turned on and configured using variables described
473below. This list beside configuration variables that control how gitweb
474looks does contain variables configuring administrative side of gitweb
475(e.g. cross-site scripting prevention; admittedly this as side effect
476affects how "summary" pages look like, or load limiting).
477
478@git_base_url_list::
2de9b711 479 List of Git base URLs. These URLs are used to generate URLs
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480 describing from where to fetch a project, which are shown on
481 project summary page. The full fetch URL is "`$git_base_url/$project`",
482 for each element of this list. You can set up multiple base URLs
483 (for example one for `git://` protocol, and one for `http://`
484 protocol).
485+
486Note that per repository configuration can be set in '$GIT_DIR/cloneurl'
487file, or as values of multi-value `gitweb.url` configuration variable in
488project config. Per-repository configuration takes precedence over value
489composed from `@git_base_url_list` elements and project name.
490+
491You can setup one single value (single entry/item in this list) at build
d7bfb9ee 492time by setting the `GITWEB_BASE_URL` build-time configuration variable.
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493By default it is set to (), i.e. an empty list. This means that gitweb
494would not try to create project URL (to fetch) from project name.
495
496$projects_list_group_categories::
270f0a8c 497 Whether to enable the grouping of projects by category on the project
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498 list page. The category of a project is determined by the
499 `$GIT_DIR/category` file or the `gitweb.category` variable in each
500 repository's configuration. Disabled by default (set to 0).
501
502$project_list_default_category::
503 Default category for projects for which none is specified. If this is
504 set to the empty string, such projects will remain uncategorized and
505 listed at the top, above categorized projects. Used only if project
506 categories are enabled, which means if `$projects_list_group_categories`
507 is true. By default set to "" (empty string).
508
509$prevent_xss::
510 If true, some gitweb features are disabled to prevent content in
511 repositories from launching cross-site scripting (XSS) attacks. Set this
512 to true if you don't trust the content of your repositories.
513 False by default (set to 0).
514
515$maxload::
516 Used to set the maximum load that we will still respond to gitweb queries.
517 If the server load exceeds this value then gitweb will return
518 "503 Service Unavailable" error. The server load is taken to be 0
519 if gitweb cannot determine its value. Currently it works only on Linux,
520 where it uses '/proc/loadavg'; the load there is the number of active
521 tasks on the system -- processes that are actually running -- averaged
522 over the last minute.
523+
524Set `$maxload` to undefined value (`undef`) to turn this feature off.
525The default value is 300.
526
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527$omit_age_column::
528 If true, omit the column with date of the most current commit on the
529 projects list page. It can save a bit of I/O and a fork per repository.
530
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531$omit_owner::
532 If true prevents displaying information about repository owner.
533
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534$per_request_config::
535 If this is set to code reference, it will be run once for each request.
536 You can set parts of configuration that change per session this way.
537 For example, one might use the following code in a gitweb configuration
538 file
539+
540--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
541our $per_request_config = sub {
542 $ENV{GL_USER} = $cgi->remote_user || "gitweb";
543};
544--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
545+
546If `$per_request_config` is not a code reference, it is interpreted as boolean
547value. If it is true gitweb will process config files once per request,
548and if it is false gitweb will process config files only once, each time it
549is executed. True by default (set to 1).
550+
551*NOTE*: `$my_url`, `$my_uri`, and `$base_url` are overwritten with their default
552values before every request, so if you want to change them, be sure to set
553this variable to true or a code reference effecting the desired changes.
554+
555This variable matters only when using persistent web environments that
556serve multiple requests using single gitweb instance, like mod_perl,
557FastCGI or Plackup.
558
559
560Other variables
561~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
562Usually you should not need to change (adjust) any of configuration
563variables described below; they should be automatically set by gitweb to
564correct value.
565
566
567$version::
568 Gitweb version, set automatically when creating gitweb.cgi from
569 gitweb.perl. You might want to modify it if you are running modified
570 gitweb, for example
571+
572---------------------------------------------------
573our $version .= " with caching";
574---------------------------------------------------
575+
576if you run modified version of gitweb with caching support. This variable
577is purely informational, used e.g. in the "generator" meta header in HTML
578header.
579
580$my_url::
581$my_uri::
582 Full URL and absolute URL of the gitweb script;
583 in earlier versions of gitweb you might have need to set those
584 variables, but now there should be no need to do it. See
585 `$per_request_config` if you need to set them still.
586
587$base_url::
588 Base URL for relative URLs in pages generated by gitweb,
589 (e.g. `$logo`, `$favicon`, `@stylesheets` if they are relative URLs),
590 needed and used '<base href="$base_url">' only for URLs with nonempty
591 PATH_INFO. Usually gitweb sets its value correctly,
592 and there is no need to set this variable, e.g. to $my_uri or "/".
