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epipho 2bc2d45612 Docker publish: added tags field to allow for a single build to be tagged with multiple
tags. Only push tags that are applied to the repo. Change custom_tag to just tag.
2014-10-21 23:55:33 -04:00
cli changed drone build flags from string to bool 2014-10-12 14:09:55 -07:00
client altered cli to get status of last build, without branch param 2014-10-15 23:08:18 -07:00
packaging Fix packages install without bc 2014-10-14 13:19:32 +04:00
plugin Docker publish: added tags field to allow for a single build to be tagged with multiple 2014-10-21 23:55:33 -04:00
server minor session refactoring in prep for upcoming changes discussed in #590 2014-10-19 22:45:32 -07:00
shared Detect https scheme when serving ssl 2014-10-15 09:51:05 -02:00
.dockerignore hooked up custom docker instances from config file 2014-09-30 21:35:30 -07:00
.drone.yml updated yaml 2014-10-14 21:53:39 -07:00
.gitignore Build rpm and deb packages 2014-10-12 23:51:51 +04:00
AUTHORS updated README to include more branch details 2014-07-13 19:53:59 -07:00
Dockerfile fixed Dockerfile to pass port via ENV 2014-10-11 20:48:24 -07:00
LICENSE initial public commit 2014-02-07 03:10:01 -07:00
Makefile updated Makefile to create packaging/output during build step 2014-10-16 20:40:26 -07:00
README.md Fixing session section of readme 2014-10-18 22:13:44 -04:00
Vagrantfile Add Vagrantfile 2014-07-31 12:55:41 +04:00

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System Requirements

  • Docker
  • AUFS

We highly recommend running Docker with the AUFS storage driver. You can verify Docker is using the AUFS storage driver with the following command sudo docker info | grep Driver:

Upgrading

If you are upgrading from 0.2 I would recommend waiting a few weeks for the master branch to stabilize. There was a huge amount of refactoring that destabilized the codebase and I'd hate for that to impact any real world installations.

If you still want to upgrade to 0.2 please know that the databases are not compatible and there is no automated migration due to some fundamental structural changes. You will need to start with a fresh instance.

Installation

This is project is alpha stage. Consider yourself warned

We have optimized the installation process for Ubuntu since that is what we test with internally. You can run the following commands to quickly download an install Drone on an Ubuntu machine.

# Ubuntu, Debian
wget downloads.drone.io/master/drone.deb
sudo dpkg -i drone.deb

# CentOS, RedHat
wget downloads.drone.io/master/drone.rpm
sudo yum localinstall drone.rpm

Database

By default, Drone will create a SQLite database. Drone also supports Postgres and MySQL databases. You can customize the database settings using the configuration options described in the Setup section.

Below are some example configurations that you can use as reference:

# to use postgres
[database]
driver="postgres"
datasource="host=127.0.0.1 user=postgres dbname=drone sslmode=disable"

# to use mysql
[database]
driver="mysql"
datasource="root@tcp(127.0.0.1:3306)/drone"

Setup

We are in the process of moving configuration out of the UI and into configuration files and/or environment variables (your choice which). If you prefer configuration files you can provide Drone with the path to your configuration file:

droned --config=/path/to/drone.toml

The configuration file is in TOML format. If installed using the drone.deb file will be located in /etc/drone/drone.toml.


[server]
port=""

[server.ssl]
key=""
cert=""

[session]
secret=""
expires=""

[database]
driver=""
datasource=""

[registration]
open=true

[github]
client=""
secret=""

[github_enterprise]
client=""
secret=""
api=""
url=""
private_mode=false

[bitbucket]
client=""
secret=""

[gitlab]
url=""

[smtp]
host=""
port=""
from=""
user=""
pass=""

[worker]
nodes=[
"unix:///var/run/docker.sock",
"unix:///var/run/docker.sock"
]

Or you can use environment variables


# custom http server settings
export DRONE_SERVER_PORT=""
export DRONE_SERVER_SSL_KEY=""
export DRONE_SERVER_SSL_CERT=""

# session settings
export DRONE_SESSION_SECRET=""
export DRONE_SESSION_EXPIRES=""

# custom database settings
export DRONE_DATABASE_DRIVER=""
export DRONE_DATABASE_DATASOURCE=""

# enable users to self-register
export DRONE_REGISTRATION_OPEN=false

# github configuration
export DRONE_GITHUB_CLIENT=""
export DRONE_GITHUB_SECRET=""

# github enterprise configuration
export DRONE_GITHUB_ENTERPRISE_CLIENT=""
export DRONE_GITHUB_ENTERPRISE_SECRET=""
export DRONE_GITHUB_ENTERPRISE_API=""
export DRONE_GITHUB_ENTERPRISE_URL=""
export DRONE_GITHUB_ENTERPRISE_PRIVATE_MODE=false

# bitbucket configuration
export DRONE_BITBUCKET_CLIENT=""
export DRONE_BITBUCKET_SECRET=""

# gitlab configuration
export DRONE_GITLAB_URL=""

# email configuration
export DRONE_SMTP_HOST=""
export DRONE_SMTP_PORT=""
export DRONE_SMTP_FROM=""
export DRONE_SMTP_USER=""
export DRONE_SMTP_PASS=""

# worker nodes
# these are optional. If not specified Drone will add
# two worker nodes that connect to $DOCKER_HOST
export DRONE_WORKER_NODES="tcp://0.0.0.0:2375,tcp://0.0.0.0:2375"

Or a combination of the two:

DRONE_GITLAB_URL="https://gitlab.com" droned --config=/path/to/drone.conf

GitHub

In order to setup with GitHub you'll need to register your local Drone installation with GitHub (or GitHub Enterprise). You can read more about registering an application here: https://github.com/settings/applications/new

Below are example values when running Drone locally. If you are running Drone on a server you should replace localhost with your server hostname or address.

Homepage URL:

http://localhost:8000/

Authorization callback URL:

http://localhost:8000/api/auth/github.com