KatolaZ
587c8bf415
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examples | ||
hooks | ||
sandpit | ||
.gitignore | ||
LICENSE.md | ||
Makefile | ||
README.md | ||
commits.go | 8 years ago | |
config.go | 8 years ago | |
exec.go | 8 years ago | |
notes.txt | ||
scorsh.cfg | ||
scorsh.sh | ||
scorshd.go | 8 years ago | |
spooler.go | 8 years ago | |
types.go | 8 years ago | |
worker_config.cfg | ||
workers.go | 8 years ago |
README.md
scorsh
Signed-Commit Remote Shell
scorsh lets you trigger commands on a remote git server through signed git commits.
scorsh is written in Go.
This is still work-in-progress, not ready to be used yet
WTF
...if you have ever felt that git hooks fall too short to your standards...
...because you would like each specific push event to trigger something different on the git repo...
...and you want only authorised users to be able to trigger that something...
...then scorsh might be what you have been looking for.
scorsh is a simple system to execute commands on a remote host by using GPG-signed commits containing customisable commands (scorsh-tags). scorsh consists of two components:
-
a
post-receive
git hook -
the
scorsh
binary itself
For each new push event, the post-receive
hook creates a file in a
configurable spool directory, containing information about the repo,
branch, and commits of the push.
The scorsh
binary processes inotify events from the spool, parses
each new file there, walks through the new commits looking for signed
ones, checks if the message of a signed commit contains a recognised
scorsh-tag, verifies that the user who signed the message is allowed
to use that scorsh-tag, and executes the commands associated to the
scorsh-tag. Or, well, this is what scorsh
should be able to do when
it's finished ;-)
The set of scorsh-tags accepted on a repo/branch is configurable, and each scorsh-tag can be associated to a list of commands. Commands are just URLs, at the moment restricted to two possible types:
-
file://path/to/file
- in this casescorsh
tries to execute the corresponding file (useful to execute scripts) -
http://myserver.com/where/you/like
- in this casescorsh
makes an HTTP request to the specified URL (useful to trigger other actions, e.g., Jenkins or Travis builds...)
Build notes
scorsh depends from the availability of a native build of
libgit2
version 0.25
or greater on the native system where
*scorsh is built. This dependencies is easily satisfied on various
operating systems by using their respective package manager. For
instance in Devuan ASCII one can simply do:
sudo apt install libgit2-dev
In Devuan Jessie unfortunately libgit2
is older than 0.25
so one
should first build git2go
from its repository, in which libgit2
is a
submodule to be built from scratch.
git clone https://github.com/libgit2/git2go
cd git2go
git submodule init
git submodule update
cd libgit2
cmake .
make
sudo make install
Then proceed installing dependencies for scorsh:
make deps
And finally build its binary:
make