593 See `$per_request_config` if you need to override it anyway.
594
595
596CONFIGURING GITWEB FEATURES
597---------------------------
598Many gitweb features can be enabled (or disabled) and configured using the
599`%feature` hash. Names of gitweb features are keys of this hash.
600
601Each `%feature` hash element is a hash reference and has the following
602structure:
603----------------------------------------------------------------------
604"<feature_name>" => {
605 "sub" => <feature-sub (subroutine)>,
606 "override" => <allow-override (boolean)>,
607 "default" => [ <options>... ]
608},
609----------------------------------------------------------------------
610Some features cannot be overridden per project. For those
611features the structure of appropriate `%feature` hash element has a simpler
612form:
613----------------------------------------------------------------------
614"<feature_name>" => {
615 "override" => 0,
616 "default" => [ <options>... ]
617},
618----------------------------------------------------------------------
619As one can see it lacks the \'sub' element.
620
621The meaning of each part of feature configuration is described
622below:
623
624default::
625 List (array reference) of feature parameters (if there are any),
626 used also to toggle (enable or disable) given feature.
627+
628Note that it is currently *always* an array reference, even if
629feature doesn't accept any configuration parameters, and \'default'
630is used only to turn it on or off. In such case you turn feature on
631by setting this element to `[1]`, and torn it off by setting it to
632`[0]`. See also the passage about the "blame" feature in the "Examples"
633section.
634+
635To disable features that accept parameters (are configurable), you
636need to set this element to empty list i.e. `[]`.
637
638override::
639 If this field has a true value then the given feature is
5fe8f49b 640 overridable, which means that it can be configured
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641 (or enabled/disabled) on a per-repository basis.
642+
643Usually given "<feature>" is configurable via the `gitweb.<feature>`
2de9b711 644config variable in the per-repository Git configuration file.
6d3902b0 645+
5fe8f49b 646*Note* that no feature is overridable by default.
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647
648sub::
649 Internal detail of implementation. What is important is that
650 if this field is not present then per-repository override for
651 given feature is not supported.
652+
653You wouldn't need to ever change it in gitweb config file.
654
655
656Features in `%feature`
657~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
658The gitweb features that are configurable via `%feature` hash are listed
659below. This should be a complete list, but ultimately the authoritative
660and complete list is in gitweb.cgi source code, with features described
661in the comments.
662
663blame::
664 Enable the "blame" and "blame_incremental" blob views, showing for
665 each line the last commit that modified it; see linkgit:git-blame[1].
666 This can be very CPU-intensive and is therefore disabled by default.
667+
668This feature can be configured on a per-repository basis via
669repository's `gitweb.blame` configuration variable (boolean).
670
671snapshot::
672 Enable and configure the "snapshot" action, which allows user to
673 download a compressed archive of any tree or commit, as produced
674 by linkgit:git-archive[1] and possibly additionally compressed.
675 This can potentially generate high traffic if you have large project.
676+
677The value of \'default' is a list of names of snapshot formats,
678defined in `%known_snapshot_formats` hash, that you wish to offer.
679Supported formats include "tgz", "tbz2", "txz" (gzip/bzip2/xz
680compressed tar archive) and "zip"; please consult gitweb sources for
681a definitive list. By default only "tgz" is offered.
682+
683This feature can be configured on a per-repository basis via
684repository's `gitweb.blame` configuration variable, which contains
685a comma separated list of formats or "none" to disable snapshots.
686Unknown values are ignored.
687
688grep::
689 Enable grep search, which lists the files in currently selected
690 tree (directory) containing the given string; see linkgit:git-grep[1].
691 This can be potentially CPU-intensive, of course. Enabled by default.
692+
693This feature can be configured on a per-repository basis via
694repository's `gitweb.grep` configuration variable (boolean).
695
696pickaxe::
697 Enable the so called pickaxe search, which will list the commits
698 that introduced or removed a given string in a file. This can be
699 practical and quite faster alternative to "blame" action, but it is
700 still potentially CPU-intensive. Enabled by default.
701+
702The pickaxe search is described in linkgit:git-log[1] (the
703description of `-S<string>` option, which refers to pickaxe entry in
704linkgit:gitdiffcore[7] for more details).
705+
706This feature can be configured on a per-repository basis by setting
707repository's `gitweb.pickaxe` configuration variable (boolean).
708
709show-sizes::
710 Enable showing size of blobs (ordinary files) in a "tree" view, in a
711 separate column, similar to what `ls -l` does; see description of
712 `-l` option in linkgit:git-ls-tree[1] manpage. This costs a bit of
713 I/O. Enabled by default.
714+
715This feature can be configured on a per-repository basis via
da0005b8 716repository's `gitweb.showSizes` configuration variable (boolean).
