The git repository must be closed after using it. Without this change
some tests started to fail due to the lingering repository running into
a timeout.
This moves the `annexObjectPath()` helper out of the tests and into a
dedicated sub-package as `annex.ContentLocation()`, and expands it with
`.Pointer()` (which validates using `git annex examinekey`),
`.IsAnnexed()` and `.Content()` to make it a more useful module.
The tests retain their own wrapper version of `ContentLocation()`
because I tried to follow close to the API modules/lfs uses, which in
terms of abstract `git.Blob` and `git.TreeEntry` objects, not in terms
of `repoPath string`s which are more convenient for the tests.
Usage of `path` was replaced by `path/filepath` in upstream forgejo, and
it made sense to use that as well where `path` was previously used. The
`setHeaderCacheForever` function and the `sendFile` method had their
signature changed.
This makes HTTP symmetric with SSH clone URLs.
This gives us the fancy feature of _anonymous_ downloads,
so people can access datasets without having to set up an
account or manage ssh keys.
Previously, to access "open access" data shared this way,
users would need to:
1. Create an account on gitea.example.com
2. Create ssh keys
3. Upload ssh keys (and make sure to find and upload the correct file)
4. `git clone git@gitea.example.com:user/dataset.git`
5. `cd dataset`
6. `git annex get`
This cuts that down to just the last three steps:
1. `git clone https://gitea.example.com/user/dataset.git`
2. `cd dataset`
3. `git annex get`
This is significantly simpler for downstream users, especially for those
unfamiliar with the command line.
Unfortunately there's no uploading. While git-annex supports uploading
over HTTP to S3 and some other special remotes, it seems to fail on a
_plain_ HTTP remote. See https://github.com/neuropoly/gitea/issues/7
and https://git-annex.branchable.com/forum/HTTP_uploads/#comment-ce28adc128fdefe4c4c49628174d9b92.
This is not a major loss since no one wants uploading to be anonymous anyway.
To support private repos, I had to hunt down and patch a secret extra security
corner that Gitea only applies to HTTP for some reason (services/auth/basic.go).
This was guided by https://git-annex.branchable.com/tips/setup_a_public_repository_on_a_web_site/
Fixes https://github.com/neuropoly/gitea/issues/3
Co-authored-by: Mathieu Guay-Paquet <mathieu.guaypaquet@polymtl.ca>
Multiple tests that worked fine on v1.20.4-1 started to fail after the
rebase onto v1.20.5-1. These tests are:
- TestGitAnnexPermissions/Private/Owner/HTTP/Init
- TestGitAnnexPermissions/Private/Owner/HTTP/Download
- TestGitAnnexPermissions/Private/Writer/HTTP/Init
- TestGitAnnexPermissions/Private/Writer/HTTP/Download
- TestGitAnnexPermissions/Private/Reader/HTTP/Init
- TestGitAnnexPermissions/Private/Reader/HTTP/Download
What these tests have in common is that they all operate on a private
repository via http with authentication.
They broke at some point between v1.20.4-1 and v1.20.5-1, so I did a
bisect between these two points running the offending tests. This
brought me to the conclusion that
ee48c0d5ea introduced the issue.
The thing is, this commit does not change any code, it only changes the
test environment. Among other things that didn't look as suspicious, it
changes the container image from a bespoke test_env image based on
debian bullseye to a node image based on debian bookworm. Obviously,
this means that there are many version differences between the two.
The first one I looked at was git. The previous bullseye image used a
manually installed git version 2.40.0, while the bookworm image has
2.39.2 installed. Updating git in the new image did not fix the issue,
however.
The next thing I looked at was the git-annex version. Bullseye had
8.20210223 installed and worked, while bookworm used 10.20230126 when
the tests broke. So I tried my luck upgrading to a more recent version
via neurodebian (10.20240227-1~ndall+1). This still worked fine on
bullseye and now also works fine on bookworm.
I have no idea why this specific version of git-annex broke the tests,
but at least there was a commit to pinpoint this to, which isn't always
the case with docker images silently changing beneath you...
