Prerequisites
To run the Gerrit service, the following requirement must be met on the host:
-
JRE, version 1.8 Download
Gerrit is not yet compatible with Java 9 or newer at this time.
Configure Java for Strong Cryptography
Support for extra strength cryptographic ciphers: AES128CTR, AES256CTR, ARCFOUR256, and ARCFOUR128 can be enabled by downloading the Java Cryptography Extension (JCE) Unlimited Strength Jurisdiction Policy Files from Oracle and installing them into your JRE.
Note
|
Installing JCE extensions is optional and export restrictions may apply. |
-
Download the unlimited strength JCE policy files.
-
Uncompress and extract the downloaded file.
The downloaded file contains the following files:
README.txt
Information about JCE and installation guide
local_policy.jar
Unlimited strength local policy file
US_export_policy.jar
Unlimited strength US export policy file
-
Install the unlimited strength policy JAR files by following instructions found in
README.txt
.
Download Gerrit
Current and past binary releases of Gerrit can be obtained from the Gerrit Releases site.
Download any current *.war
package. The war will be referred to as
gerrit.war
from this point forward, so you may find it easier to
rename the downloaded file.
If you would prefer to build Gerrit directly from source, review the notes under developer setup.
Initialize the Site
Gerrit stores configuration files, the server’s SSH keys, and the
managed Git repositories under a local directory, typically referred
to as '$site_path'
.
You also have to decide where to store your server side git repositories. This
can either be a relative path under '$site_path'
or an absolute path
anywhere on your server system. You have to choose a place before commencing
your init phase.
Initialize a new site directory by running the init command, passing the path of the site directory to be created as an argument to the '-d' option. Its recommended that Gerrit Code Review be given its own user account on the host system:
sudo adduser gerrit sudo su gerrit java -jar gerrit.war init -d /path/to/your/gerrit_application_directory
Note
|
If you choose a location where your new user doesn’t
have any privileges, you may have to manually create the directory first and
then give ownership of that location to the 'gerrit' user.
|
If run from an interactive terminal, the init command will prompt through a
series of configuration questions. If the terminal is not interactive,
running the init command will choose some reasonable default selections.
Once the init phase is complete, you can review your settings in the file
'$site_path/etc/gerrit.config'
.
When running the init command, additional JARs might be downloaded to support optional selected functionality. If a download fails a URL will be displayed and init will wait for the user to manually download the JAR and store it in the target location.
When the init phase is complete, the daemon will be automatically started in the background and your web browser will open to the site:
Initialized /home/gerrit/review_site Executing /home/gerrit/review_site/bin/gerrit.sh start Starting Gerrit Code Review: OK Waiting for server to start ... OK Opening browser ...
When the browser opens, sign in to Gerrit through the web interface. The first user to sign-in and register an account will be automatically placed into the fully privileged Administrators group, permitting server management over the web and over SSH. Subsequent users will be automatically registered as unprivileged users.
Installation Complete
Your base Gerrit server is now installed and running. You’re now ready to either set up more projects or start working with the projects you’ve already imported.
Project Setup
See Project Configuration for further details on how to register a new project with Gerrit. This step is necessary if existing Git repositories were not imported during 'init'.
Start/Stop Daemon
To control the Gerrit Code Review daemon that is running in the background, use the rc.d style start script created by 'init':
review_site/bin/gerrit.sh start review_site/bin/gerrit.sh stop review_site/bin/gerrit.sh restart
('Optional') Configure the daemon to automatically start and stop with the operating system.
Uncomment the following 3 lines in the '$site_path/bin/gerrit.sh'
script:
chkconfig: 3 99 99 description: Gerrit Code Review processname: gerrit
Then link the gerrit.sh
script into rc3.d
:
sudo ln -snf `pwd`/review_site/bin/gerrit.sh /etc/init.d/gerrit sudo ln -snf /etc/init.d/gerrit /etc/rc3.d/S90gerrit
('Optional') To enable autocompletion of the gerrit.sh commands, install
autocompletion from the /contrib/bash_completion
script. Refer to the
script’s header comments for installation instructions.
To install Gerrit into an existing servlet container instead of using the embedded Jetty server, see J2EE installation.
Installation on Windows
The ssh-keygen
command must be available during the init phase to
generate SSH host keys. If you have
Git for Windows installed,
start Command Prompt and temporary add directory with ssh-keygen to the
PATH environment variable just before running init command:
PATH=%PATH%;c:\Program Files\Git\usr\bin
Please note that the path in the above example must not be double-quoted.
To run the daemon after site initialization execute:
cd C:\MY\GERRIT\SITE java.exe -jar bin\gerrit.war daemon --console-log
To stop the daemon press Ctrl+C.
Install the daemon as Windows Service
To install Gerrit as Windows Service use the Apache Commons Daemon Procrun.
Sample install command:
prunsrv.exe //IS//Gerrit --DisplayName="Gerrit Code Review" --Startup=auto ^ --Jvm="C:\Program Files\Java\jre1.8.0_65\bin\server\jvm.dll" ^ --Classpath=C:\MY\GERRIT\SITE\bin\gerrit.war ^ --LogPath=C:\MY\GERRIT\SITE\logs ^ --StartPath=C:\MY\GERRIT\SITE ^ --StartMode=jvm --StopMode=jvm ^ --StartClass=com.google.gerrit.launcher.GerritLauncher --StartMethod=daemonStart ^ --StopClass=com.google.gerrit.launcher.GerritLauncher --StopMethod=daemonStop
Site Customization
Gerrit Code Review supports some site-specific customization options. For more information, see the related topics in this manual:
Anonymous Access
Exporting the Git repository directory
(gerrit.basePath) over the
anonymous, unencrypted git:// protocol is more efficient than
Gerrit’s internal SSH daemon. See the git-daemon
documentation
for details on how to configure this if anonymous access is desired.
Plugins
Place Gerrit plugins in the review_site/plugins directory to have them loaded on Gerrit startup.