273 lines
11 KiB
Plaintext
273 lines
11 KiB
Plaintext
# Plugin SyncMonotone by Thomas Keller (me@thomaskeller.biz)
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The SyncMonotone plugin allow the direct creation and synchronisation of
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monotone repositories with the InDefero database. It has been built to
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work together with monotone's "super server" usher, which is used to control
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several repositories at once, acts as proxy and single entrance.
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## Prerequisites
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* a unixoid operating system
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* monotone >= 0.99.1
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* for a proxy setup with usher:
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* boost headers (for usher compilation)
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* a current version of usher
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* a daemonizer, like supervise
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## Installation of monotone
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If you install monotone from a distribution package, ensure you do not
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install and / or activate the server component. We just need a plain
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client installation which usually consists only of the `mtn` binary and
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a few docs.
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If you install monotone from source (<http://monotone.ca/downloads.php>),
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please follow the `INSTALL` document which comes with the software.
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It contains detailed instructions, including all needed dependencies.
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## Choose your indefero setup
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The monotone plugin can be used in several different ways:
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1. One database for everything. This is the easiest setup and of possible
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use in case you do not want indefero to manage the access to your project.
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Your `idf.php` should look like this:
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$ cat idf.php
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...
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$cfg['mtn_path'] = 'mtn';
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$cfg['mtn_opts'] = array('--no-workspace', '--no-standard-rcfiles');
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$cfg['mtn_repositories'] = '/home/monotone/all_projects.mtn';
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$cfg['mtn_remote_url'] = 'ssh://monotone@my.server.com:~all_projects.mtn';
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$cfg['mtn_db_access'] = 'local';
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...
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Pro:
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* easy to setup and to manage
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Con:
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* you need to give committers SSH access to your machine
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* database lock problem: the database from which
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indefero reads its data might be locked in case a user
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syncs at the very moment via SSH
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2. One database for every project. Similar to the above setup, but this
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time you use the '%s' placeholder which is replaced with the short name
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of the indefero project:
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$ cat idf.php
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...
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$cfg['mtn_path'] = 'mtn';
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$cfg['mtn_opts'] = array('--no-workspace', '--no-standard-rcfiles');
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$cfg['mtn_repositories'] = '/home/monotone/%s.mtn';
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$cfg['mtn_remote_url'] = 'ssh://monotone@my.server.com:~%s.mtn';
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$cfg['mtn_db_access'] = 'local';
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...
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The same pro's and con's apply. Additionally you have to be careful about
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not giving people physical read/write access of another project's database.
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Furthermore, if you do not want to use `ssh`, but `netsync` transport,
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each project's database must be served over a separate port.
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3. One database for every project, all managed with usher. This is the
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recommended setup for a mid-size forge setup. The remaining part of this
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document will describe the process to set this up in detail.
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Pro:
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* access rights can be granted per project and are automatically
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managed by indefero, just like the user's public monotone keys
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* no database locking issues
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* one public server running on the one well-known port
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Con:
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* harder to setup
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## Installation and configuration of usher
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1. Clone usher's monotone repository:
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$ mtn clone "mtn://monotone.ca?net.venge.monotone.contrib.usher"
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2. Compile usher:
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$ autoreconf -i
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$ ./configure && make
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$ sudo make install
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This installs the usher binary in $prefix/bin.
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3. Create a new usher user:
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$ adduser --system --disabled-login --home /var/lib/usher usher
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4. Create the basic usher setup:
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$ cd /var/lib/usher
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$ mkdir projects logs
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$ cat > usher.conf
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userpass "admin" "<secret-password>"
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adminaddr "127.0.0.1:12345"
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logdir "log"
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^D
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$ chmod 600 usher.conf
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Your indefero www user needs later write access to `usher.conf` and
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`projects/`. There are two ways of setting this up:
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* Make the usher user the web user, for example via Apache's `suexec`
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* Use acls, like this:
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$ setfacl -m u:www:rw usher.conf
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$ setfacl -m d:u:www:rwx projects/
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5. Wrap a daemonizer around usher, for example supervise from daemontools
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(<http://cr.yp.to/damontools.html>):
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$ cat > run
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#!/bin/sh
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cd /var/lib/usher
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exec 2>&1
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exec \
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setuidgid usher \
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usher usher.conf
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^D
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The service can now be started through supervise:
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$ supervise /var/lib/usher
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## Configuration of indefero
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Based on the above setup, the configuration in `src/IDF/conf/idf.php` should
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look like this:
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$ cat idf.php
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...
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$cfg['mtn_path'] = 'mtn';
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$cfg['mtn_opts'] = array('--no-workspace', '--no-standard-rcfiles');
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$cfg['mtn_repositories'] = '/var/lib/usher/projects/%s/';
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$cfg['mtn_remote_url'] = 'mtn://my.server.com/%s';
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$cfg['mtn_db_access'] = 'remote';
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$cfg['mtn_usher_conf'] = '/var/lib/usher/usher.conf';
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...
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The `%s` placeholders are automatically replaced by the name of the
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indefero project. The plugin assumes that every project is separated
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by a distinct server name in the monotone URL (hence the use of `/%s`),
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so if a user calls
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$ mtn sync mtn://my.server.com/project1
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then the database / repository of the indefero `project1` is used.
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Note that 'mtn_remote_url' is also used as internal URI to query the data
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for indefero's source view, so it *must* be a valid host!
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Usher also allows the identification of a project repository by hostname,
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which would allow an URL template like `mtn://%s.my.server.com`, however
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the plugin does not write out the configuration which is needed for this
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yet.
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For even more advanced setups, usher can also be used to forward sync
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requests to other remote servers for load balancing, please consult the
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README file for more information.
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## Security and remote access
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Indefero distinguishs between public and private projects and so does
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the monotone plugin.
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Public projects can be pulled by everybody and pushed by team members
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or additional invited people. Remote command execution is enabled, but
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only for read-only commands.
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Remote commands can be helpful for a user or a 3rd party tool (like
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[mtn-browse](http://mtn-browse.sourceforge.net) or
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[guitone](http://guitone.thomaskeller.biz)) to browse the database
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contents remotely without having to pull everything in first instance.
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Private projects on the other hand can only be synced by team members
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or additional invited people. Remote command execution is disabled
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by default. If you want to enable that, simply put the keys of the users
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you want to give access to in your project's `remote-automate-permissions`
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file. In the future this plugin might handle this file just as it handles
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`read-permissions` and `write-permissions`.
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## Notifications
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If you have successfully set up your monotone instance, you probably want
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to notify 3rd party systems for incoming changes or simply mirror them
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somewhere else for backup purposes. The monotone source tree already comes
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with [many example scripts and hooks](http://code.monotone.ca/p/monotone/source/tree/h:net.venge.monotone/contrib)
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which serve these purposes, after only little additional configuration.
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The usher/indefero-controlled setup automatically looks for *.lua files
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in a directory called `hooks.d` right under the project's base directory
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(configured via $cfg['mtn_repositories']) and this is the ideal place to
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put or link these additional lua sources.
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## Custom project configurations and templates
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If a new project is created in IDF, the SyncMonotone plugin creates a new
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configuration tree for the project into the project's configuration directory,
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determined by `$cfg['mtn_repositories']`. IDF ships with the minimum set of
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files for this configuration tree and sets up everything automatically for you.
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Even more, most of the configuration files from the newly created tree are only
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symlinked to the original configuration directory which is configurable via
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`$cfg['mtn_confdir']` and defaults to `src/IDF/Plugin/SyncMonotone/`. This has
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the advantage that your standard IDF setup automatically receives updates to
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existing (symlinked) configuration files as soon as you update to a newer
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version.
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You could, however, also choose to place the directory tree somewhere else
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and adapt the contents of the individual files yourself, so these changes get
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automatically applied to all new projects you create. You could even go so far
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and add new files to the tree and let them be processed automatically just
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as the basic files! All you need to do is to copy your files and / or directories
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underknees your `$cfg['mtn_confdir']` and add their relative paths to
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`$cfg['mtn_confdir_extra']`.
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By convention, all entries which end with a slash are considered directories,
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so mkdir(1) is issued for these entries, all files which do not end up with
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".in" are considered to be static script files which are just symlinked from
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the basic configuration dir and all entries ending on ".in" are considered
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configuration files or templates, which are copied over to the project's
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configuration tree and which get some basic project-specific values replaced.
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The following placeholders are currently recognized and replaced for these files:
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* %%PROJECT%% - the name of the created project
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* %%MTNPOSTPUSH%% - the absolute path to the `mtn-post-push` script
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* %%MTNCLIENTKEY%% - the public key hash of the key which is used by IDF
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to authenticate remote stdio access
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Thats it - I hope you find it useful :)
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## Q&A
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### After I created a new project, IDF throws an exception and tells me that it couldn't save the membership data with a cryptic error message. Whats wrong?
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Multiple issues could cause that. If you've set up usher, make sure the usher
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can fork your database at all and look out for specific errors in the log file
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of your project. If you stumble upon permission issues, ensure that the user
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who runs the usher can access all files in your project's configuration directory,
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including symlinked files.
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### I pushed a branch to my server, but it does not show up in IDF. Whats wrong?
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Check if the heads of your branch are not suspended, i.e. do not carry a
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`suspend` certificate. This usually hides the branch and all of its history
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from monotone's eyes and therefor also from indefero. You can either choose
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to "unsuspend" the branch simply by committing and pushing another head or
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by letting monotone ignore all suspend certs. For the latter, its usually
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enough to add `--ignore-suspend-certs` to the list of options in `$cfg['mtn_opts']`.
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### I want to display another default branch when I click the "Source" tab. How can I do that?
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Let the forge admin know the new master branch for your project. He is able
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to change that quickly. Depending on the backend / server setup this might
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also require some changes in the usher configuration, but only if usher
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recognizes and proxies your database on a branch name level.
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