## Troubleshooting ### Eclipse/Egit/JGit complains that it "can't open upload pack"? There are a few ways this can occur: 1. Are you running Java 7?
Java 7 introduced SNI support for SSL connections and it is enabled by default.
[Java 7 Security Enhancements](http://docs.oracle.com/javase/7/docs/technotes/guides/security/enhancements-7.html)
To disable SNI alerts, add this line to your eclipse.ini file and restart Eclipse.
-Djsse.enableSNIExtension=false
2. You are using https with a self-signed certificate and you **did not** configure *http.sslVerify=false* 1. Window->Preferences->Team->Git->Configuration 2. Click the *New Entry* button 3.
Key = http.sslVerify
Value = false
3. Gitblit GO's default self-signed certificate is bound to *localhost* and you are trying to clone/push between machines. 1. Review the contents of `makekeystore.cmd` 2. Set *your hostname* in the *HOSTNAME* variable. 3. Execute the script.
This will generate a new certificate and keystore for *your hostname* protected by *server.storePassword*. 4. The repository is clone-restricted and you don't have access. 5. The repository is clone-restricted and your password changed. 6. A regression in Gitblit. :( ### I can not push using git:// protocol on Windows using native Git This is a long-standing, known bug in the native Git for Windows implementation. https://groups.google.com/d/topic/msysgit/at8D7J-h7mw/discussion ### Why can't I access Gitblit GO from another machine? 1. Please check *server.httpBindInterface* and *server.httpsBindInterface* in `gitblit.properties`, you may be only be serving on *localhost*. 2. Please see the above answer about "**can't open upload pack**". 3. Ensure that any firewall you may have running on the Gitblit server either has an exception for your specified ports or for the running process. ### How do I run Gitblit GO on port 80 or 443 in Linux? Linux requires root permissions to serve on ports < 1024.
Run the server as *root* (security concern) or change the ports you are serving to 8080 (http) and/or 8443 (https). ### Gitblit GO does not list my repositories?! 1. Confirm that the value *git.repositoriesFolder* in `gitblit.properties` actually points to your repositories folder. 2. Confirm that the Gitblit GO process has full read-write-execute permissions to your *git.repositoriesFolder*. ### Gitblit WAR does not list my repositories?! 1. Confirm that the <context-param> *git.repositoriesFolder* value in your `web.xml` file actually points to your repositories folder. 2. Confirm that the servlet container process has full read-write-execute permissions to your *git.repositoriesFolder*. ### Gitblit WAR will not authenticate any users?! Confirm that the <context-param> *realm.userService* value in your `web.xml` file actually points to a `users.conf` or `users.properties` file. ### Gitblit won't open my grouped repository (/group/myrepo.git) or browse my log/branch/tag/ref?! This is likely an url encoding/decoding problem with forward slashes: **bad** http://192.168.1.2/log/myrepo.git/refs/heads/master **good** http://192.168.1.2/log/myrepo.git/refs%2Fheads%2Fmaster **NOTE:** You can not trust the url in the address bar of your browser since your browser may decode it for presentation. When in doubt, *View Source* of the generated html to confirm the *href*. There are two possible workarounds for this issue. In `gitblit.properties` or `web.xml`: 1. try setting *web.mountParameters* to *false*.
This changes the url scheme from mounted (*/commit/myrepo.git/abcdef*) to parameterized (*/commit/?r=myrepo.git&h=abcdef*). 2. try changing *web.forwardSlashCharacter* to an asterisk or a **!** ### Running Gitblit behind mod_proxy or some other proxy layer You must ensure that the proxy does not decode and then re-encode request urls with interpretation of forward-slashes (*%2F*). If your proxy layer does re-encode embedded forward-slashes then you may not be able to browse grouped repositories or logs, branches, and tags **unless** you set *web.mountParameters=false*. If you are using Apache mod_proxy you may have luck with specifying [AllowEncodedSlashes NoDecode](http://httpd.apache.org/docs/2.2/mod/core.html#allowencodedslashes). ### Running Gitblit on Tomcat Tomcat takes the extra precaution of [disallowing embedded slashes by default](http://tomcat.apache.org/security-6.html#Fixed_in_Apache_Tomcat_6.0.10). This breaks Gitblit urls. You have a few options on how to handle this scenario: 1. [Tweak Tomcat](http://tomcat.apache.org/security-6.html#Fixed_in_Apache_Tomcat_6.0.10) Add *-Dorg.apache.tomcat.util.buf.UDecoder.ALLOW_ENCODED_SLASH=true* to *CATALINA_OPTS* or to your JVM launch parameters 2. *web.mountParameters = false* and use non-pretty, parameterized urls 3. *web.forwardSlashCharacter = !* which tells Gitblit to use **!** instead of **/** #### UTF-8 Filenames Tomcat also dislikes urls with non-ASCII characters. If your repositories have non-ASCII filenames you will have to modify your connector properties to allow UTF-8 encoded urls. [Tomcat Character Encoding](http://wiki.apache.org/tomcat/FAQ/CharacterEncoding) [Tomcat Connector Properties](http://tomcat.apache.org/tomcat-6.0-doc/config/http.html) ## General Interest Questions ### Gitblit? What kind of name is that? It's a phonetic play on [bitblt][bitblt] which is an image processing operation meaning *bit-block transfer*. ### Why use Gitblit? It's a small tool that allows you to easily manage shared repositories and doesn't require alot of setup or git kung-foo. ### Who is the target user for Gitblit? Small workgroups that require centralized repositories. Gitblit is not meant to be a social coding resource like [Github](http://github.com) or [Bitbucket](http://bitbucket.com) with 100s or 1000s of users. Gitblit is designed to fulfill the same function as your centralized Subversion or CVS server. ### Why does Gitblit exist when there is Git and Gitweb? As a Java developer I prefer that as much of my tooling as possible is Java.