Below are the versions as they are reported by git and git-annex:
bullseye (works):
git version 2.30.2
git-annex version: 8.20210223
build flags: Assistant Webapp Pairing Inotify DBus DesktopNotify TorrentParser MagicMime Feeds Testsuite S3 WebDAV
dependency versions: aws-0.22 bloomfilter-2.0.1.0 cryptonite-0.26 DAV-1.3.4 feed-1.3.0.1 ghc-8.8.4 http-client-0.6.4.1 persistent-sqlite-2.10.6.2 torrent-10000.1.1 uuid-1.3.13 yesod-1.6.1.0
key/value backends: SHA256E SHA256 SHA512E SHA512 SHA224E SHA224 SHA384E SHA384 SHA3_256E SHA3_256 SHA3_512E SHA3_512 SHA3_224E SHA3_224 SHA3_384E SHA3_384 SKEIN256E SKEIN256 SKEIN512E SKEIN512 BLAKE2B256E BLAKE2B256 BLAKE2B512E BLAKE2B512 BLAKE2B160E BLAKE2B160 BLAKE2B224E BLAKE2B224 BLAKE2B384E BLAKE2B384 BLAKE2BP512E BLAKE2BP512 BLAKE2S256E BLAKE2S256 BLAKE2S160E BLAKE2S160 BLAKE2S224E BLAKE2S224 BLAKE2SP256E BLAKE2SP256 BLAKE2SP224E BLAKE2SP224 SHA1E SHA1 MD5E MD5 WORM URL X*
remote types: git gcrypt p2p S3 bup directory rsync web bittorrent webdav adb tahoe glacier ddar git-lfs httpalso borg hook external
operating system: linux x86_64
supported repository versions: 8
upgrade supported from repository versions: 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7
bullseye + git-annex from neurodebian (works):
git version 2.30.2
git-annex version: 10.20240227-1~ndall+1
build flags: Assistant Webapp Pairing Inotify DBus DesktopNotify TorrentParser MagicMime Benchmark Feeds Testsuite S3 WebDAV
dependency versions: aws-0.22.1 bloomfilter-2.0.1.0 cryptonite-0.29 DAV-1.3.4 feed-1.3.2.1 ghc-9.0.2 http-client-0.7.13.1 persistent-sqlite-2.13.1.0 torrent-10000.1.1 uuid-1.3.15 yesod-1.6.2.1
key/value backends: SHA256E SHA256 SHA512E SHA512 SHA224E SHA224 SHA384E SHA384 SHA3_256E SHA3_256 SHA3_512E SHA3_512 SHA3_224E SHA3_224 SHA3_384E SHA3_384 SKEIN256E SKEIN256 SKEIN512E SKEIN512 BLAKE2B256E BLAKE2B256 BLAKE2B512E BLAKE2B512 BLAKE2B160E BLAKE2B160 BLAKE2B224E BLAKE2B224 BLAKE2B384E BLAKE2B384 BLAKE2BP512E BLAKE2BP512 BLAKE2S256E BLAKE2S256 BLAKE2S160E BLAKE2S160 BLAKE2S224E BLAKE2S224 BLAKE2SP256E BLAKE2SP256 BLAKE2SP224E BLAKE2SP224 SHA1E SHA1 MD5E MD5 WORM URL X*
remote types: git gcrypt p2p S3 bup directory rsync web bittorrent webdav adb tahoe glacier ddar git-lfs httpalso borg hook external
operating system: linux x86_64
supported repository versions: 8 9 10
upgrade supported from repository versions: 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10
bookworm (fails):
git version 2.39.2
git-annex version: 10.20230126
build flags: Assistant Webapp Pairing Inotify DBus DesktopNotify TorrentParser MagicMime Benchmark Feeds Testsuite S3 WebDAV
dependency versions: aws-0.22.1 bloomfilter-2.0.1.0 cryptonite-0.29 DAV-1.3.4 feed-1.3.2.1 ghc-9.0.2 http-client-0.7.13.1 persistent-sqlite-2.13.1.0 torrent-10000.1.1 uuid-1.3.15 yesod-1.6.2.1
key/value backends: SHA256E SHA256 SHA512E SHA512 SHA224E SHA224 SHA384E SHA384 SHA3_256E SHA3_256 SHA3_512E SHA3_512 SHA3_224E SHA3_224 SHA3_384E SHA3_384 SKEIN256E SKEIN256 SKEIN512E SKEIN512 BLAKE2B256E BLAKE2B256 BLAKE2B512E BLAKE2B512 BLAKE2B160E BLAKE2B160 BLAKE2B224E BLAKE2B224 BLAKE2B384E BLAKE2B384 BLAKE2BP512E BLAKE2BP512 BLAKE2S256E BLAKE2S256 BLAKE2S160E BLAKE2S160 BLAKE2S224E BLAKE2S224 BLAKE2SP256E BLAKE2SP256 BLAKE2SP224E BLAKE2SP224 SHA1E SHA1 MD5E MD5 WORM URL X*
