Only changed incorrect use of words and not each and every grammatical changes. Refer: #4277
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Self-Hosting Renovate
Open Source vs Commercial versions
Although Renovate is now best known as a "service" via the GitHub App, that service is actually running this same open source project, so you can get the same functionality if running it yourself. The version you see here in this repository can be cloned or npm
installed in seconds and give you the same core functionality as in the app.
There is also a commercially-licensed "Professional Edition" of Renovate available for GitHub Enterprise, that includes a stateful priority job queue, background scheduler and webhook listener. For details and documentation on Renovate Pro, please visit renovatebot.com/pro.
Installing Renovate OSS
npmjs
$ npm install -g renovate
Docker
Renovate is available for Docker via an automated build renovate/renovate. It builds latest
based on the master
branch and all semver tags are published too. All the following are valid:
$ docker run renovate/renovate
$ docker run renovate/renovate:13.1.1
$ docker run renovate/renovate:13.1
$ docker run renovate/renovate:13
(Please look up what the latest actual tags are though, do not use the above literally).
If you wish to configure Renovate using a config.js
file then map it to /usr/src/app/config.js
using Docker volumes.
Kubernetes
Renovate's official Docker image is compatible with Kubernetes. The following is an example manifest of running Renovate against a GitHub Enterprise server. First the Kubernetes manifest:
apiVersion: batch/v1beta1
kind: CronJob
metadata:
name: renovate
spec:
schedule: '@hourly'
concurrencyPolicy: Forbid
jobTemplate:
spec:
template:
spec:
containers:
- name: renovate
# Update this to the latest available and then enable Renovate on the manifest
image: renovate/renovate:13.153.0
# Environment Variables
env:
- name: RENOVATE_PLATFORM
valueFrom:
secretKeyRef:
key: renovate-platform
name: renovate-env
- name: RENOVATE_ENDPOINT
valueFrom:
secretKeyRef:
key: renovate-endpoint
name: renovate-env
- name: RENOVATE_TOKEN
valueFrom:
secretKeyRef:
key: renovate-token
name: renovate-env
- name: GITHUB_COM_TOKEN
valueFrom:
secretKeyRef:
key: github-token
name: renovate-env
- name: RENOVATE_AUTODISCOVER
valueFrom:
secretKeyRef:
key: renovate-autodiscover
name: renovate-env
restartPolicy: Never
And also this accompanying secret.yaml
:
apiVersion: v1
kind: Secret
metadata:
name: renovate-env
type: Opaque
stringData:
renovate-platform: 'github'
renovate-endpoint: 'https://github.company.com/api/v3'
renovate-token: 'your-github-enterprise-renovate-user-token'
github-token: 'any-personal-user-token-for-github-com-for-fetching-changelogs'
renovate-autodiscover: 'true'
Authentication
You need to select a user account for renovate
to assume the identity of, and generate a Personal Access Token. It is recommended to be @renovate-bot
if you are using a self-hosted server and can pick any username you want.
It is also recommended that you configure config.gitAuthor
with the same identity as your Renovate user, e.g. like "gitAuthor": "Renovate Bot <bot@renovateapp.com>"
.
GitHub Enterprise
First, create a personal access token for the bot account (select "repo" permissions).
Configure it either as token
in your config.js
file, or in environment variable RENOVATE_TOKEN
, or via CLI --token=
.
GitLab CE/EE
First, create a personal access token for the bot account (select "api" scope).
Configure it either as token
in your config.js
file, or in environment variable RENOVATE_TOKEN
, or via CLI --token=
.
Don't forget to configure platform=gitlab
somewhere in config.
Bitbucket Cloud
First, create an AppPassword for the bot account.
Configure it as password
in your config.js
file, or in environment variable RENOVATE_PASSWORD
, or via CLI --password=
.
Also be sure to configure the username
for your bot account too.
Don't forget to configure platform=bitbucket
somewhere in config.
Bitbucket Server
Create a Personal Access Token for your bot account.
Configure it as password
in your config.js
file, or in environment variable RENOVATE_PASSWORD
, or via CLI --password=
.
Also configure the username
for your bot account too, if you decided not to name it @renovate-bot
.
Don't forget to configure platform=bitbucket-server
somewhere in config.
Azure DevOps
First, create a personal access token for the bot account.
Configure it either as token
in your config.js
file, or in environment variable RENOVATE_TOKEN
, or via CLI --token=
.
Don't forget to configure platform=azure
somewhere in config.
GitHub.com token for release notes
If you are running on any platform except github.com, it's important to also configure GITHUB_COM_TOKEN
containing a personal access token for github.com. This account can actually be any account on GitHub, and needs only read-only access. It's used when fetching release notes for repositories in order to increase the hourly API limit.
File/directory usage
By default, Renovate will store all files within a renovate/
subdirectory of the operating system's temporary directory, e.g. /tmp/renovate/
.
Repository data will be copied or cloned into unique subdirectories under repos/
, e.g. /tmp/renovate/repos/github/owner1/repo-a/
.
Cache data - such as Renovate's own cache as well as that for npm, yarn, composer, etc - will be stored in /tmp/renovate/cache
.
If you wish to override the base directory to be used (e.g. instead of /tmp/renovate/
) then configure a value for baseDir
in config.js
, or via env (RENOVATE_BASE_DIR
) or via CLI (--base-dir=
).
If you wish to override the cache location specifically then configure a value for cacheDir
instead.
Identification and Authorization
It's possible to sign git commits, but for this you need to set up the GPG key and setting out of band. In short:
- Make sure the private key is added via GPG
- Tell git about the private key (e.g.
git config --global user.signingkey AABBCCDDEEFF
) - Configure git to sign all commits (
git config --global commit.gpgsign true
)
Usage
The following example uses the Renovate CLI tool, which can be installed by running npm i -g renovate
.
