Installing Git in Home Directory - CentOS 5 - NO ROOT
At work, development doesn't have revision control. By this I mean that we are only allowed to check into the P4 depot when the change set is ready for regression testing. We can't check in intercolary changes! There are a host of problems with having no revision control during development that I don't need to go into here. Instead, I brought the problem to prodsys and they said, "no, but what you do in your home directory is your business". Basically, I can install it myself if I want it.
Unfortunately, I can't install it myself, because I'm on CentOS 5 at work and I don't have root. Yum won't give you the time of day if you don't have root. So what can I do to get git? I'm fine with statically linked binary if that makes it easy, but开发者_JAVA百科 I can't find such a thing anywhere. I'm also looking for git-p4.
Edit: I've downloaded the tarball but I think I'm missing deps. I've read through the INSTALL doc and opted out of every optional dependency:
make prefix=$HOME/git NO_TCLTK=YesPlease NO_OPENSSL=YesPlease NO_CURL=YesPlease NO_EXPAT=YesPlease
But I still can't build.
I get this error:
: command not foundline 2:
: command not foundline 5:
: command not foundline 8:
./GIT-VERSION-GEN: line 14: syntax error near unexpected token `elif'
'/GIT-VERSION-GEN: line 14: `elif test -d .git -o -f .git &&
and it builds a lot of .o's until I get to:
...
LINK git-daemon
make: *** No rule to make target `GIT-VERSION-FILE', needed by `git-am'. Stop.`
And I'm stuck again.
Chris Kaminski already linked to the git site (though the true url is http://git-scm.com/). There's a download link for a tarball there. You can also clone the git.git repo:
git clone git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/git/git.git
git clone http://www.kernel.org/pub/scm/git/git.git # if behind a firewall
Either way, all you'll have to do is make install
- the default prefix is $HOME, placing files in $HOME/bin, $HOME/libexec, and so on. If you want to keep it partitioned (a good idea, since there's no uninstall rule), just use the prefix option, e.g. make prefix=$HOME/git
.
www.git-scm.org
Or you could download the RPMs yourself, and extract them like so:
rpm2cpio git-1.7.0.5.i386.rpm |cpio -iv
and copy it into ~username/bin/git and run it from there.
This is probably an obvious question but... "Can't you just ask your sysadmin to install git"?
Often the sysadmin will be happier to do that than have you install it with make, because at least then he'll be aware of pending security errata etc. (esp. so for something like git which speaks over the network).
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