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* giteaofficial/main:
  Improve squash merge commit author and co-author with private emails (go-gitea#22977)
  Fix broken Chroma CSS styles (go-gitea#23174)
  Add gradle samples in maven doc of packages (go-gitea#23374)
  Fix and move "Use this template" button (go-gitea#23398)
  [skip ci] Updated translations via Crowdin
  Add init file for Ubuntu (go-gitea#23362)
  Rename `canWriteUnit` to `canWriteProjects` (go-gitea#23386)
  Fix pull request update showing too many commits with multiple branches (go-gitea#22856)
  Fix incorrect NotFound conditions in org/projects.go (go-gitea#23384)
  Refactor merge/update git command calls (go-gitea#23366)
  Redirect to project again after editing it (go-gitea#23326)
  Add Gitea Community Code of Conduct (go-gitea#23188)
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zjjhot committed Mar 10, 2023
2 parents 62af2dc + d647e74 commit 89e0d62
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6 changes: 6 additions & 0 deletions .stylelintrc.yaml
Original file line number Diff line number Diff line change
@@ -1,12 +1,18 @@
plugins:
- stylelint-declaration-strict-value

ignoreFiles:
- "**/*.go"

overrides:
- files: ["**/*.less"]
customSyntax: postcss-less
- files: ["**/chroma/*", "**/codemirror/*", "**/standalone/*", "**/console/*"]
rules:
scale-unlimited/declaration-strict-value: null
- files: ["**/chroma/*", "**/codemirror/*"]
rules:
block-no-empty: null

rules:
alpha-value-notation: null
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96 changes: 96 additions & 0 deletions CODE_OF_CONDUCT.md
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@@ -0,0 +1,96 @@
# Gitea Community Code of Conduct

## About

Online communities include people from many different backgrounds. The Gitea contributors are committed to providing a friendly, safe and welcoming environment for all, regardless of gender identity and expression, sexual orientation, disabilities, neurodiversity, physical appearance, body size, ethnicity, nationality, race, age, religion, or similar personal characteristics.

The first goal of the Code of Conduct is to specify a baseline standard of behavior so that people with different social values and communication styles can talk about Gitea effectively, productively, and respectfully.

The second goal is to provide a mechanism for resolving conflicts in the community when they arise.

The third goal of the Code of Conduct is to make our community welcoming to people from different backgrounds. Diversity is critical to the project; for Gitea to be successful, it needs contributors and users from all backgrounds.

We believe that healthy debate and disagreement are essential to a healthy project and community. However, it is never ok to be disrespectful. We value diverse opinions, but we value respectful behavior more.

## Community values

These are the values to which people in the Gitea community should aspire.

- **Be friendly and welcoming.**
- **Be patient.**
- Remember that people have varying communication styles and that not everyone is using their native language. (Meaning and tone can be lost in translation.)
- **Be thoughtful.**
- Productive communication requires effort. Think about how your words will be interpreted.
- Remember that sometimes it is best to refrain entirely from commenting.
- **Be respectful.**
- In particular, respect differences of opinion.
- **Be charitable.**
- Interpret the arguments of others in good faith, do not seek to disagree.
- When we do disagree, try to understand why.
- **Be constructive.**
- Avoid derailing: stay on topic; if you want to talk about something else, start a new conversation.
- Avoid unconstructive criticism: don't merely decry the current state of affairs; offer—or at least solicit—suggestions as to how things may be improved.
- Avoid snarking (pithy, unproductive, sniping comments)
- Avoid discussing potentially offensive or sensitive issues; this all too often leads to unnecessary conflict.
- Avoid microaggressions (brief and commonplace verbal, behavioral and environmental indignities that communicate hostile, derogatory or negative slights and insults to a person or group).
- **Be responsible.**
- What you say and do matters. Take responsibility for your words and actions, including their consequences, whether intended or otherwise.

People are complicated. You should expect to be misunderstood and to misunderstand others; when this inevitably occurs, resist the urge to be defensive or assign blame. Try not to take offense where no offense was intended. Give people the benefit of the doubt. Even if the intent was to provoke, do not rise to it. It is the responsibility of all parties to de-escalate conflict when it arises.

## Code of Conduct

### Our Pledge

In the interest of fostering an open and welcoming environment, we as contributors and maintainers pledge to making participation in our project and our community a harassment-free experience for everyone, regardless of age, body size, disability, ethnicity, gender identity and expression, level of experience, education, socio-economic status, nationality, personal appearance, race, religion, or sexual identity and orientation.