remote types: git gcrypt p2p S3 bup directory rsync web bittorrent webdav adb tahoe glacier ddar git-lfs httpalso borg hook external
operating system: linux x86_64
supported repository versions: 8 9 10
upgrade supported from repository versions: 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10
bookworm + git-annex from neurodebian (works):
git version 2.39.2
git-annex version: 10.20240227-1~ndall+1
build flags: Assistant Webapp Pairing Inotify DBus DesktopNotify TorrentParser MagicMime Benchmark Feeds Testsuite S3 WebDAV
dependency versions: aws-0.22.1 bloomfilter-2.0.1.0 cryptonite-0.29 DAV-1.3.4 feed-1.3.2.1 ghc-9.0.2 http-client-0.7.13.1 persistent-sqlite-2.13.1.0 torrent-10000.1.1 uuid-1.3.15 yesod-1.6.2.1
key/value backends: SHA256E SHA256 SHA512E SHA512 SHA224E SHA224 SHA384E SHA384 SHA3_256E SHA3_256 SHA3_512E SHA3_512 SHA3_224E SHA3_224 SHA3_384E SHA3_384 SKEIN256E SKEIN256 SKEIN512E SKEIN512 BLAKE2B256E BLAKE2B256 BLAKE2B512E BLAKE2B512 BLAKE2B160E BLAKE2B160 BLAKE2B224E BLAKE2B224 BLAKE2B384E BLAKE2B384 BLAKE2BP512E BLAKE2BP512 BLAKE2S256E BLAKE2S256 BLAKE2S160E BLAKE2S160 BLAKE2S224E BLAKE2S224 BLAKE2SP256E BLAKE2SP256 BLAKE2SP224E BLAKE2SP224 SHA1E SHA1 MD5E MD5 WORM URL X*
remote types: git gcrypt p2p S3 bup directory rsync web bittorrent webdav adb tahoe glacier ddar git-lfs httpalso borg hook external
operating system: linux x86_64
supported repository versions: 8 9 10
upgrade supported from repository versions: 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10
Fixes https://github.com/neuropoly/gitea/issues/11
Tests:
* `git annex init`
* `git annex copy --from origin`
* `git annex copy --to origin`
over:
* ssh
for:
* the owner
* a collaborator
* a read-only collaborator
* a stranger
in a
* public repo
* private repo
And then confirms:
* Deletion of the remote repo (to ensure lockdown isn't messing with us: https://git-annex.branchable.com/internals/lockdown/#comment-0cc5225dc5abe8eddeb843bfd2fdc382)
------
To support all this:
* Add util.FileCmp()
* Patch withKeyFile() so it can be nested in other copies of itself
-------
Many thanks to Mathieu for giving style tips and catching several bugs,
including a subtle one in util.filecmp() which neutered it.
Co-authored-by: Mathieu Guay-Paquet <mathieu.guay-paquet@polymtl.ca>
[git-annex](https://git-annex.branchable.com/) is a more complicated cousin to
git-lfs, storing large files in an optional-download side content. Unlike lfs,
it allows mixing and matching storage remotes, so the content remote(s) doesn't
need to be on the same server as the git remote, making it feasible to scatter
a collection across cloud storage, old harddrives, or anywhere else storage can
be scavenged. Since this can get complicated, fast, it has a content-tracking
database (`git annex whereis`) to help find everything later.
