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forgejo-docs/docs/admin/customization.md
Panagiotis "Ivory" Vasilopoulos d12a9fee60 admin/customization: No need to be a developer for custom branding (#427)
Preview: https://forgejo.codeberg.page/@docs_pull_427/docs/next/admin/customization/

---

The previous version of this document insinuated that you need to be
familiar with Forgejo's source code and compile Forgejo from source
for custom branding changes. As of the most recent Forgejo version,
this is not necessarily true, as custom files can be served from
the CustomPath.

Administrators that were not developers therefore dismissed the
other guide and its contents without reading this, and I was one
of them. I thought it would make sense for this file to provide
information on where to put a custom logo. This change does not
fix it (this will be done later), but it will reduce the confusion
for now.

This warning confused me personally and other Forgejo users, as I
had one person tell me IRL that they thought that it was not possible
to serve a custom logo.

Reviewed-on: https://codeberg.org/forgejo/docs/pulls/427
Reviewed-by: Earl Warren <earl-warren@noreply.codeberg.org>
Co-authored-by: Panagiotis "Ivory" Vasilopoulos <git@n0toose.net>
Co-committed-by: Panagiotis "Ivory" Vasilopoulos <git@n0toose.net>
2024-02-18 17:22:54 +00:00

2 KiB

title license
Interface customization CC-BY-SA-4.0

Forgejo currently has limited capabilities for customizing the user interface.

Configurations and UI settings

Some settings are provided to customize the look and feel of the Forgejo user interface.

This includes the default theme, the name of your Forgejo instance, as well as the description that appears in Forgejo's homepage. A complete list of those settings can be found in the config cheat sheet:

They are documented and supported to be backward compatible between versions.

Serving custom resources, logos and pages

A word of warning (Here be dragons!)

Setting a custom logo for your instance, serving custom public files or modifying pages shown by Forgejo (such as the homepage) is possible. However, they impose an additional maintenance burden on administrators and, most importantly, are unsupported.

Unsupported means that future updates are likely to break your changes without any warning.

Templates

The most dangerous types of modifications are the ones concerning template files (.tmpl) served by Forgejo, as Forgejo issues backward incompatible updates to its templates very regularly.

Before deploying your changes to production or upgrading a modified Forgejo instance, we urge that you test your custom modifications in a testing environment first.

Instructions

For the reasons mentioned above, the instructions on performing such tasks can be found in the developer section on interface customization.

At this stage, it is also worth mentioning that it is possible to customize Forgejo by modifying its source code and compiling the changes, or by extracting and modifying the files of your choice using the command forgejo embedded extract. However, these methods are, for the same reasons as mentioned above, also unsupported.