Kallithea (original) (raw)

About

Kallithea is a fast and powerful management tool for Mercurial and Gitwith a built-in push/pull server, full text search and code-review. It works on HTTP/HTTPS and SSH, has a built-in permission/authentication system with the ability to authenticate via LDAP or ActiveDirectory. Kallithea also provides simple API so it’s easy to integrate with existing external systems.

Kallithea is similar in some respects to GitHub or Bitbucket, however Kallithea can be run as standalone hosted application on your own server. It is open-source and focuses more on providing a customised, self-administered interface for Mercurial and Git repositories. Kallithea works on Unix-like systems and Windows.

Kallithea was forked from RhodeCode in July 2014 and has been heavily modified.

Installation

Kallithea requires Python 3 and it is recommended to install it in a virtualenv. Official releases of Kallithea can be installed with:

pip install kallithea

The development repository is kept very stable and used in production by the developers – you can do the same.

Please visit https://docs.kallithea-scm.org/en/latest/installation.html for more details.

There is also an experimental Puppet module for installing and setting up Kallithea. Currently, only basic functionality is provided, but it is still enough to get up and running quickly, especially for people without Python background. Seehttps://docs.kallithea-scm.org/en/latest/installation_puppet.html for further information.

Source code

The latest sources can be obtained fromhttps://kallithea-scm.org/repos/kallithea.

Kallithea features

License

Kallithea is released under the GPLv3 license. Kallithea is a Software Freedom Conservancy project and thus controlled by a non-profit organization. No commercial entity can take ownership of the project and change the direction.

Kallithea started out as an effort to make sure the existing GPLv3 codebase would stay available under a legal license. Kallithea thus has to stay GPLv3 compatible … but we are also happy it is GPLv3 and happy to keep it that way. A different license (such as AGPL) could perhaps help attract a different community with a different mix of Free Software people and companies but we are happy with the current focus.

Online documentation

Online documentation for the current version of Kallithea is available athttps://docs.kallithea-scm.org/en/stable/. Documentation for the current development version can be found on https://docs.kallithea-scm.org/en/default/.

You can also build the documentation locally: go to docs/ and run:

make html

Migrating from RhodeCode

Kallithea 0.3.2 and earlier supports migrating from an existing RhodeCode installation. To migrate, install Kallithea 0.3.2 and follow the instructions in the 0.3.2 README to perform a one-time conversion of the database from RhodeCode to Kallithea, before upgrading to this version of Kallithea.