TeamCity 2019.1 Help

Git

TeamCity supports Git out of the box. Git source control with Azure DevOps Services is supported (see authentication notes below).

This page contains description of the Git-specific fields of the VCS root settings.
For common VCS Root properties, see this section.

Important notes:

On this page:

General Settings

Option

Description

Fetch URL

The URL of the remote Git repository used for fetching data from the repository.

Push URL

The URL of the target remote Git repository used for pushing annotated tags created via VCS labeling build feature to the remote repository. If blank, the fetch URL is used.

Default branch

Configures default branch. Parameter references are supported here. Default value is refs/heads/master.

Branch specification

Lists the patterns for branch names, required for feature branches support. The matched branches are monitored for changes in addition to the default branch. The syntax is similar to checkout rules: +|-:branch_name, where branch_name is specific to the VCS, i.e. refs/heads/ in Git (with the optional * placeholder).

Use tags as branches

Allows monitoring / checking out git tags as branches making branch specification match tag names as well as branches (for example,+|-:refs/tags/<tag_name>). By default, tags are ignored.

Username style

Defines a way TeamCity reports username for a VCS change. Changing the username style will affect only newly collected changes. Old changes will continue to be stored with the style that was active at the time of collecting changes.

Submodules

Select whether you want to ignore the submodules, or treat them as a part of the source tree. Submodule repositories should either not require authentication or use the same protocol and accept the same authentication as configured in the VCS root.

Username for tags/merge

A custom username used for labeling.

Branch Matching Rules

  • If the branch matches a line without patterns, the line is used.

  • If the branch matches several lines with patterns, the best matching line is used.

  • If there are several lines with equal matching, the one below takes precedence.
    Everything that is matched by the wildcard will be shown as a branch name in the TeamCity interface. For example, +:refs/heads/* will match refs/heads/feature1 branch, but in the TeamCity interface you'll see only feature1 as a branch name.
    The short name of the branch is determined as follows:

  • if the line contains no brackets, then full line is used, if there are no patterns or part of line starting with the first pattern-matched character to the last pattern-matched character.

  • if the line contains brackets, then part of the line within brackets is used. When branches are specified here, and if your build configuration has a VCS trigger and a change is found in some branch, TeamCity will trigger a build in this branch.

Supported Git Protocols

The following protocols are supported for Git repository URL:

  • ssh: (for example, ssh://git.somwhere.org/repos/test.git, ssh://git@git.somwhereElse.org/repos/test.git, scp-like syntax: git@git.somwhere.org:repos/test.git)

Authentication Settings

Authentication Method

Description

Anonymous

Select this option to clone a repository with anonymous read access.

Password

Specify a valid username (if there is no username in the clone URL; the username specified here overrides the username from the URL) and a password to be used to clone the repository.
For the agent-side checkout, it is supported only if Git 1.7.3+ client is installed on the agent. See TW-18711.
For Git hosted from Team Foundation Server 2013, specify NTLM credentials here.

You can use a personal access token instead of a password to authenticate to Azure DevOps Services. Note that TeamCity does not support token authentication to hosted Azure DevOps Server (formerly, Team Foundation Server) installations.

Private Key

Valid only for SSH protocol. A private key must be in the OpenSSH format. Select one of the options from the Private Key list and specify a valid username (if there is no username in the clone URL; the username specified here overrides the username from the URL).
Available Private Key options:

  • Uploaded Key – uses the key(s) uploaded to the project. See SSH Keys Management for details.

  • Default Private key – uses the keys available on the file system in the default locations used by common ssh tools: the mapping specified in <USER_HOME>/.ssh/config if the file exists or the private key file <USER_HOME>/.ssh/id_rsa (the files are required to be present on the server and also on the agent if the agent-side checkout is used).

  • Custom Private Key – supported only for server-side checkout. When this method is used, fill the Private Key Path field with an absolute path to the private key file on the server machine. If required, specify the passphrase to access your SSH key in the corresponding field.

For all available options to connect to GitHub, see the comment.

Authenticating to Azure DevOps Services

If you use Git source control with Azure DevOps Services, the following options are available to you:

Personal Access Tokens

To use access tokens, you need to create a personal access token in your Azure DevOps account, where you have to set some Code access scope in your repositories and use it when configuring a VCS root.

Option

Description

Username

Leave blank for TFVC, any value for Git, for example, username

Password

Enter your personal access token created earlier

Required Access Scope

TFS subsystem

Scopes

TFVC

All scopes

Git

Code (read) / Code (read and write) for versioned settings

Work Items

Work items (read)

Commit Status

Code (status)

Alternate Authentication Credentials

To use the login/password pair authentication, you have to enable alternate credentials in your Azure DevOps account, where you can set a secondary username and password to use when configuring a VCS root.

Server Settings

These are the settings used in case of the server-side checkout.

Option

Description

Convert line-endings to CRLF

Convert line-endings of all text files to CRLF (works as setting core.autocrlf=true in a repository config). When not selected, no line-endings conversion is performed (works as setting core.autocrlf=false). Affects the server-side checkout only. A change to this property causes a clean checkout.

