Author: | Pierre-Yves Chibon <pingou@pingoured.fr> |
---|
Pagure is a git-centered forge, python based using pygit2.
With pagure you can host your project with its documentation, let your users report issues or request enhancements using the ticketing system and build your community of contributors by allowing them to fork your projects and contribute to it via the now-popular pull-request mechanism.
Homepage: https://pagure.io/pagure
See it at work: https://pagure.io
Playground version: https://stg.pagure.io
There are several options when it comes to a development environment. Vagrant will provide you with a virtual machine which you can develop on, or you can install it directly on your host machine.
For a more thorough introduction to Vagrant, see https://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Vagrant.
An example Vagrantfile is provided as Vagrantfile.example
. To use it,
just copy it and install Vagrant:
$ cp dev/Vagrantfile.example Vagrantfile $ sudo dnf install ansible libvirt vagrant-libvirt vagrant-sshfs vagrant-hostmanager $ vagrant up
The default Vagrantfile
forwards ports from the host to the guest,
so you can interact with the application as if it were running on your
host machine.
Note
vagrant-hostmanager
will automatically maintain /etc/hosts for you so you
can access the development environment from the host using its hostname, which
by default is pagure-dev.example.com
. You can choose not to use this
functionality by simply not installing the vagrant-hostmanager
plugin, but
if you want Pagure to provide valid URLs in the UI for git repositories, you
will need to adjust Pagure's configuration found in ~/pagure.cfg on the guest.
Install the needed system libraries:
sudo dnf install git python2-virtualenv libgit2-devel \ libjpeg-devel gcc libffi-devel redhat-rpm-config
Note
Do note the version of libgit2 that you install, for example
in libgit2-0.23.4-1
you need to keep in mind the 0.23
Note
On Fedora 23 and earlier or on RHEL and derivative (CentOS, Scientific Linux) the package python2-virtualenv is named python-virtualenv
Retrieve the sources:
git clone https://pagure.io/pagure.git cd pagure
Install dependencies
create the virtualenv:
virtualenv pagure_env source ./pagure_env/bin/activate
Install the correct version of pygit2:
pip install pygit2==<version of libgit2 found>.*
So in our example:
pip install pygit2==0.23.*
Install the rest of the dependencies:
pip install -r requirements.txt
Create the folder that will receive the projects, forks, docs, requests and tickets' git repo:
mkdir -p lcl/{repos,docs,forks,tickets,requests,remotes,attachments}
Create the inital database scheme:
python createdb.py
Start a worker, in one terminal:
./runworker.py
Run the application, in another terminal:
./runserver.py
To get some profiling information you can also run it as:
./runserver.py --profile
This will launch the application at http://127.0.0.1:5000
To run unit-tests on pagure
Install the dependencies:
pip install -r tests_requirements.txt
Run it:
./runtests.sh
Note
While testing for worker tasks, pagure uses celery in /usr/bin/ Celery then looks for eventlet (which we use for testing only) at system level and not in virtualenv. You will need to install eventlet outside of your virtualenv if you are using one.