### Our Standards

Examples of behavior that contributes to creating a positive environment include:

- Using welcoming and inclusive language
- Being respectful of differing viewpoints and experiences
- Gracefully accepting constructive criticism
- Focusing on what is best for the community
- Showing empathy towards other community members

Examples of unacceptable behavior by participants include:

- The use of sexualized language or imagery and unwelcome sexual attention or advances
- Trolling, insulting/derogatory comments, and personal or political attacks
- Public or private harassment
- Publishing others’ private information, such as a physical or electronic address, without explicit permission
- Other conduct which could reasonably be considered inappropriate in a professional setting

### Our Responsibilities

Project maintainers are responsible for clarifying the standards of acceptable behavior and are expected to take appropriate and fair corrective action in response to any instances of unacceptable behavior.

Project maintainers have the right and responsibility to remove, edit, or reject: comments, commits, code, wiki edits, issues, and other contributions that are not aligned to this Code of Conduct, as well as to ban (temporarily or permanently) any contributor for behaviors that they deem inappropriate, threatening, offensive, or harmful.

### Scope

This Code of Conduct applies both within project spaces and in public spaces when an individual is representing the project or its community. Examples of representing a project or community include using an official project e-mail address, posting via an official social media account, or acting as an appointed representative at an online or offline event. Representation of a project may be further defined and clarified by project maintainers.

This Code of Conduct also applies outside the project spaces when the Project Stewards have a reasonable belief that an individual’s behavior may have a negative impact on the project or its community.

### Conflict Resolution

We do not believe that all conflict is bad; healthy debate and disagreement often yield positive results. However, it is never okay to be disrespectful or to engage in behavior that violates the project’s code of conduct.

If you see someone violating the code of conduct, you are encouraged to address the behavior directly with those involved. Many issues can be resolved quickly and easily, and this gives people more control over the outcome of their dispute. If you are unable to resolve the matter for any reason, or if the behavior is threatening or harassing, report it. We are dedicated to providing an environment where participants feel welcome and safe.

Reports should be directed to the Gitea Project Stewards at conduct@gitea.com. It is the Project Stewards’ duty to receive and address reported violations of the code of conduct. They will then work with a committee consisting of representatives from the technical-oversight-committee.

We will investigate every complaint, but you may not receive a direct response. We will use our discretion in determining when and how to follow up on reported incidents, which may range from not taking action to permanent expulsion from the project and project-sponsored spaces. Under normal circumstances, we will notify the accused of the report and provide them an opportunity to discuss it before any action is taken. If there is a consensus between maintainers that such an endeavor would be useless (i.e. in case of an obvious spammer), we reserve the right to take action without notifying the accused first. The identity of the reporter will be omitted from the details of the report supplied to the accused. In potentially harmful situations, such as ongoing harassment or threats to anyone’s safety, we may take action without notice.

### Attribution

This Code of Conduct is adapted from the Contributor Covenant, version 1.4, available at https://www.contributor-covenant.org/version/1/4/code-of-conduct.html

## Summary

- Treat everyone with respect and kindness.
- Be thoughtful in how you communicate.
- Don’t be destructive or inflammatory.
- If you encounter an issue, please mail conduct@gitea.com.
84 changes: 84 additions & 0 deletions contrib/init/ubuntu/gitea
Original file line number Diff line number Diff line change
@@ -0,0 +1,84 @@
#!/bin/sh
### BEGIN INIT INFO
# Provides: gitea
# Required-Start: $syslog $network
# Required-Stop: $syslog
# Default-Start: 2 3 4 5
# Default-Stop: 0 1 6
# Short-Description: A self-hosted Git service written in Go.
# Description: A self-hosted Git service written in Go.
### END INIT INFO

# Do NOT "set -e"

# PATH should only include /usr/* if it runs after the mountnfs.sh script
PATH=/sbin:/usr/sbin:/bin:/usr/bin:/usr/local/bin
DESC="Gitea - Git with a cup of tea"
NAME=gitea
SERVICEVERBOSE=yes
PIDFILE=/run/$NAME.pid
SCRIPTNAME=/etc/init.d/$NAME
WORKINGDIR=/var/lib/$NAME
DAEMON=/usr/local/bin/$NAME
DAEMON_ARGS="web -c /etc/$NAME/app.ini"
USER=git
STOP_SCHEDULE="${STOP_SCHEDULE:-QUIT/5/TERM/1/KILL/5}"