If running your own Renovate bot then you will need a user account that Renovate will run as. It's recommended to use a dedicated account for the bot, e.g. name it renovate-bot
if on your own instance. Create and save a Personal Access Token for this account.
Create a Renovate config file, e.g. here is an example:
module.exports = {
endpoint: 'https://self-hosted.gitlab/api/v4/',
token: '**gitlab_token**',
platform: 'gitlab',
logFileLevel: 'warn',
logLevel: 'info',
logFile: '/home/user/renovate.log',
onboarding: true,
onboardingConfig: {
extends: ['config:base'],
},
repositories: ['username/repo', 'orgname/repo'],
};
Here change the logFile
and repositories
to something appropriate. Also replace gitlab-token value with the one created during the previous step.
If running against GitHub Enterprise, change the above gitlab values to the equivalent github ones.
You can save this file as anything you want and then use RENOVATE_CONFIG_FILE
env variable to tell Renovate where to find it.
Most people will run Renovate via cron, e.g. once per hour. Here is an example bash script that you can point cron
to:
#!/bin/bash
export PATH="/home/user/.yarn/bin:/usr/bin:/usr/local/sbin:/usr/local/bin:/usr/sbin:/usr/bin:/sbin:/bin:$PATH"
export RENOVATE_CONFIG_FILE="/home/user/renovate-config.js"
export RENOVATE_TOKEN="**some-token**" # GitHub, GitLab, Azure DevOps
export GITHUB_COM_TOKEN="**github-token**" # Delete this if using github.com
# Renovate
renovate
Note: the GitHub.com token in env is necessary in order to retrieve Release Notes that are usually hosted on github.com. You don't need to add it if you are already running the bot against github.com, but you do need to add it if you're using GitHub Enterprise, GitLab, Azure DevOps, or Bitbucket.
You should save and test out this script manually first, and add it to cron once you've verified it.
Deployment
See deployment docs for details.
Kubernetes for Gitlab, using Git over SSH
This section describes how to use git binary with ssh for Gitlab, to avoid API shortcomings.
You need to first create a ssh key, then add the public part to Gitlab (see this guide)
Then, you need to create the secret to add the ssh key, and the following config to your container
host gitlab.com
HostName gitlab.com
StrictHostKeyChecking no
IdentityFile ~/.ssh/id_rsa
User git
To easily create the secret, you can do the following (see docs)
kubectl create secret generic ssh-key-secret --from-file=config=/path/to/config --from-file=id_rsa=/path/to/.ssh/id_rsa --from-file=id_rsa.pub=/path/to/.ssh/id_rsa.pub
It creates something like this
apiVersion: v1
data:
config: aG9zdCBnaXRsYWIuY29tCiAgSG9zdE5hbWUgZ2l0bGFiLmNvbQogIFN0cmljdEhvc3RLZXlDaGVja2luZyBubwogIElkZW50aXR5RmlsZSB+Ly5zc2gvaWRfcnNhCiAgVXNlciBnaXQ=
id_rsa: <base64String>
id_rsa.pub: <base64String>
kind: Secret
metadata:
name: ssh-key-secret
namespace: <namespace>
Then you just need to add Git author, and mount volumes The final configuration should look like something like this :
---
apiVersion: v1
kind: Namespace
metadata:
name: <namespace, for example renovate>
---
apiVersion: v1
kind: Secret
metadata:
name: renovate-env
namespace: <namespace>
type: Opaque
stringData:
renovate-platform: 'gitlab'
renovate-endpoint: 'https://gitlab.com/api/v4'
renovate-token: <Gitlab Token>
github-token: <Github Token>
renovate-autodiscover: 'false'
---
apiVersion: v1
data:
config: aG9zdCBnaXRsYWIuY29tCiAgSG9zdE5hbWUgZ2l0bGFiLmNvbQogIFN0cmljdEhvc3RLZXlDaGVja2luZyBubwogIElkZW50aXR5RmlsZSB+Ly5zc2gvaWRfcnNhCiAgVXNlciBnaXQ=
id_rsa: <base64String>
id_rsa.pub: <base64String>
kind: Secret
metadata:
name: ssh-key-secret
namespace: <namespace>
---
apiVersion: batch/v1beta1
kind: CronJob
metadata:
name: renovate
namespace: <namespace>
spec:
schedule: '@hourly'
concurrencyPolicy: Forbid
jobTemplate:
spec:
template:
spec:
volumes:
- name: ssh-key-volume
secret:
secretName: ssh-key-secret
containers:
- name: renovate
# Update this to the latest available and then enable Renovate on the manifest
image: renovate/renovate:14.1.0
volumeMounts:
- name: ssh-key-volume
readOnly: true
mountPath: "/home/ubuntu/.ssh"
args:
- <repository>
# Environment Variables
env:
- name: RENOVATE_GIT_AUTHOR
value: <Git Author, with format 'User <email@email.com>'>
- name: RENOVATE_GIT_FS
value: ssh
- name: RENOVATE_PLATFORM
valueFrom:
secretKeyRef:
key: renovate-platform
name: renovate-env
- name: RENOVATE_ENDPOINT
valueFrom:
secretKeyRef:
key: renovate-endpoint
name: renovate-env
- name: RENOVATE_TOKEN
valueFrom:
secretKeyRef:
key: renovate-token
name: renovate-env
- name: GITHUB_COM_TOKEN
valueFrom:
secretKeyRef:
key: github-token
name: renovate-env
- name: RENOVATE_AUTODISCOVER
valueFrom:
secretKeyRef:
key: renovate-autodiscover
name: renovate-env
restartPolicy: Never