--- title: 'Repository Permissions' license: 'CC-BY-SA-4.0' origin_url: 'https://codeberg.org/Codeberg/Documentation/src/commit/7bb8fa5ca559073c028805888195ee31b1f3d9c2/content/collaborating/repo-permissions.md' --- When you invite collaborators to join your repository or when you create teams for your organization, you have to decide what each collaborator/team is allowed to do. You can assign teams different levels of permission for each unit (e.g. issues, PR's, wiki). ## Profile and Visibility The visibility of your repositories will depend on the visibility of your profile, as well as whether you have marked a repository as private. Let's break down what this means: - If your profile's visibility is set to "Limited", _all_ of your non-private repositories will only be visible to logged in users. - If your profile's visibility is set to "Public", _all_ of your non-private repositories will be shown to everyone. - If you do not want anyone (apart from your fellow collaborators) to see your repositories, mark your repository as "Private". The visibility of your profile can be changed in the `Privacy settings`. Be careful when you set your profile's visibility to "Limited"; Even if a repository is public, users that are _not logged in_ will get a [404 error](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/HTTP_404) if they try to access your repository — it will seem as if it does not exist at all! ![screenshot showing the updated README](../_images/user/repo-permissions/user-settings-privacy-limited.webp) ## Collaborators There are four permission levels: **Read**, **Write**, **Administrator** and **Owner**. By default, the person who creates a repository is an **_Owner_**. The table below gives an overview of what collaborators are allowed to do when granted each of these permission levels:
Task Read Write Admin Owner
View, clone and pull repository
Contribute pull requests
Push to/update contributed pull requests
Push directly to repository
Merge pull requests
Moderate/delete issues and comments
Force-push/rewrite history (if enabled)
Add/remove collaborators to repository
Configure branch settings (protect/unprotect, enable force-push)
Configure repository settings (enable wiki, issues, PRs, releases, update profile)
Configure repository settings in the danger zone (transfer ownership, delete wiki data / repository, archive repository)
## Teams The permissions for teams are quite configurable. You can specify which repositories a team has access to; therefore, you can specify for each unit (Code Access, Issues, Releases) a different permission level. Each unit is configured to have one of these 3 permission levels: - No Access: Members cannot view or take any other action on this unit. - Read: Members can view the unit, and do standard actions for that unit (See the Read column under [Collaborators](#collaborators)). - Write: Members can view the unit, and execute write actions that unit (See the Write column under [Collaborators](#collaborators)). When a team is configured to have administrator access, when this is specified, you cannot change units. The team will have admin permissions (See the Admin column under _Collaborators_). Currently, there are six units that can be configured: - Code: access source code, files, commits, and branches. - Issues: organize bug reports, tasks, and milestones. - Pull Requests: access pull requests, and code reviews. - Releases: track the project versions and downloads. - Wiki: access and write documentation. - Projects: access and manage issues and pull requests in project boards. There are also two units which can be toggled: - External Wiki: access to external wiki. - External Issues: access to the external issue tracker. A team can be given the permission to create new repositories. When a member of such team creates a new repository, they will get administrator access to the repository.