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717
718patches::
719 Enable and configure "patches" view, which displays list of commits in email
720 (plain text) output format; see also linkgit:git-format-patch[1].
721 The value is the maximum number of patches in a patchset generated
722 in "patches" view. Set the 'default' field to a list containing single
723 item of or to an empty list to disable patch view, or to a list
724 containing a single negative number to remove any limit.
725 Default value is 16.
726+
727This feature can be configured on a per-repository basis via
728repository's `gitweb.patches` configuration variable (integer).
729
730avatar::
731 Avatar support. When this feature is enabled, views such as
732 "shortlog" or "commit" will display an avatar associated with
733 the email of each committer and author.
734+
735Currently available providers are *"gravatar"* and *"picon"*.
736Only one provider at a time can be selected ('default' is one element list).
737If an unknown provider is specified, the feature is disabled.
738*Note* that some providers might require extra Perl packages to be
739installed; see 'gitweb/INSTALL' for more details.
740+
741This feature can be configured on a per-repository basis via
742repository's `gitweb.avatar` configuration variable.
743+
744See also `%avatar_size` with pixel sizes for icons and avatars
745("default" is used for one-line like "log" and "shortlog", "double"
746is used for two-line like "commit", "commitdiff" or "tag"). If the
747default font sizes or lineheights are changed (e.g. via adding extra
748CSS stylesheet in `@stylesheets`), it may be appropriate to change
749these values.
750
751highlight::
752 Server-side syntax highlight support in "blob" view. It requires
753 `$highlight_bin` program to be available (see the description of
754 this variable in the "Configuration variables" section above),
755 and therefore is disabled by default.
756+
757This feature can be configured on a per-repository basis via
758repository's `gitweb.highlight` configuration variable (boolean).
759
760remote_heads::
761 Enable displaying remote heads (remote-tracking branches) in the "heads"
762 list. In most cases the list of remote-tracking branches is an
763 unnecessary internal private detail, and this feature is therefore
764 disabled by default. linkgit:git-instaweb[1], which is usually used
765 to browse local repositories, enables and uses this feature.
766+
767This feature can be configured on a per-repository basis via
768repository's `gitweb.remote_heads` configuration variable (boolean).
769
770
771The remaining features cannot be overridden on a per project basis.
772
773search::
774 Enable text search, which will list the commits which match author,
775 committer or commit text to a given string; see the description of
776 `--author`, `--committer` and `--grep` options in linkgit:git-log[1]
777 manpage. Enabled by default.
778+
779Project specific override is not supported.
780
781forks::
782 If this feature is enabled, gitweb considers projects in
783 subdirectories of project root (basename) to be forks of existing
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784 projects. For each project +$projname.git+, projects in the
785 +$projname/+ directory and its subdirectories will not be
786 shown in the main projects list. Instead, a \'\+' mark is shown
787 next to +$projname+, which links to a "forks" view that lists all
788 the forks (all projects in +$projname/+ subdirectory). Additionally
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789 a "forks" view for a project is linked from project summary page.
790+
6cf378f0 791If the project list is taken from a file (+$projects_list+ points to a
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792file), forks are only recognized if they are listed after the main project
793in that file.
794+
795Project specific override is not supported.
796
797actions::
798 Insert custom links to the action bar of all project pages. This
799 allows you to link to third-party scripts integrating into gitweb.
800+
801The "default" value consists of a list of triplets in the form
802`("<label>", "<link>", "<position>")` where "position" is the label
803after which to insert the link, "link" is a format string where `%n`
804expands to the project name, `%f` to the project path within the
805filesystem (i.e. "$projectroot/$project"), `%h` to the current hash
806(\'h' gitweb parameter) and `%b` to the current hash base
807(\'hb' gitweb parameter); `%%` expands to \'%'.
808+
809For example, at the time this page was written, the http://repo.or.cz[]
2de9b711 810Git hosting site set it to the following to enable graphical log
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811(using the third party tool *git-browser*):
812+
813----------------------------------------------------------------------
814$feature{'actions'}{'default'} =
815 [ ('graphiclog', '/git-browser/by-commit.html?r=%n', 'summary')];
816----------------------------------------------------------------------
817+
818This adds a link titled "graphiclog" after the "summary" link, leading to
819`git-browser` script, passing `r=<project>` as a query parameter.
820+
821Project specific override is not supported.
822
823timed::
2de9b711 824 Enable displaying how much time and how many Git commands it took to
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825 generate and display each page in the page footer (at the bottom of
826 page). For example the footer might contain: "This page took 6.53325
2de9b711 827 seconds and 13 Git commands to generate." Disabled by default.
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828+
829Project specific override is not supported.
830
831javascript-timezone::
0ffa154b 832 Enable and configure the ability to change a common time zone for dates
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833 in gitweb output via JavaScript. Dates in gitweb output include
834 authordate and committerdate in "commit", "commitdiff" and "log"
835 views, and taggerdate in "tag" view. Enabled by default.
