##// END OF EJS Templates
changed official rhodecode favicon, from hg to some more generic...
changed official rhodecode favicon, from hg to some more generic removed some unneded icons update setup to add changelog

File last commit:

r671:bee56f20 rhodecode-0.0.1.0.1 default
r682:23c2a0e6 beta
Show More
setup.rst
128 lines | 4.1 KiB | text/x-rst | RstLexer

Setup

Setting up the application

paster make-config RhodeCode production.ini
  • This will create production.ini config inside the directory this config contain various settings for rhodecode, e.g port, email settings static files, cache and logging.
paster setup-app production.ini
  • This command will create all needed tables and an admin account. When asked for a path You can either use a new location of one with already existing ones. RhodeCode will simply add all new found repositories to it's database. Also make sure You specify correct path to repositories.
  • Remember that the given path for mercurial repositories must be write accessible for the application. It's very important since RhodeCode web interface will work even without such an access but, when trying to do a push it'll eventually fail with permission denied errors.
  • Run
paster serve production.ini
  • This command runs the rhodecode server the app should be available at the 127.0.0.1:5000. This ip and port is configurable via the production.ini file created in previous step
  • Use admin account you created to login.
  • Default permissions on each repository is read, and owner is admin. So remember to update these if needed.

Setting up Whoosh

  • For full text search You can either put crontab entry for
python /var/www/rhodecode/<rhodecode_installation_path>/lib/indexers/daemon.py incremental <put_here_path_to_repos>

When using incremental mode whoosh will check last modification date of each file and add it to reindex if newer file is available. Also indexing daemon checks for removed files and removes them from index. Sometime You might want to rebuild index from scrach, in admin pannel You can check build from scratch flag and in standalone daemon You can pass full instead on incremental to build remove previos index and build new one.

Nginx virtual host example

Sample config for nginx:

server {
   listen          80;
   server_name     hg.myserver.com;
   access_log      /var/log/nginx/rhodecode.access.log;
   error_log       /var/log/nginx/rhodecode.error.log;
   location / {
           root /var/www/rhodecode/rhodecode/public/;
           if (!-f $request_filename){
               proxy_pass      http://127.0.0.1:5000;
           }
           #this is important for https !!!
           proxy_set_header X-Url-Scheme $scheme;
           include         /etc/nginx/proxy.conf;
   }
}

Here's the proxy.conf. It's tuned so it'll not timeout on long pushes and also on large pushes:

proxy_redirect              off;
proxy_set_header            Host $host;
proxy_set_header            X-Host $http_host;
proxy_set_header            X-Real-IP $remote_addr;
proxy_set_header            X-Forwarded-For $proxy_add_x_forwarded_for;
proxy_set_header            Proxy-host $proxy_host;
client_max_body_size        400m;
client_body_buffer_size     128k;
proxy_buffering             off;
proxy_connect_timeout       3600;
proxy_send_timeout          3600;
proxy_read_timeout          3600;
proxy_buffer_size           8k;
proxy_buffers               8 32k;
proxy_busy_buffers_size     64k;
proxy_temp_file_write_size  64k;

Also when using root path with nginx You might set the static files to false in production.ini file:

[app:main]
  use = egg:rhodecode
  full_stack = true
  static_files = false
  lang=en
  cache_dir = %(here)s/data

To not have the statics served by the application. And improve speed.

Other configuration files

Some extra configuration files and examples can be found here: http://hg.python-works.com/rhodecode/files/tip/init.d

and also an celeryconfig file can be use from here: http://hg.python-works.com/rhodecode/files/tip/celeryconfig.py