The use-case we imagine for including it in Gitea is just the simple case, where
we're primarily emulating git-lfs: each repo has its large content at the same URL.
Our motivation is so we can self-host https://www.datalad.org/ datasets, which
currently are only hostable by fragilely scrounging together cloud storage --
and having to manage all the credentials associated with all the pieces -- or at
https://openneuro.org which is fragile in its own ways.
Supporting git-annex also allows multiple Gitea instance to be annex remotes for
each other, mirroring the content or otherwise collaborating the split up the
hosting costs.
Enabling
--------
TODO
HTTP
----
TODO
Permission Checking
-------------------
This tweaks the API in routers/private/serv.go to expose the calling user's
computed permission, instead of just returning HTTP 403.
This doesn't fit in super well. It's the opposite from how the git-lfs support is
done, where there's a complete list of possible subcommands and their matching
permission levels, and then the API compares the requested with the actual level
and returns HTTP 403 if the check fails.
But it's necessary. The main git-annex verbs, 'git-annex-shell configlist' and
'git-annex-shell p2pstdio' are both either read-only or read-write operations,
depending on the state on disk on either end of the connection and what the user
asked it to ask for, with no way to know before git-annex examines the situation.
So tell the level via GIT_ANNEX_READONLY and trust it to handle itself.
In the older Gogs version, the permission was directly read in cmd/serv.go:
```
mode, err = db.UserAccessMode(user.ID, repo)
```
- 966e925cf3/internal/cmd/serv.go (L334)
but in Gitea permission enforcement has been centralized in the API layer.
(perhaps so the cmd layer can avoid making direct DB connections?)
Deletion
--------
git-annex has this "lockdown" feature where it tries
really quite very hard to prevent you deleting its
data, to the point that even an rm -rf won't do it:
each file in annex/objects/ is nested inside a
folder with read-only permissions.
The recommended workaround is to run chmod -R +w when
you're sure you actually want to delete a repo. See
https://git-annex.branchable.com/internals/lockdown
So we edit util.RemoveAll() to do just that, so now
it's `chmod -R +w && rm -rf` instead of just `rm -rf`.
Backport #31417 by @silverwind
Make `air` log less. Uses the option added in
https://github.com/air-verse/air/pull/367.
Co-authored-by: silverwind <me@silverwind.io>
(cherry picked from commit 3813b2786295087b3a5ecb3562fc35d90c439bf0)
#4059 was unfortunately incomplete: some custom_url fields are currently shown, even if they are not used by the provider. Moreover the `Use Custom URLs Instead of Default URLs` is always checked by default.
Manual testing:
- go to http://localhost:3000/admin/auths
- click on `Add authentication source`
- Choose `Authentication type`: `OAuth2`
- Choose `OAuth2 provider`: `GitLab`
- verify that the `Use Custom URLs Instead of Default URLs` option is **initially unchecked**
- enable the `Use Custom URLs Instead of Default URLs` checkbox
- verify that only the fields "Authorize", "Token" and "Profile" URLs are shown (no "Email URL", nor "Tenant").
- Switch the `OAuth2 provider` to `Azure AD v2`
- verify that the `Use Custom URLs Instead of Default URLs` option is **initially checked**
- verify that only the field "Tenant" is shown (with the default "organizations").

Note: this is loosely based on the upstream fix https://github.com/go-gitea/gitea/pull/31246 which I initially overlooked.
Reviewed-on: https://codeberg.org/forgejo/forgejo/pulls/4194
Reviewed-by: Earl Warren <earl-warren@noreply.codeberg.org>
Co-authored-by: oliverpool <git@olivier.pfad.fr>
Co-committed-by: oliverpool <git@olivier.pfad.fr>
(cherry picked from commit 65f8c22cc7)
- Make the `UserSettings` definition an non-array, this is consistent
with the existing endpoints that uses this definition.