Originally, I was going to use [Mercurial](http://mercurial.selenic.com) but... - MercurialEclipse [shells to Python, writes to System.out, and captures System.in](http://mercurial.808500.n3.nabble.com/Hg4J-Mercurial-pure-Java-library-tp2693090p2694555.html)
Parsing command-line output is fragile and suboptimal.
Unfortunately this is necessary because Mercurial is an application, not a library. - Mercurial HTTP/HTTPS needs to run as CGI through Apache/IIS/etc, as mod_python through Apache, or served with a built-in http server.
This requires setup and maintenance of multiple, mixed 3rd party components. Gitblit eliminates all that complication with its 100% Java stack and simple single configuration file. Additionally, Git and Gitweb do not offer repository creation or user management. ### Do I need real Git? No (mostly). Gitblit is based on [JGit][jgit] which is a pure Java implementation of the [Git version control system][git].
Everything you need for Gitblit (except Java) is either bundled in the distribution file or automatically downloaded on execution. #### mostly JGit does not fully support the git-gc featureset (garbage collection) so you may want native Git to periodically run git-gc until [JGit][jgit] fully supports this feature. ### Can I run Gitblit in conjunction with my existing Git tooling? Yes. ### Do I need a JDK or can I use a JRE? Gitblit will run just fine with a JRE. Gitblit can optionally use `keytool` from the JDK to generate self-signed certificates, but normally Gitblit uses [BouncyCastle][bouncycastle] for that need. ### Does Gitblit use a database to store its data? No. Gitblit stores its repository configuration information within the `.git/config` file and its user information in `users.conf`, `users.properties`, or whatever filename is configured in `gitblit.properties`. ### Can I manually edit users.conf, users.properties, gitblit.properties, or .git/config? Yes. You can manually manipulate all of them and (most) changes will be immediately available to Gitblit.
Exceptions to this are noted in `gitblit.properties`. **NOTE:** Care must be taken to preserve the relationship between user roles and repository names.
Please see the *User Roles* section of the [setup](/setup.html) page for details. ### Can I restrict access to branches or paths within a repository? No, not out-of-the-box. Access restrictions apply to the repository as a whole. Gitblit's simple authentication and authorization mechanism can be used to facilitate one or more of the [workflows outlined here](http://progit.org/book/ch5-1.html). Should you require more fine-grained access controls you might consider writing a Groovy *prereceive* script to block updating branch refs based on some permissions file. I would be interested in a generic, re-usable script to include with Gitblit, should someone want to implement it. Alternatively, you could use [gitolite](https://github.com/sitaramc/gitolite) and SSH for your repository access. ### Can I authenticate users against XYZ? Yes. The user service is pluggable. You may write your own complete user service by implementing the *com.gitblit.IUserService* interface. Or you may subclass *com.gitblit.GitblitUserService* and override just the authentication. Set the fully qualified classname as the *realm.userService* property. ### Why doesn't Gitblit support SSH? Gitblit could integrate [Apache Mina][mina] to provide SSH access. However, doing so violates Gitblit's first design principle: [KISS](http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/KISS_principle).
SSH support requires creating, exchanging, and managing SSH keys (arguably not more complicated than managing users). While this is possible, JGit's SmartHTTP implementation is a simpler and universal transport mechanism. You might consider running [Gerrit](http://gerrit.googlecode.org) which does integrate [Apache Mina][mina] and supports SSH or you might consider serving [Git][git] on Linux which would offer real SSH support and also allow use of [many other compelling Git solutions](https://git.wiki.kernel.org/index.php/InterfacesFrontendsAndTools). ### What types of Search does Gitblit support? As of 0.9.0, Gitblit supports Lucene-based searching. If Lucene indexing is disabled, Gitblit falls back to brute-force commit-traversal search. Commit-traversal search supports case-insensitive searching of *commit message* (default), *author*, and *committer*.
To search by *author* or *committer* use the following syntax in the search box: author: james committer: james Alternatively, you could enable the search type dropdown list in your `gitblit.properties` file. ### Why did you call the setting federation.N.frequency instead of federation.N.period?! Yes, yes I know that you are really specifying the period, but Frequency sounds better to me. :) ### Can Gitblit be translated? Yes. Most messages are localized to a standard Java properties file. [bitblt]: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bit_blit "Wikipedia Bitblt" [jgit]: http://eclipse.org/jgit "Eclipse JGit Site" [git]: http://git-scm.com "Official Git Site" [mina]: http://mina.apache.org "Apache Mina" [bouncycastle]: http://bouncycastle.org "The Legion of the Bouncy Castle"