* Add frontend/backend make targets, fix source release - Add 'make backend' and 'make frontend' make targets which are used to build go and js/css/svg files respectively. - The 'backend' target can be invoked without requiring Node.js to be present on the system if pre-built frontend assets are present like in the release source tarballs. - Fix source releases missing 'dist' folders inside 'node_modules' which were erronously excluded from tar. - Store VERSION in file VERSION for the release tarballs and prefer that file over git-derived version. * fix release task * fix typo * fix another typo
5.9 KiB
date | title | slug | weight | toc | draft | menu | ||||||||||
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2016-12-01T16:00:00+02:00 | Installation from source | install-from-source | 10 | true | false |
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Installation from source
You should install go and set up your go
environment correctly. In particular, it is recommended to set the $GOPATH
environment variable and to add the go bin directory or directories
${GOPATH//://bin:}/bin
to the $PATH
. See the Go wiki entry for
GOPATH.
Next, install Node.js with npm which is required to build the JavaScript and CSS files. The minimum supported Node.js version is 10 and the latest LTS version is recommended.
Note: When executing make tasks that require external tools, like
make misspell-check
, Gitea will automatically download and build these as
necessary. To be able to use these, you must have the "$GOPATH/bin"
directory
on the executable path. If you don't add the go bin directory to the
executable path, you will have to manage this yourself.
Note 2: Go version 1.11 or higher is required. However, it is recommended to obtain the same version as our continuous integration, see the advice given in Hacking on Gitea
Download
First, we must retrieve the source code. Since, the advent of go modules, the simplest way of doing this is to use git directly as we no longer have to have gitea built from within the GOPATH.
git clone https://github.com/go-gitea/gitea
(Previous versions of this document recommended using go get
. This is
no longer necessary.)
Decide which version of Gitea to build and install. Currently, there are
multiple options to choose from. The master
branch represents the current
development version. To build with master, skip to the build section.
To work with tagged releases, the following commands can be used:
git branch -a
git checkout v{{< version >}}
To validate a Pull Request, first enable the new branch (xyz
is the PR id;
for example 2663
for #2663):
git fetch origin pull/xyz/head:pr-xyz
To build Gitea from source at a specific tagged release (like v{{< version >}}), list the available tags and check out the specific tag.
List available tags with the following.
git tag -l
git checkout v{{< version >}} # or git checkout pr-xyz
Build
To build from source, the following programs must be present on the system:
Various make tasks are provided to keep the build process as simple as possible.
Depending on requirements, the following build tags can be included.
bindata
: Build a single monolithic binary, with all assets included.sqlite sqlite_unlock_notify
: Enable support for a SQLite3 database. Suggested only for tiny installations.pam
: Enable support for PAM (Linux Pluggable Authentication Modules). Can be used to authenticate local users or extend authentication to methods available to PAM.
Bundling assets into the binary using the bindata
build tag can make
development and testing easier, but is not ideal for a production deployment.
To include assets, add the bindata
tag:
TAGS="bindata" make build
In the default release build of our continuous integration system, the build
tags are: TAGS="bindata sqlite sqlite_unlock_notify"
. The simplest
recommended way to build from source is therefore:
TAGS="bindata sqlite sqlite_unlock_notify" make build
The build
target is split into two sub-targets:
make backend
which requires Go 1.11 or greater.make frontend
which requires Node.js 10.0.0 or greater.
If pre-built frontend files are present it is possible to only build the backend:
TAGS="bindata" make backend
``
## Test
After following the steps above, a `gitea` binary will be available in the working directory.
It can be tested from this directory or moved to a directory with test data. When Gitea is
launched manually from command line, it can be killed by pressing `Ctrl + C`.
```bash
./gitea web
Changing the default CustomPath, CustomConf and AppWorkPath
Gitea will search for a number of things from the CustomPath
. By default this is
the custom/
directory in the current working directory when running Gitea. It will also
look for its configuration file CustomConf
in $CustomPath/conf/app.ini
, and will use the
current working directory as the relative base path AppWorkPath
for a number configurable
values.
These values, although useful when developing, may conflict with downstream users preferences.
One option is to use a script file to shadow the gitea
binary and create an appropriate
environment before running Gitea. However, when building you can change these defaults
using the LDFLAGS
environment variable for make
. The appropriate settings are as follows
- To set the
CustomPath
useLDFLAGS="-X \"code.gitea.io/gitea/modules/setting.CustomPath=custom-path\""
- For
CustomConf
you should use-X \"code.gitea.io/gitea/modules/setting.CustomConf=conf.ini\"
- For
AppWorkPath
you should use-X \"code.gitea.io/gitea/modules/setting.AppWorkPath=working-path\"
Add as many of the strings with their preceding -X
to the LDFLAGS
variable and run make build
with the appropriate TAGS
as above.
Running gitea help
will allow you to review what the computed settings will be for your gitea
.