| From: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com> and Carl Baldwin <cnb@fc.hp.com> | 
 | Subject: control access to branches. | 
 | Date: Thu, 17 Nov 2005 23:55:32 -0800 | 
 | Message-ID: <7vfypumlu3.fsf@assigned-by-dhcp.cox.net> | 
 | Abstract: An example hooks/update script is presented to | 
 |  implement repository maintenance policies, such as who can push | 
 |  into which branch and who can make a tag. | 
 | Content-type: text/asciidoc | 
 |  | 
 | How to use the update hook | 
 | ========================== | 
 |  | 
 | When your developer runs git-push into the repository, | 
 | git-receive-pack is run (either locally or over ssh) as that | 
 | developer, so is hooks/update script.  Quoting from the relevant | 
 | section of the documentation: | 
 |  | 
 |     Before each ref is updated, if $GIT_DIR/hooks/update file exists | 
 |     and executable, it is called with three parameters: | 
 |  | 
 |            $GIT_DIR/hooks/update refname sha1-old sha1-new | 
 |  | 
 |     The refname parameter is relative to $GIT_DIR; e.g. for the | 
 |     master head this is "refs/heads/master".  Two sha1 are the | 
 |     object names for the refname before and after the update.  Note | 
 |     that the hook is called before the refname is updated, so either | 
 |     sha1-old is 0{40} (meaning there is no such ref yet), or it | 
 |     should match what is recorded in refname. | 
 |  | 
 | So if your policy is (1) always require fast-forward push | 
 | (i.e. never allow "git-push repo +branch:branch"), (2) you | 
 | have a list of users allowed to update each branch, and (3) you | 
 | do not let tags to be overwritten, then you can use something | 
 | like this as your hooks/update script. | 
 |  | 
 | [jc: editorial note.  This is a much improved version by Carl | 
 | since I posted the original outline] | 
 |  | 
 | ---------------------------------------------------- | 
 | #!/bin/bash | 
 |  | 
 | umask 002 | 
 |  | 
 | # If you are having trouble with this access control hook script | 
 | # you can try setting this to true.  It will tell you exactly | 
 | # why a user is being allowed/denied access. | 
 |  | 
 | verbose=false | 
 |  | 
 | # Default shell globbing messes things up downstream | 
 | GLOBIGNORE=* | 
 |  | 
 | function grant { | 
 |   $verbose && echo >&2 "-Grant-		$1" | 
 |   echo grant | 
 |   exit 0 | 
 | } | 
 |  | 
 | function deny { | 
 |   $verbose && echo >&2 "-Deny-		$1" | 
 |   echo deny | 
 |   exit 1 | 
 | } | 
 |  | 
 | function info { | 
 |   $verbose && echo >&2 "-Info-		$1" | 
 | } | 
 |  | 
 | # Implement generic branch and tag policies. | 
 | # - Tags should not be updated once created. | 
 | # - Branches should only be fast-forwarded unless their pattern starts with '+' | 
 | case "$1" in | 
 |   refs/tags/*) | 
 |     git rev-parse --verify -q "$1" && | 
 |     deny >/dev/null "You can't overwrite an existing tag" | 
 |     ;; | 
 |   refs/heads/*) | 
 |     # No rebasing or rewinding | 
 |     if expr "$2" : '0*$' >/dev/null; then | 
 |       info "The branch '$1' is new..." | 
 |     else | 
 |       # updating -- make sure it is a fast-forward | 
 |       mb=$(git-merge-base "$2" "$3") | 
 |       case "$mb,$2" in | 
 |         "$2,$mb") info "Update is fast-forward" ;; | 
 | 	*)	  noff=y; info "This is not a fast-forward update.";; | 
 |       esac | 
 |     fi | 
 |     ;; | 
 |   *) | 
 |     deny >/dev/null \ | 
 |     "Branch is not under refs/heads or refs/tags.  What are you trying to do?" | 
 |     ;; | 
 | esac | 
 |  | 
 | # Implement per-branch controls based on username | 
 | allowed_users_file=$GIT_DIR/info/allowed-users | 
 | username=$(id -u -n) | 
 | info "The user is: '$username'" | 
 |  | 
