| | 1 | = The Trac Environment = |
| | 2 | |
| | 3 | Trac uses a directory structure and a database for storing project data. The directory is referred to as the “environment”. |
| | 4 | |
| | 5 | == Creating an Environment == |
| | 6 | |
| | 7 | A new Trac environment is created using [wiki:TracAdmin trac-admin]: |
| | 8 | {{{ |
| | 9 | $ trac-admin /path/to/projectenv initenv |
| | 10 | }}} |
| | 11 | |
| | 12 | [wiki:TracAdmin trac-admin] will ask you for the name of the project, the |
| | 13 | database connection string (explained below), and the type and path to |
| | 14 | your source code repository. |
| | 15 | |
| | 16 | ''Note: The web server user will require file system write permission to |
| | 17 | the environment directory and all the files inside. Please remember to set |
| | 18 | the appropriate permissions. The same applies to the Subversion repository |
| | 19 | Trac is eventually using, although Trac will only require read access as long |
| | 20 | as you're not using the BDB file system.'' |
| | 21 | |
| | 22 | == Database Connection Strings == |
| | 23 | |
| | 24 | Since version 0.9, Trac supports both [http://sqlite.org/ SQLite], |
| | 25 | [http://www.postgresql.org/ PostgreSQL] and [http://mysql.com/ MySQL] as |
| | 26 | database backends. The default is to use SQLite, which is probably sufficient |
| | 27 | for most projects. The database file is then stored in the environment |
| | 28 | directory, and can easily be [wiki:TracBackup backed up] together with the |
| | 29 | rest of the environment. |
| | 30 | |
| | 31 | The connection string for an embedded SQLite database is: |
| | 32 | {{{ |
| | 33 | sqlite:db/trac.db |
| | 34 | }}} |
| | 35 | |
| | 36 | If you want to use PostgreSQL or MySQL instead, you'll have to use a |
| | 37 | different connection string. For example, to connect to a PostgreSQL |
| | 38 | database on the same machine called `trac`, that allows access to the |
| | 39 | user `johndoe` with the password `letmein`, use: |
| | 40 | {{{ |
| | 41 | postgres://johndoe:letmein@localhost/trac |
| | 42 | }}} |
| | 43 | |
| | 44 | If PostgreSQL is running on a non-standard port (for example 9342), use: |
| | 45 | {{{ |
| | 46 | postgres://johndoe:letmein@localhost:9342/trac |
| | 47 | }}} |
| | 48 | |
| | 49 | Note that with PostgreSQL you will have to create the database before running |
| | 50 | `trac-admin initenv`. |
| | 51 | |
| | 52 | And make sure PostgreSQl DB name is "trac". What worked for me: |
| | 53 | And didn't work uppercase trac-user-name |
| | 54 | {{{ |
| | 55 | sudo su - postgres -c createdb trac |
| | 56 | sudo su - postgres -c psql trac |
| | 57 | CREATE USER trac-user-name WITH PASSWORD 'trac-pass-name'; |
| | 58 | }}} |
| | 59 | |
| | 60 | (Just to remind you, if you don't have a sudo/su setup, you just need to do the createdb and psql statements. That threw me the first couple of times I read this.) |
| | 61 | |
| | 62 | == Source Code Repository == |
| | 63 | |
| | 64 | You'll first have to provide the ''type'' of your repository (e.g. `svn` for Subversion, |
| | 65 | which is the default), then the ''path'' where the repository is located. |
| | 66 | |
| | 67 | If you don't want to use Trac with a source code repository, simply leave the ''path'' empty |
| | 68 | (the ''type'' information doesn't matter, then). |
| | 69 | |
| | 70 | For some systems, it is possible to specify not only the path to the repository, |
| | 71 | but also a ''scope'' within the repository. Trac will then only show information |
| | 72 | related to the files and changesets below that scope. The Subversion backend for |
| | 73 | Trac supports this; for other types, check the corresponding plugin's documentation. |
| | 74 | |
| | 75 | Example of a configuration for a Subversion repository: |
| | 76 | {{{ |
| | 77 | [trac] |
| | 78 | repository_type = svn |
| | 79 | repository_dir = /path/to/your/repository |
| | 80 | }}} |
| | 81 | |
| | 82 | The configuration for a scoped Subversion repository would be: |
| | 83 | {{{ |
| | 84 | [trac] |
| | 85 | repository_type = svn |
| | 86 | repository_dir = /path/to/your/repository/scope/within/repos |
| | 87 | }}} |
| | 88 | |
| | 89 | == Directory Structure == |
| | 90 | |
| | 91 | An environment directory will usually consist of the following files and directories: |
| | 92 | |
| | 93 | * `README` - Brief description of the environment. |
| | 94 | * `VERSION` - Contains the environment version identifier. |
| | 95 | * `attachments` - Attachments to wiki pages and tickets are stored here. |
| | 96 | * `conf` |
| | 97 | * `trac.ini` - Main configuration file. See TracIni. |
| | 98 | * `db` |
| | 99 | * `trac.db` - The SQLite database (if you're using SQLite). |
| | 100 | * `plugins` - Environment-specific [wiki:TracPlugins plugins] (Python eggs) |
| | 101 | * `templates` - Custom environment-specific templates. |
| | 102 | * `site_css.cs` - Custom CSS rules. |
| | 103 | * `site_footer.cs` - Custom page footer. |
| | 104 | * `site_header.cs` - Custom page header. |
| | 105 | * `wiki-macros` - Environment-specific [wiki:WikiMacros Wiki macros]. |
| | 106 | |
| | 107 | '''Note: don't confuse a Trac environment directory with the source code repository directory. |
| | 108 | It happens that the above structure is loosely modelled after the Subversion repository directory |
| | 109 | structure, but they are not and ''must not'' be located at the same place.''' |
| | 110 | |
| | 111 | ---- |
| | 112 | See also: TracAdmin, TracBackup, TracIni, TracGuide |