* Use url.PathEscape to escape the branchname
* GetRepositoryByOwnerAndName should also have url.PathEscape as the owner and reponame are provided by the client
1. A key can either be an ssh user key or a deploy key. It cannot be both.
2. If a key is a user key - it can only be associated with one user.
3. If a key is a deploy key - it can be used in multiple repositories and the permissions it has on those repositories can be different.
4. If a repository is deleted, its deploy keys must be deleted too.
We currently don't enforce any of this and multiple repositories access with different permissions doesn't work at all. This PR enforces the following constraints:
- [x] You should not be able to add the same user key as another user
- [x] You should not be able to add a ssh user key which is being used as a deploy key
- [x] You should not be able to add a ssh deploy key which is being used as a user key
- [x] If you add an ssh deploy key to another repository you should be able to use it in different modes without losing the ability to use it in the other mode.
- [x] If you delete a repository you must delete all its deploy keys.
Fix #1357
* move all database operations from hook command to web command and instead of internal routes
* bug fixed
* adjust the import path sequences
* remove unused return value on hookSetup
* add internal routes for ssh hook comands
* fix lint
* add comment on why package named private not internal but the route name is internal
* add comment above package private why package named private not internal but the route name is internal
* remove exp time on internal access
* move routes from /internal to /api/internal
* add comment and defer on UpdatePublicKeyUpdated