836+
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837The value is a list of three values: a default time zone (for if the client
838hasn't selected some other time zone and saved it in a cookie), a name of cookie
839where to store selected time zone, and a CSS class used to mark up
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840dates for manipulation. If you want to turn this feature off, set "default"
841to empty list: `[]`.
842+
0ffa154b 843Typical gitweb config files will only change starting (default) time zone,
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844and leave other elements at their default values:
845+
846---------------------------------------------------------------------------
847$feature{'javascript-timezone'}{'default'}[0] = "utc";
848---------------------------------------------------------------------------
849+
850The example configuration presented here is guaranteed to be backwards
851and forward compatible.
852+
0ffa154b 853Time zone values can be "local" (for local time zone that browser uses), "utc"
6d3902b0 854(what gitweb uses when JavaScript or this feature is disabled), or numerical
0ffa154b 855time zones in the form of "+/-HHMM", such as "+0200".
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856+
857Project specific override is not supported.
858
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859extra-branch-refs::
860 List of additional directories under "refs" which are going to
861 be used as branch refs. For example if you have a gerrit setup
862 where all branches under refs/heads/ are official,
863 push-after-review ones and branches under refs/sandbox/,
864 refs/wip and refs/other are user ones where permissions are
865 much wider, then you might want to set this variable as
866 follows:
867+
868--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
869$feature{'extra-branch-refs'}{'default'} =
870 ['sandbox', 'wip', 'other'];
871--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
872+
873This feature can be configured on per-repository basis after setting
874$feature{'extra-branch-refs'}{'override'} to true, via repository's
875`gitweb.extraBranchRefs` configuration variable, which contains a
876space separated list of refs. An example:
877+
878--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
879[gitweb]
880 extraBranchRefs = sandbox wip other
881--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
882+
883The gitweb.extraBranchRefs is actually a multi-valued configuration
884variable, so following example is also correct and the result is the
885same as of the snippet above:
886+
887--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
888[gitweb]
889 extraBranchRefs = sandbox
890 extraBranchRefs = wip other
891--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
892+
893It is an error to specify a ref that does not pass "git check-ref-format"
894scrutiny. Duplicated values are filtered.
895
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896
897EXAMPLES
898--------
899
900To enable blame, pickaxe search, and snapshot support (allowing "tar.gz" and
901"zip" snapshots), while allowing individual projects to turn them off, put
902the following in your GITWEB_CONFIG file:
903
904 $feature{'blame'}{'default'} = [1];
905 $feature{'blame'}{'override'} = 1;
906
907 $feature{'pickaxe'}{'default'} = [1];
908 $feature{'pickaxe'}{'override'} = 1;
909
910 $feature{'snapshot'}{'default'} = ['zip', 'tgz'];
911 $feature{'snapshot'}{'override'} = 1;
912
913If you allow overriding for the snapshot feature, you can specify which
06ab60c0 914snapshot formats are globally disabled. You can also add any command-line
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915options you want (such as setting the compression level). For instance, you
916can disable Zip compressed snapshots and set *gzip*(1) to run at level 6 by
917adding the following lines to your gitweb configuration file:
918
919 $known_snapshot_formats{'zip'}{'disabled'} = 1;
920 $known_snapshot_formats{'tgz'}{'compressor'} = ['gzip','-6'];
921
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922BUGS
923----
924Debugging would be easier if the fallback configuration file
925(`/etc/gitweb.conf`) and environment variable to override its location
926('GITWEB_CONFIG_SYSTEM') had names reflecting their "fallback" role.
927The current names are kept to avoid breaking working setups.
928
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929ENVIRONMENT
930-----------
931The location of per-instance and system-wide configuration files can be
932overridden using the following environment variables:
933
934GITWEB_CONFIG::
935 Sets location of per-instance configuration file.
936GITWEB_CONFIG_SYSTEM::
937 Sets location of fallback system-wide configuration file.
938 This file is read only if per-instance one does not exist.
939GITWEB_CONFIG_COMMON::
940 Sets location of common system-wide configuration file.
941
942
943FILES
944-----
945gitweb_config.perl::
946 This is default name of per-instance configuration file. The
947 format of this file is described above.
948/etc/gitweb.conf::
949 This is default name of fallback system-wide configuration
950 file. This file is used only if per-instance configuration
951 variable is not found.
952/etc/gitweb-common.conf::
953 This is default name of common system-wide configuration
954 file.
955
956
957SEE ALSO
958--------
959linkgit:gitweb[1], linkgit:git-instaweb[1]
960
961'gitweb/README', 'gitweb/INSTALL'
962
963GIT
964---
965Part of the linkgit:git[1] suite