* Split TestPullRequest out of AddTestPullRequestTask
* Before scheduling the task, AddTestPullRequestTask stores the max
index of the repository
* When the task runs, it does not take into account pull requests that
have an index higher than the recorded max index
When AddTestPullRequestTask is called with isSync == true, it is the
direct consequence of a new commit being pushed. Forgejo knows nothing
of this new commit yet. If a PR is created later and its head
references the new commit, it will have an index that is higher and
must not be taken into account. It would be acting and triggering a
notification for a PR based on an event that happened before it
existed.
Refs: https://codeberg.org/forgejo/forgejo/issues/2009
Reviewed-on: https://codeberg.org/forgejo/forgejo/pulls/2236
Reviewed-by: Gusted <gusted@noreply.codeberg.org>
Co-authored-by: Earl Warren <contact@earl-warren.org>
Co-committed-by: Earl Warren <contact@earl-warren.org>
(cherry picked from commit b3be895a30)
Previously, the repo wiki was hardcoded to use `master` as its branch,
this change makes it possible to use `main` (or something else, governed
by `[repository].DEFAULT_BRANCH`, a setting that already exists and
defaults to `main`).
The way it is done is that a new column is added to the `repository`
table: `wiki_branch`. The migration will make existing repositories
default to `master`, for compatibility's sake, even if they don't have a
Wiki (because it's easier to do that). Newly created repositories will
default to `[repository].DEFAULT_BRANCH` instead.
The Wiki service was updated to use the branch name stored in the
database, and fall back to the default if it is empty.
Old repositories with Wikis using the older `master` branch will have
the option to do a one-time transition to `main`, available via the
repository settings in the "Danger Zone". This option will only be
available for repositories that have the internal wiki enabled, it is
not empty, and the wiki branch is not `[repository].DEFAULT_BRANCH`.
When migrating a repository with a Wiki, Forgejo will use the same
branch name for the wiki as the source repository did. If that's not the
same as the default, the option to normalize it will be available after
the migration's done.
Additionally, the `/api/v1/{owner}/{repo}` endpoint was updated: it will
now include the wiki branch name in `GET` requests, and allow changing
the wiki branch via `PATCH`.
Signed-off-by: Gergely Nagy <forgejo@gergo.csillger.hu>
(cherry picked from commit d87c526d2a)
So the caller can check log events at the desired level instead of
being limited to the default level log.INFO
(cherry picked from commit 2fbf5f9555)
(cherry picked from commit e2137a3147)
With this change, the "You pushed on branch xyz" banner will be
displayed when either the viewed repository or its base repo (if the
current one's a fork) has pull requests enabled. Previously it only
displayed if the viewed repo had PRs enabled.
Furthermore, if the viewed repository is an original repository that the
viewing user has a fork of, if the forked repository has recently pushed
branches, then the banner will appear for the original repository too.
In this case, the notification will include branches from the viewing
user's fork, and branches they pushed to the base repo, too.
Refs: https://codeberg.org/forgejo/forgejo/pulls/2195
Signed-off-by: Gergely Nagy <forgejo@gergo.csillger.hu>
(cherry picked from commit a29f10661d)
(cherry picked from commit 70c5e2021d)
(cherry picked from commit 48b25be67a)
When searching for repository topics, either via the API, or via
Explore, paging did not work correctly, because it only applied when the
`page` parameter was non-zero. Paging should have applied when the page
size is greater than zero, which is what this patch does.
As a result, both the API, and the Explore endpoint will return paged
results (30 by default). As such, when managing topics on the frontend,
the offered completions will also be limited to a pageful of results,
based on what the user has already typed.
This drastically reduces the amount of traffic, and also the number of
the topics to choose from, and thus, the rendering time too.
The topics will be returned by popularity, with most used topics first.
A single page will contain `[api].DEFAULT_PAGING_NUM` (30 by default)
items that match the query. That's plenty to choose from.
Fixes #132.
