0.0.3 • Published 12 years ago
git-push-server v0.0.3
GIT-Push Server
This node module makes it easy to build an HTTP stateless git-push server, to build stuff like Heroku or GitBook.io without keeping the repositories content.
Installation
$ npm install git-push-serverExample
var GitPush = require("git-push-server");
var express = require("express");
var path = require("path");
// Create the http application
var app = express();
// Create the git-push server
var git = new GitPush();
// Create a router for the git-push server
var router = express.Router();
// Start the git server on the router
git.start(router);
// Bind the router to the app
app.use('/:author/:repo.git', function(req, res, next) {
// Needed to identify the repository
req.repoId = [req.params.author, req.params.repo].join("/");
next();
});
app.use('/:author/:repo.git', router);
// Start the http server
var server = app.listen(3000, function() {
console.log('Listening on port %d', server.address().port);
});You can now run from a git repository:
$ git push http://localhost:3000/test/test.git masterRun an operation on each push
If you need to run an operation on the folder resulting from the push, you need to override push. For async operaiton, this method can return a promise.
git.push = function(pushInfos) {
// pushInfos.repoId
// pushInfos.auth.username
// pushInfos.auth.password
// pushInfos.content
// pushInfos.bare
// do some build or deployment operation
};Authentication
You need to override authenticate to make authentication work. It should return a boolean or a promise for async authentication.
git.authenticate = function(infos) {
// infos.repoId -> repository id set with in req.repoID
// infos.username
// infos.password
return doSomethingWithDatabase(infos.username, infos.password, infos.repoId);
};Options
var git = new GitPush(options);options.debug: enable log messages (default false)
options.root: root directory for the repositories (default os.tmpdir)