--- title: git.sr.ht installation --- git.sr.ht is the git repository hosting service for the sr.ht network. # Installation git.sr.ht is a standard sr.ht web service and can be installed through the [standard procedure](/installation.md). However, there are several additional steps required. ## Daemons - `git.sr.ht`: the web service - `git.sr.ht-webhooks`: webhook delivery service ## Cronjobs - `gitsrht-periodic`: various maintenance tasks. Recommended configuration is `*/20 * * * * gitsrht-periodic` ## Repository storage You will need to set up a directory for repositories to be stored in - we suggest `/var/lib/git/`. Also configure a `git` user and assign ownership over `/var/lib/git/` to this user. The git.sr.ht package will automatically prepare these for you. If you do not use the package, you must create the user yourself and ensure that the git.sr.ht web application runs as this user. ## SSH dispatch It is necessary to configure git.sr.ht's SSH dispatcher as the system-wide SSH authorization hook. First you need to install `go`, then build the dispatcher with `go install` in the `gitsrht-dispatch` repository. The `gitsrht-shell` helper is also written in Go, run the same process from its directory. In `/etc/ssh/sshd_config`, configure gitsrht-dispatch like so: ``` AuthorizedKeysCommand=/usr/bin/gitsrht-dispatch "%u" "%h" "%t" "%k" AuthorizedKeysCommandUser=root PermitUserEnvironment SRHT_* ``` sshd will invoke our dispatcher whenever a connection is made to the server to obtain a list of authorized keys for the connecting user. The default behavior is to read the `.ssh/authorized_keys` file from that user's HOME directory, but the dispatcher can also "dispatch" to other authentication tools for other users. This is used to authorize and perform git operations via the `gitsrht-keys` and `gitsrht-shell`. See the `[dispatch]` section of your git.sr.ht configuration for details on how this works and how to configure it for additional services (e.g. man.sr.ht). Authorization logs are written to `/var/log/gitsrht-dispatch` and `gitsrht-shell`. ## HTTP(s) Cloning git.sr.ht does not do this for you - you need to wire it up in nginx. Here's an example config: ```nginx location = /authorize { proxy_pass http://127.0.0.1:5001; proxy_pass_request_body off; proxy_set_header Content-Length ""; proxy_set_header X-Original-URI $request_uri; } location ~ ^/([^/]+)/([^/]+)/(HEAD|info/refs|objects/info/.*|git-upload-pack).*$ { auth_request /authorize; root /var/lib/git; fastcgi_pass unix:/run/fcgiwrap.sock; fastcgi_param SCRIPT_FILENAME /usr/lib/git-core/git-http-backend; fastcgi_param PATH_INFO $uri; fastcgi_param GIT_PROJECT_ROOT $document_root; fastcgi_param GIT_HTTP_EXPORT_ALL ""; include fastcgi_params; gzip off; } ``` It's important that you set up the `/authorize` endpoint to enforce the privacy of private repositories. If you don't have `/run/fcgiwrap.sock` on your system, you'll need to install the `fcgiwrap` package (for instance: `apt-get install fcgiwrap`). On some systems, the script might be `/run/fcgiwrap.socket` or `/run/fcgiwrap/fcgiwrap.sock`.