Agent Settings

These are the settings used in case of the agent-side checkout.
Note that the agent-side checkout has limited support for SSH. The only supported authentication methods are "Default Private Key" and "Uploaded Private Key".
If you plan to use the agent-side checkout, you need to have Git 1.6.4+ installed on the agents.

Option

Description

Path to git

Provide the path to a git executable to be used on the agent. When set to %env.TEAMCITY_GIT_PATH%, the automatically detected git will be used, see Git executable on the agent for details

Clean Policy/Clean Files Policy

Specify here when the git clean command is to run on the agent, and which files are to be removed.

Use mirrors

When enabled (default), TeamCity clones the repository under the agent's system\git directory and uses the mirror as an alternate repository when updating the checkout directory for the build. As a result, this speeds-up clean checkout (because only the working directory is cleaned), and saves disk space (as there is only one clone of the given Git repository on an agent).

If you disable this option, TeamCity will clone the repository directly under the build's working directory, unless the teamcity.git.use.local.mirrors property is set to true.

Git executable on the agent

TeamCity needs Git command line client version 1.6.4+ on the agent in order to use the agent-side checkout.

The recommended approach is to ensure that the git client is available in PATH of the TeamCity agent and leave the "Path to git" setting in the VCS root blank.
If you only have the git command line on some machines, set "Path to git" setting in the VCS root to the %env.TEAMCITY_GIT_PATH% value.

Instead of adding Git to the agent's PATH, you can set the TEAMCITY_GIT_PATH environment variable (or env.TEAMCITY_GIT_PATH property in the agent's buildAgent.properties file) to the full path to the git executable.

If TEAMCITY_GIT_PATH is not defined, the Git agent plugin tries to detect the installed git on the launch of the agent. It first tries to run git from the following locations:

  • for Windows - it tries to run git.exe at:
    • C:\Program Files\Git\bin
    • C:\Program Files (x86)\Git\bin
    • C:\cygwin\bin
  • for *nix - it tries to run git at:
    • /usr/local/bin
    • /usr/bin
    • /opt/local/bin
    • /opt/bin

If git is not found in any of these locations, it tries to run the git accessible via the PATH environment variable.
If a compatible git (1.6.4+) is found, it is reported in the TEAMCITY_GIT_PATH environment variable. This variable can be used in the Path to git field in the VCS root settings. As a result, the configuration with such a VCS root will run only on the agents where git was detected or specified in the agent properties.

Configuring Git Garbage Collection on Server

TeamCity server maintains a local clone for every Git repository used in the VCS roots configured on the server. Since the server performs fetch in those clones many times a day, the clone needs regular optimization to maintain predictable performance. If the Git garbage collection for the clone was not run for a long time, the process of collecting changes may slow down or start to report memory-related errors.TeamCity can automatically run git gc periodically when native Git client can be found on the server. Inability to run Git GC results in a related health report.

To fix the warning / meet automatic git gc requirements, perform the following:

  1. Install a native Git client manually on the TeamCity server.

  2. Specify path to the Git executable:
    • add the drectory with the executable to the Path environment variable and restart the server, or

    • set the full path to the directory in the teamcity.server.git.executable.path internal property without the server restart.

When TeamCity runs Git garbage collection, the details are logged into the teamcity-cleanup.log. If git garbage collection fails, a corresponding warning is displayed.

TeamCity executes Git garbage collection until the total time doesn't exceed 5 hours quota; the quota can be changed using the teamcity.server.git.gc.quota.minutes internal property.
Git garbage collection is executed every night at 2 a.m., this can be changed by specifying the internal property with a cron expression like this: teamcity.git.cleanupCron=0 0 2 * * ? (restart the server for the property to take effect). If the git gc process works slowly and cannot be completed in the allotted time, check the git-repack configuration in the default Git configuration files (for example, you can increase --window-memory to improve the git gc performance).

If the local Git clones need some kind of manual maintenance, you can find them under <TeamCity Data Directory>/system/caches/git directory. The map file in the directory contains mapping between the repository URL and the subdirectory storing the bare clone of the repository.

Git LFS

TeamCity supports Git LFS for agent-side checkout. To use it, install git 1.8.5+ and Git LFS on the build agent machine. Git LFS should be enabled using the git lfs install command (on Windows an elevated command prompt may be needed). More information is available in Git LFS documentation.

