The release number displayed by the API and the CLI becomes:
7.0.0+1.22.0
instead of
1.22.0
It would otherwise be inconsistent to have different version number depending on the interface. With the current implementation `/api/forgejo/v1/version` would return `7.0.0+1.22.0` while `/api/v1/version` would return `1.22.0`. The release would be announced as `7.0.0+1.22.0` but the web API would display `1.22.0`.
It may cause some tools that are Gitea specific to not behave as they should in the future if they expect a Gitea version number and activate some features depending on what it is. They would need to be patched to strip the leading Forgejo version number before asserting the Gitea version.
Refs: https://codeberg.org/forgejo/forgejo/issues/2425
The test suite was broken e.g. on Debian 12 due to requiring a very
recent version of Git installed on the system. This commit skips SHA256
tests in the git module, if a Git version older than 2.42 or gogit is used.
Also ignore the *-test tags when figuring out the Forgejo version,
they exist in the integration repository and experimental repository
for daily releases.
- The ambiguous character detection is an important security feature to
combat against sourcebase attacks (https://trojansource.codes/).
- However there are a few problems with the feature as it stands
today (i) it's apparantly an big performance hitter, it's twice as slow
as syntax highlighting (ii) it contains false positives, because it's
reporting valid problems but not valid within the context of a
programming language (ambiguous charachters in code comments being a
prime example) that can lead to security issues (iii) charachters from
certain languages always being marked as ambiguous. It's a lot of effort
to fix the aforementioned issues.
- Therefore, make it configurable in which context the ambiguous
character detection should be run, this avoids running detection in all
contexts such as file views, but still enable it in commits and pull
requests diffs where it matters the most. Ideally this also becomes an
per-repository setting, but the code architecture doesn't allow for a
clean implementation of that.
- Adds unit test.
- Adds integration tests to ensure that the contexts and instance-wide
is respected (and that ambigious charachter detection actually work in
different places).
- Ref: https://codeberg.org/forgejo/forgejo/pulls/2395#issuecomment-1575547
- Ref: https://codeberg.org/forgejo/forgejo/issues/564
Adds a very bare-bones test for artifact deletion. It does not exercise
the functionality itself, just the presence of the functionality.
Signed-off-by: Gergely Nagy <forgejo@gergo.csillger.hu>
https://github.com/go-gitea/gitea/pull/27172#discussion_r1493735466
When cleanup artifacts, it removes storage first. If storage is not
exist (maybe delete manually), it gets error and continue loop. It makes
a dead loop if there are a lot pending but non-existing artifacts.
Now it updates db record at first to avoid keep a lot of pending status
artifacts.
- Instead of relying on JSON to convert the struct to map, use
`reflect` to do this conversion. Also simplify it a bit by only passing
one variable to the template.
- This avoids issues where the conversion to JSON causes changes in
the value, for example huge numbers are converted to its scientific
notation but are consequently not converted back when being displayed.
- Adds unit tests.
- Resolves an issue where the amount of comments is being displayed in
scientific notation on Codeberg.
It's possible for reviews to not be assiocated with users, when they
were migrated from another forge instance. In the migration code,
there's no sanitization check for author names, so they could contain
HTML tags and thus needs to be properely escaped.
On the wiki and revisions page, information is shown about the last
commit that modified that wiki page. This includes the time it was last
edited and by whom. Verify it is sanitized.
This adds the ability to run `make test-e2e-debugserver` to start a
forgejo server pupulated with the test data from `models/fixtures`. This
is particularly useful for debugging the e2e tests with a external tool,
such as the Playwright extension for VSCode [1].
[1] https://open-vsx.org/extension/ms-playwright/playwright
- In order to determine if the "Add more..." tab should be shown, the
template has to know if the repository has all units enabled, this is
done in the repository header which can be shown for quite a lot of
pages (code, issues, projects, actions etc.)
- This was previously set in the `RepoRefByType` function, which would
be called by pages such as code, issues and releases, but it was not
being called for all pages such as actions, packages and wiki. Which
would in turn incorrectly show the "Add more..." button when it
shouldn't.
- Now call it from the template itself, so the value is 'always' loaded
when necessary.
- Port 1fd7e3d6be to the Forgejo themes,
they are a copy paste, but have a bit darker console background color to
have better contrast and match better with the overal Forgejo dark
theme's shade.
- The hook regeneration code relies on `git.SupportProcReceive` being
set to determine if the `proc-receive` hook should be written, this
variable is set when the git module is initialized.
- Resolves#2414
Since #26254, it started using `{{ctx.Locale.Tr ...}}`
Now the `ctx` seems stable enough, so the check could be removed.
(cherry picked from commit 567a68a0bf78c8d70f08c8ab948fdbb455225aa9)