Signed-off-by: Gergely Nagy <forgejo@gergo.csillger.hu>
(cherry picked from commit 64d4ff41db)
(cherry picked from commit 06b808fa2c)
(cherry picked from commit 9205c9266a)
(cherry picked from commit 47863d4f72)
- When the database returns an error about the SQL query, the error is
logged but not the SQL query and arguments, which is just as valuable as
the vague deeply hidden documented error that the database returns.
It's possible to log the SQL query by logging **all** SQL queries. For
bigger instances such as Codeberg, this is not a viable option.
- Adds a new hook, enabled by default, to log SQL queries with their
arguments and the error returned by the database when the database
returns an error.
- This likely needs some fine tuning in the future to decide when to
enable this, as the error is already logged and if people have the
`[database].LOG_SQL` option enabled, the SQL would be logged twice. But
given that it's an rare occurence for SQL queries to error, it's fine to
leave that as-is.
- Ref: https://codeberg.org/forgejo/forgejo/issues/1998
(cherry picked from commit 866229bc32)
(cherry picked from commit 96dd3e87cf)
(cherry picked from commit e165510317)
(cherry picked from commit 1638e2b3f5)
This implements "repository flags", a way for instance administrators to
assign custom flags to repositories. The idea is that custom templates
can look at these flags, and display banners based on them, Forgejo does
not provide anything built on top of it, just the foundation. The
feature is optional, and disabled by default. To enable it, set
`[repository].ENABLE_FLAGS = true`.
On the UI side, instance administrators will see a new "Manage flags"
tab on repositories, and a list of enabled tags (if any) on the
repository home page. The "Manage flags" page allows them to remove
existing flags, or add any new ones that are listed in
`[repository].SETTABLE_FLAGS`.
The model does not enforce that only the `SETTABLE_FLAGS` are present.
If the setting is changed, old flags may remain present in the database,
and anything that uses them, will still work. The repository flag
management page will allow an instance administrator to remove them, but
not set them, once removed.
Signed-off-by: Gergely Nagy <forgejo@gergo.csillger.hu>
(cherry picked from commit ba735ce222)
(cherry picked from commit f09f6e029b)
(cherry picked from commit 2f8b041489)
(cherry picked from commit d3186ee5f4)
Adds a new `/{username}/{repo}/badges` family of routes, which redirect
to various shields.io badges. The goal is to not reimplement badge
generation, and delegate it to shields.io (or a similar service), which
are already used by many. This way, we get all the goodies that come
with it: different styles, colors, logos, you name it.
So these routes are just thin wrappers around shields.io that make it
easier to display the information we want. The URL is configurable via
`app.ini`, and is templatable, allowing to use alternative badge
generator services with slightly different URL patterns.
Additionally, for compatibility with GitHub, there's an
`/{username}/{repo}/actions/workflows/{workflow_file}/badge.svg` route
that works much the same way as on GitHub. Change the hostname in the
URL, and done.
Fixes gitea#5633, gitea#23688, and also fixes #126.
Work sponsored by Codeberg e.V.
Signed-off-by: Gergely Nagy <forgejo@gergo.csillger.hu>
(cherry picked from commit fcd0f61212)
(cherry picked from commit 20d14f7844)
(cherry picked from commit 4359741431)
(cherry picked from commit 35cff45eb8)
(cherry picked from commit 2fc0d0b8a3)
- Rewrite `UpdateCommentsMigrationsByType` to not use `WHERE IN` as
that's a performance diaster for MariaDB, it now use batching to query
the the relevant comment IDs via JOINs (which is not possible in a
UPDATE query for SQLite) and then update them in a seperate query.
- Add unit test.
- Resolves https://codeberg.org/forgejo/forgejo/issues/1856
(cherry picked from commit 8098ca9d2e)
Conflicts:
models/issues/comment.go
https://codeberg.org/forgejo/forgejo/pulls/2075
(cherry picked from commit ca65deba1c)
(cherry picked from commit 0e1e09e77d)
(cherry picked from commit 19013ba5ea)
(cherry picked from commit 23c887f97e)
(cherry picked from commit b3321d1a84)
This is largely based on gitea#6312 by @ashimokawa, with updates and
fixes by myself, and incorporates the review feedback given in that pull
request, and more.