# Read configuration variable file if it is present
[ -r /etc/default/$NAME ] && . /etc/default/$NAME

# Exit if the package is not installed
[ -x "$DAEMON" ] || exit 0

do_start()
{
GITEA_ENVS="USER=$USER GITEA_WORK_DIR=$WORKINGDIR HOME=/home/$USER"
GITEA_EXEC="$DAEMON -- $DAEMON_ARGS"
sh -c "start-stop-daemon --start --quiet --pidfile $PIDFILE --make-pidfile \\
--background --chdir $WORKINGDIR --chuid $USER \\
--exec /bin/bash -- -c '/usr/bin/env $GITEA_ENVS $GITEA_EXEC'"
}

do_stop()
{
start-stop-daemon --stop --quiet --retry=$STOP_SCHEDULE --pidfile $PIDFILE --name $NAME --oknodo
rm -f $PIDFILE
}

do_status()
{
if [ -f $PIDFILE ]; then
if kill -0 $(cat "$PIDFILE"); then
echo "$NAME is running, PID is $(cat $PIDFILE)"
else
echo "$NAME process is dead, but pidfile exists"
fi
else
echo "$NAME is not running"
fi
}

case "$1" in
start)
echo "Starting $DESC" "$NAME"
do_start
;;
stop)
echo "Stopping $DESC" "$NAME"
do_stop
;;
status)
do_status
;;
restart)
echo "Restarting $DESC" "$NAME"
do_stop
do_start
;;
*)
echo "Usage: $SCRIPTNAME {start|stop|status|restart}" >&2
exit 2
;;
esac

exit 0
48 changes: 47 additions & 1 deletion docs/content/doc/packages/maven.en-us.md
Original file line number Diff line number Diff line change
Expand Up @@ -23,7 +23,7 @@ Publish [Maven](https://maven.apache.org) packages for your user or organization
## Requirements

To work with the Maven package registry, you can use [Maven](https://maven.apache.org/install.html) or [Gradle](https://gradle.org/install/).
The following examples use `Maven`.
The following examples use `Maven` and `Gradle Groovy`.

## Configuring the package registry

Expand Down Expand Up @@ -73,6 +73,40 @@ Afterwards add the following sections to your project `pom.xml` file:
| `access_token` | Your [personal access token]({{< relref "doc/developers/api-usage.en-us.md#authentication" >}}). |
| `owner` | The owner of the package. |

### Gradle variant

When you plan to add some packages from Gitea instance in your project, you should add it in repositories section:

```groovy
repositories {
// other repositories
maven { url "https://gitea.example.com/api/packages/{owner}/maven" }
}
```

In Groovy gradle you may include next script in your publishing part:

```groovy
publishing {
// other settings of publication
repositories {
maven {
name = "Gitea"
url = uri("https://gitea.example.com/api/packages/{owner}/maven")
credentials(HttpHeaderCredentials) {
name = "Authorization"
value = "token {access_token}"
}
authentication {
header(HttpHeaderAuthentication)
}
}
}
}
```

## Publish a package

To publish a package simply run:
Expand All @@ -81,6 +115,12 @@ To publish a package simply run:
mvn deploy
```

Or call `gradle` with task `publishAllPublicationsToGiteaRepository` in case you are using gradle:

```groovy
./gradlew publishAllPublicationsToGiteaRepository
```

If you want to publish a prebuild package to the registry, you can use [`mvn deploy:deploy-file`](https://maven.apache.org/plugins/maven-deploy-plugin/deploy-file-mojo.html):

```shell
Expand All @@ -105,6 +145,12 @@ To install a Maven package from the package registry, add a new dependency to yo
</dependency>
```

And analog in gradle groovy:

```groovy
implementation "com.test.package:test_project:1.0.0"
```

Afterwards run:

```shell
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2 changes: 1 addition & 1 deletion modules/git/command.go
Original file line number Diff line number Diff line change
Expand Up @@ -179,7 +179,7 @@ func (c *Command) AddDashesAndList(list ...string) *Command {
}