 | if test -f "$allowed_users_file" | 
 | then | 
 |   rc=$(cat $allowed_users_file | grep -v '^#' | grep -v '^$' | | 
 |     while read heads user_patterns | 
 |     do | 
 |       # does this rule apply to us? | 
 |       head_pattern=${heads#+} | 
 |       matchlen=$(expr "$1" : "${head_pattern#+}") | 
 |       test "$matchlen" = ${#1} || continue | 
 |  | 
 |       # if non-ff, $heads must be with the '+' prefix | 
 |       test -n "$noff" && | 
 |       test "$head_pattern" = "$heads" && continue | 
 |  | 
 |       info "Found matching head pattern: '$head_pattern'" | 
 |       for user_pattern in $user_patterns; do | 
 |         info "Checking user: '$username' against pattern: '$user_pattern'" | 
 |         matchlen=$(expr "$username" : "$user_pattern") | 
 |         if test "$matchlen" = "${#username}" | 
 |         then | 
 |           grant "Allowing user: '$username' with pattern: '$user_pattern'" | 
 |         fi | 
 |       done | 
 |       deny "The user is not in the access list for this branch" | 
 |     done | 
 |   ) | 
 |   case "$rc" in | 
 |     grant) grant >/dev/null "Granting access based on $allowed_users_file" ;; | 
 |     deny)  deny  >/dev/null "Denying  access based on $allowed_users_file" ;; | 
 |     *) ;; | 
 |   esac | 
 | fi | 
 |  | 
 | allowed_groups_file=$GIT_DIR/info/allowed-groups | 
 | groups=$(id -G -n) | 
 | info "The user belongs to the following groups:" | 
 | info "'$groups'" | 
 |  | 
 | if test -f "$allowed_groups_file" | 
 | then | 
 |   rc=$(cat $allowed_groups_file | grep -v '^#' | grep -v '^$' | | 
 |     while read heads group_patterns | 
 |     do | 
 |       # does this rule apply to us? | 
 |       head_pattern=${heads#+} | 
 |       matchlen=$(expr "$1" : "${head_pattern#+}") | 
 |       test "$matchlen" = ${#1} || continue | 
 |  | 
 |       # if non-ff, $heads must be with the '+' prefix | 
 |       test -n "$noff" && | 
 |       test "$head_pattern" = "$heads" && continue | 
 |  | 
 |       info "Found matching head pattern: '$head_pattern'" | 
 |       for group_pattern in $group_patterns; do | 
 |         for groupname in $groups; do | 
 |           info "Checking group: '$groupname' against pattern: '$group_pattern'" | 
 |           matchlen=$(expr "$groupname" : "$group_pattern") | 
 |           if test "$matchlen" = "${#groupname}" | 
 |           then | 
 |             grant "Allowing group: '$groupname' with pattern: '$group_pattern'" | 
 |           fi | 
 |         done | 
 |       done | 
 |       deny "None of the user's groups are in the access list for this branch" | 
 |     done | 
 |   ) | 
 |   case "$rc" in | 
 |     grant) grant >/dev/null "Granting access based on $allowed_groups_file" ;; | 
 |     deny)  deny  >/dev/null "Denying  access based on $allowed_groups_file" ;; | 
 |     *) ;; | 
 |   esac | 
 | fi | 
 |  | 
 | deny >/dev/null "There are no more rules to check.  Denying access" | 
 | ---------------------------------------------------- | 
 |  | 
 | This uses two files, $GIT_DIR/info/allowed-users and | 
 | allowed-groups, to describe which heads can be pushed into by | 
 | whom.  The format of each file would look like this: | 
 |  | 
 |     refs/heads/master   junio | 
 |     +refs/heads/pu      junio | 
 |     refs/heads/cogito$  pasky | 
 |     refs/heads/bw/.*    linus | 
 |     refs/heads/tmp/.*   .* | 
 |     refs/tags/v[0-9].*  junio | 
 |  | 
 | With this, Linus can push or create "bw/penguin" or "bw/zebra" | 
 | or "bw/panda" branches, Pasky can do only "cogito", and JC can | 
 | do master and pu branches and make versioned tags.  And anybody | 
 | can do tmp/blah branches. The '+' sign at the pu record means | 
 | that JC can make non-fast-forward pushes on it. |