What this patch does is add a new "default_permissions" column to the
`repo_units` table (defaulting to read permission), adjusts the
permission checking code to take this into consideration, and then
exposes a setting that lets a repo administrator enable any user on a
Forgejo instance to edit the repo's wiki (effectively giving the wiki
unit of the repo "write" permissions by default).
By default, wikis will remain restricted to collaborators, but with the
new setting exposed, they can be turned into globally editable wikis.
Fixes Codeberg/Community#28.
Signed-off-by: Gergely Nagy <forgejo@gergo.csillger.hu>
(cherry picked from commit 4b74439922)
(cherry picked from commit 337cf62c10)
(cherry picked from commit b6786fdb32)
(cherry picked from commit a5d2829a10)
[GITEA] Optionally allow anyone to edit Wikis (squash) AddTokenAuth
(cherry picked from commit fed50cf72e)
(cherry picked from commit 42c55e494e)
(cherry picked from commit e3463bda47)
- If the session doesn't exist, it shouldn't be expected that the
variable is non-nil. Define the session variable instead and insert that.
- Add unit tests to test the behavior of the database sessions code .
- Regression caused by dd30d9d5c0.
- Resolves https://codeberg.org/forgejo/forgejo/issues/2042
(cherry picked from commit 90307ad200)
(cherry picked from commit 874ef1978d)
(cherry picked from commit 27d5f035fc)
(cherry picked from commit 65dbc4303b)
[GITEA] Fix session generation for database (squash) timeutil.Mock
because of e743570f65 * Refactor timeutil package (#28623)
(cherry picked from commit acc6b51be2)
(cherry picked from commit 02b74317f2)
(cherry picked from commit 63b9b624bd)
(cherry picked from commit 7752ff8baa)
(cherry picked from commit c0af4d9438)
During registration, one may be required to give their email address, to
be verified and activated later. However, if one makes a mistake, a
typo, they may end up with an account that cannot be activated due to
having a wrong email address.
They can still log in, but not change the email address, thus, no way to
activate it without help from an administrator.
To remedy this issue, lets allow changing the email address for logged
in, but not activated users.
This fixes gitea#17785.
Signed-off-by: Gergely Nagy <forgejo@gergo.csillger.hu>
(cherry picked from commit aaaece28e4)
(cherry picked from commit 639dafabec)
(cherry picked from commit d699c12ceb)
[GITEA] Allow changing the email address before activation (squash) cache is always active
This needs to be revisited because the MailResendLimit is not enforced
and turns out to not be tested.
See e7cb8da2a8 * Always enable caches (#28527)
(cherry picked from commit 43ded8ee30)
Rate limit pre-activation email change separately
Changing the email address before any email address is activated should
be subject to a different rate limit than the normal activation email
resending. If there's only one rate limit for both, then if a newly
signed up quickly discovers they gave a wrong email address, they'd have
to wait three minutes to change it.
With the two separate limits, they don't - but they'll have to wait
three minutes before they can change the email address again.
The downside of this setup is that a malicious actor can alternate
between resending and changing the email address (to something like
`user+$idx@domain`, delivered to the same inbox) to effectively halving
the rate limit. I do not think there's a better solution, and this feels
like such a small attack surface that I'd deem it acceptable.
The way the code works after this change is that `ActivatePost` will now
check the `MailChangeLimit_user` key rather than `MailResendLimit_user`,
and if we're within the limit, it will set `MailChangedJustNow_user`. The
`Activate` method - which sends the activation email, whether it is a
normal resend, or one following an email change - will check
`MailChangedJustNow_user`, and if it is set, it will check the rate
limit against `MailChangedLimit_user`, otherwise against
`MailResendLimit_user`, and then will delete the
`MailChangedJustNow_user` key from the cache.
Fixes #2040.
Signed-off-by: Gergely Nagy <forgejo@gergo.csillger.hu>
(cherry picked from commit e35d2af2e5)
(cherry picked from commit 03989418a7)
(cherry picked from commit f50e0dfe5e)
(cherry picked from commit cad9184a36)
(cherry picked from commit e2da5d7fe1)
(cherry picked from commit 3a80534d4d)