c1f85ce27b
`BranchName` provides the nearest branch of the requested `:commit`. It's plenty fast on smaller repositories. On larger repositories like nixpkgs, however, this can easily take 2-3 seconds on a modern machine on a NVMe. For context, at the time of writing, nixpkgs has over 650k commits and roughly 250 branches. `BranchName` is used once in the whole view: The cherry-pick target branch default selection. And I believe that's a logic error, which is why this patch is so small. The nearest branch of a given commit will always be a branch the commit is already part of. The branch you most likely *don't* want to cherry-pick to. Sure, one can technically cherry-pick a commit onto the same branch, but that simply results in an empty commit. I don't believe this is intended and even less so worth the compute. Instead, the cherry-pick branch selection suggestion now always uses the default branch, which used to be the fallback. If a user wants to know which branches contain the given commit, `load-branches-and-tags` exists and should be used instead. Also, to add insult to injury, `BranchName` was calculated for both logged-in and not logged-in users, despite its only consumer, the cherry-pick operation, only being rendered when a given user has write/commit permissions. But this isn't particularly surprising, given this happens a lot in Forgejo's codebase. |
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.devcontainer | ||
.forgejo | ||
assets | ||
build | ||
cmd | ||
contrib | ||
custom/conf | ||
docker | ||
models | ||
modules | ||
options | ||
public | ||
release-notes | ||
releases/images | ||
routers | ||
services | ||
templates | ||
tests | ||
tools | ||
web_src | ||
.air.toml | ||
.deadcode-out | ||
.dockerignore | ||
.editorconfig | ||
.envrc | ||
.eslintrc.yaml | ||
.gitattributes | ||
.gitignore | ||
.gitmodules | ||
.gitpod.yml | ||
.golangci.yml | ||
.ignore | ||
.markdownlint.yaml | ||
.npmrc | ||
.release-notes-assistant.yaml | ||
.spectral.yaml | ||
.yamllint.yaml | ||
BSDmakefile | ||
build.go | ||
CODEOWNERS | ||
CONTRIBUTING.md | ||
DCO | ||
Dockerfile | ||
Dockerfile.rootless | ||
flake.lock | ||
flake.nix | ||
go.mod | ||
go.sum | ||
LICENSE | ||
main.go | ||
Makefile | ||
package-lock.json | ||
package.json | ||
playwright.config.js | ||
poetry.lock | ||
poetry.toml | ||
pyproject.toml | ||
README.md | ||
release-notes-assistant.sh | ||
RELEASE-NOTES.md | ||
renovate.json | ||
stylelint.config.js | ||
tailwind.config.js | ||
vitest.config.js | ||
webpack.config.js |
Welcome to Forgejo
Hi there! Tired of big platforms playing monopoly? Providing Git hosting for your project, friends, company or community? Forgejo (/for'd͡ʒe.jo/ inspired by forĝejo – the Esperanto word for forge) has you covered with its intuitive interface, light and easy hosting and a lot of builtin functionality.
Forgejo was created in 2022 because we think that the project should be owned by an independent community. If you second that, then Forgejo is for you! