2.8 KiB
date | title | slug | weight | toc | draft | menu |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
2016-12-01T16:00:00+02:00 | Installation from source | install-from-source | 10 | true | false | [{sidebar [{parent installation} {name From source} {weight 30} {identifier install-from-source}]}] |
Installation from source
This section will not include basic installation instructions.
Note: Go version 1.8 or higher is required
Download
First retrieve the source code. The easiest way is to use the Go tool. Use the following commands to fetch the source and switch into the source directory.
go get -d -u code.gitea.io/gitea
cd $GOPATH/src/code.gitea.io/gitea
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 v1.0
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 v1.0.0), list the available tags and check out the specific tag.
List available tags with the following.
git tag -l
git checkout v1.0.0 # or git checkout pr-xyz
Build
Since all required libraries are already bundled in the Gitea source, it's possible to build Gitea with no additional downloads. Various make tasks are provided to keep the build process as simple as possible. See here how to get Make. 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.tidb
: Enable support for a TiDB database.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, they
must be built separately using the generate
make task.
TAGS="bindata" make generate build
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
.
./gitea web