// ToTrustedCmdArgs converts a list of strings (trusted as argument) to TrustedCmdArgs
// In most cases, it shouldn't be used. Use AddXxx function instead
// In most cases, it shouldn't be used. Use NewCommand().AddXxx() function instead
func ToTrustedCmdArgs(args []string) TrustedCmdArgs {
ret := make(TrustedCmdArgs, len(args))
for i, arg := range args {
Expand Down
13 changes: 13 additions & 0 deletions modules/git/commit.go
Original file line number Diff line number Diff line change
Expand Up @@ -218,6 +218,19 @@ func (c *Commit) HasPreviousCommit(commitHash SHA1) (bool, error) {
return false, err
}

// IsForcePush returns true if a push from oldCommitHash to this is a force push
func (c *Commit) IsForcePush(oldCommitID string) (bool, error) {
if oldCommitID == EmptySHA {
return false, nil
}
oldCommit, err := c.repo.GetCommit(oldCommitID)
if err != nil {
return false, err
}
hasPreviousCommit, err := c.HasPreviousCommit(oldCommit.ID)
return !hasPreviousCommit, err
}

// CommitsBeforeLimit returns num commits before current revision
func (c *Commit) CommitsBeforeLimit(num int) ([]*Commit, error) {
return c.repo.getCommitsBeforeLimit(c.ID, num)
Expand Down
21 changes: 21 additions & 0 deletions modules/git/repo_commit.go
Original file line number Diff line number Diff line change
Expand Up @@ -323,6 +323,27 @@ func (repo *Repository) CommitsBetweenLimit(last, before *Commit, limit, skip in
return repo.parsePrettyFormatLogToList(bytes.TrimSpace(stdout))
}

// CommitsBetweenNotBase returns a list that contains commits between [before, last), excluding commits in baseBranch.
// If before is detached (removed by reset + push) it is not included.
func (repo *Repository) CommitsBetweenNotBase(last, before *Commit, baseBranch string) ([]*Commit, error) {
var stdout []byte
var err error
if before == nil {
stdout, _, err = NewCommand(repo.Ctx, "rev-list").AddDynamicArguments(last.ID.String()).AddOptionValues("--not", baseBranch).RunStdBytes(&RunOpts{Dir: repo.Path})
} else {
stdout, _, err = NewCommand(repo.Ctx, "rev-list").AddDynamicArguments(before.ID.String()+".."+last.ID.String()).AddOptionValues("--not", baseBranch).RunStdBytes(&RunOpts{Dir: repo.Path})
if err != nil && strings.Contains(err.Error(), "no merge base") {
// future versions of git >= 2.28 are likely to return an error if before and last have become unrelated.
// previously it would return the results of git rev-list before last so let's try that...
stdout, _, err = NewCommand(repo.Ctx, "rev-list").AddDynamicArguments(before.ID.String(), last.ID.String()).AddOptionValues("--not", baseBranch).RunStdBytes(&RunOpts{Dir: repo.Path})
}
}
if err != nil {
return nil, err
}
return repo.parsePrettyFormatLogToList(bytes.TrimSpace(stdout))
}

// CommitsBetweenIDs return commits between twoe commits
func (repo *Repository) CommitsBetweenIDs(last, before string) ([]*Commit, error) {
lastCommit, err := repo.GetCommit(last)
Expand Down
18 changes: 0 additions & 18 deletions modules/repository/push.go
Original file line number Diff line number Diff line change
Expand Up @@ -4,10 +4,8 @@
package repository

import (
"context"
"strings"

repo_model "code.gitea.io/gitea/models/repo"
"code.gitea.io/gitea/modules/git"
)

Expand Down Expand Up @@ -96,19 +94,3 @@ func (opts *PushUpdateOptions) RefName() string {
func (opts *PushUpdateOptions) RepoFullName() string {
return opts.RepoUserName + "/" + opts.RepoName
}

// IsForcePush detect if a push is a force push
func IsForcePush(ctx context.Context, opts *PushUpdateOptions) (bool, error) {
if !opts.IsUpdateBranch() {
return false, nil
}

output, _, err := git.NewCommand(ctx, "rev-list", "--max-count=1").AddDynamicArguments(opts.OldCommitID, "^"+opts.NewCommitID).
RunStdString(&git.RunOpts{Dir: repo_model.RepoPath(opts.RepoUserName, opts.RepoName)})
if err != nil {
return false, err
} else if len(output) > 0 {
return true, nil
}
return false, nil
}
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