Internal Properties

For Git VCS it is possible to configure the following internal properties:

Property

Default

Description

teamcity.git.idle.timeout.seconds

1800

The idle timeout for communication with the remote repository. If no data were sent or received during this timeout, the plugin throws a timeout error to prevent hanging of the process forever.

teamcity.git.fetch.timeout

1800

(deprecated) Override of teamcity.git.idle.timeout.seconds for git fetch operation

teamcity.git.fetch.separate.process

true

Defines whether TeamCity runs git fetch in a separate process

teamcity.git.fetch.process.max.memory

512M

The value of the JVM -Xmx parameter for a separate fetch process. You also need to ensure the server machine has enough memory as the memory configured will be used in addition to the main server process and there can be several child processes doing git fetch and each using the configured amount of the memory.

teamcity.git.monitoring.expiration.timeout.hours

24

teamcity.server.git.gc.enabled

false

Whether TeamCity should run git gc during the server cleanup (native git is used)

teamcity.server.git.executable.path

git

The path to the native git executable on the server

teamcity.server.git.gc.quota.minutes

60

Maximum amount of time to run git gc

teamcity.git.cleanupCron

0 0 2 * * ? *

Cron expression for the time of a cleanup in git-plugin, by default - daily at 2a.m.

teamcity.git.stream.file.threshold.mb

128

Threshold in megabytes after which JGit uses streams to inflate objects. Increase it if you have large binary files in the repository and see symptoms described in TW-14947

teamcity.git.buildPatchInSeparateProcess

true

Git-plugin builds patches in a separate process, set it to false to build patch in the server process. To build patch git-plugin has to read repository files into memory. To not run out of memory git-plugin reads only objects of size smaller than the threshold, for larger objects streams are used and they can be slow (TW-14947). With patch building in a separate process all objects are read into memory. Patch process uses the memory settings of the separate fetch process.

teamcity.git.mirror.expiration.timeout.days

7

The number of days after which an unused clone of the repository will be removed from the server machine. The repository is considered unused if there were no TeamCity operations on this repository, like checking for changes or getting the current version. These operations are quite frequent, so 7 days is a reasonably high value.

teamcity.git.commit.debug.info

false

Defines whether to log additional debug info on each found commit

teamcity.git.sshProxyType

Type of ssh proxy, supported values: http, socks4, socks5. Keep in mind that socks4 proxy cannot resolve remote host names, so if you get an UnknownHostException, either switch to socks5 or add an entry for your git server into the hosts file on the TeamCity server machine.

teamcity.git.sshProxyHost

SSH proxy host

teamcity.git.sshProxyPort

SSH proxy port

teamcity.git.connectionRetryAttempts

3

Number of attempts to establish connection to the remote host for testing connection and getting a current repository state before admitting a failure

teamcity.git.connectionRetryIntervalSeconds

4

Interval in seconds between connection attempts

teamcity.git.use.local.mirrors

false

TeamCity checks the state of this property only if the "Use mirrors" option is disabled in the VCS root settings.

By default, if you disable "Use mirrors", TeamCity will clone the repository under the build's working directory.
Set teamcity.git.use.local.mirrors to true to clone the repository under the agent's system\git directory instead. When running a build, TeamCity will copy the repository from this directory to the build's working directory.

teamcity.git.use.shallow.clone

false

TeamCity checks the state of this property only if the "Use mirrors" option is disabled in the VCS root settings and teamcity.git.use.local.mirrors is set to true.

If teamcity.git.use.shallow.clone is set to true, TeamCity will only clone the last version of the repository. This is equal to creating a shallow clone, which means setting the depth of the git clone operation to 1.

If you don't need to store any commits, except the last one (for example if you often use disposable cloud instances for running builds), you can optimize the performance of your setup by disabling the "Use mirrors" option, and setting the internal properties as follows:

  • teamcity.git.use.local.mirrors=true
  • teamcity.git.use.shallow.clone=true

In all other cases we recommend leaving the "Use mirrors" option enabled.

Agent configuration for Git:

Property

Default

Description

teamcity.git.use.native.ssh

false

When checkout on agent: whether TeamCity should use native SSH implementation.

teamcity.git.idle.timeout.seconds

1800

The idle timeout for the git fetch operation when the agent-side checkout is used. The fetch is terminated if there is no output from the fetch process during this time. Prior to 8.0.4 the default was 600.

Limitations

When using checkout on an agent, a limited subset of checkout rules is supported. Git-plugin translates some of the checkout rules to the sparse checkout patterns. Only the rules which do not remap files are supported:

+:some/dir -:some/dir/subDir

An unsupported rule example is +:some/dir=>some/otherDir.

Known Issues

  • java.lang.OutOfMemoryError while fetch repository. Usually occurs when there are large files in the repository. By default, TeamCity runs fetch in a separate process. To increase memory available to this process, change the teamcity.git.fetch.process.max.memory internal property (see description of this property above).

  • Teamcity run as a Windows service cannot access a network mapped drives, so you cannot work with git repositories located on such drives. To make this work, run TeamCity using teamcity-server.bat.

  • inflation using streams in JGit prevents OutOfMemoryError, but can be time-consuming (see the related thread at jgit-dev for details and the TW-14947 issue related to the problem). If you meet conditions similar to those described in the issue, try to increase teamcity.git.stream.file.threshold.mb. Additionally, it is recommended to increase the overall amount of memory dedicated for TeamCity to prevent OutOfMemoryError.

Git support is implemented as an open-source plugin. For development links, refer to the plugin's page.


See also:

Administrator's Guide: Branch Remote Run Trigger