- Resolves#4179
(cherry picked from commit 5926ed1f73)
cmd/dump.go uses os.Readdir to list the directory.
This is fine on its own, but TestAddRecursiveExclude in cmd/dump_test.go
depends on the order of the directory listing, which is where the issue
lays.
Directory listings using os.Readdir (lstat) don't actually guarantee an
order. They can differ due to a number of factors. Most notably the OS,
file system and settings.
As such, the test should not check the /order of the files/ added to the
archive, but instead simply check whether the archive /contains/ them.
So this is precisely what this commit does.
Note that only TestAddRecursiveExclude/File_inside_directory/No_exclude
has been observed to fail due to this, but all TestAddRecursiveExclude
subtests have been updated for consistency.
(cherry picked from commit 230a677c74)
While trying to understand #1236, I was quite confused not to see the `Use Custom URLs` checkbox.
This checkbox disappeared in b95a893b22 (because `getElementById` does not expect a `#` as first char), fixed in 4e816e1326086ff0929c028f837f62ba1c747759.
After solving this, switching from `Nextcloud` to `OpenID Connect` triggered a JS error, which is addressed in 3efa4d836a300dc45b3ffece766b2b13539fc47c.
Manual testing:
- go to http://localhost:3000/admin/auths
- click on `Add authentication source`
- Choose `Authentication type`: `OAuth2`
- Choose `OAuth2 provider`: `Nextcloud`
- check that the `Use Custom URLs Instead of Default URLs` checkbox toggles the fields below
- let the checkbox be checked
- Switch the `OAuth2 provider` to `OpenID Connect`
- ensure that no JS error is shown
- Switch the `OAuth2 provider` to `Mastodon`
- check that the fields below `Use Custom URLs Instead of Default URLs` have the right defaults (mastodon.social)

Reviewed-on: https://codeberg.org/forgejo/forgejo/pulls/4059
Reviewed-by: twenty-panda <twenty-panda@noreply.codeberg.org>
Reviewed-by: Earl Warren <earl-warren@noreply.codeberg.org>
Co-authored-by: oliverpool <git@olivier.pfad.fr>
Co-committed-by: oliverpool <git@olivier.pfad.fr>
(cherry picked from commit 82ae7460bf)
Fix adopt repository has empty object name in database (#31333)
Fix#31330Fix#31311
A workaround to fix the old database is to update object_format_name to
`sha1` if it's empty or null.
(cherry picked from commit 1968c2222dcf47ebd1697afb4e79a81e74702d31)
With tests services/repository/adopt_test.go
(cherry picked from commit 8efef06fb1)
Backport #31319 by @lunny
Fix a hash render problem like `<hash>: xxxxx` which is usually used in
release notes.
Co-authored-by: Lunny Xiao <xiaolunwen@gmail.com>
(cherry picked from commit 6ca70c5bf20fc6b3a7d98d784f48b5a503962339)
Currently this string has different amount of placeholders in v8 and v7 because https://codeberg.org/forgejo/forgejo/pulls/3837 was not backported to v7.
### The problem
This string is currently [not translated](https://translate.codeberg.org/translate/forgejo/forgejo/en/?checksum=405b09ee2c2371d4) in every language. For example, when UI is in Slovenian, it would be in English.
But if someone translates it into Slovenian, it will be something like `Posodobljen %s`. Then we merge the Weblate PR, @forgejo-backport-action creates a backport and we forget to check this backport for presence of `repo_updated`. We ship this as a point release of our LTS v7, and then Slovenian users will literally see `Posodobljen %s` in the UI instead of `Posodobljen včeraj`.
By renaming this key in v7 we protect it from these kinds of regressions.
### Test
Go to Explore, look at repo entries, they should contain relative time.
Reviewed-on: https://codeberg.org/forgejo/forgejo/pulls/4117
Reviewed-by: Earl Warren <earl-warren@noreply.codeberg.org>
Reviewed-by: twenty-panda <twenty-panda@noreply.codeberg.org>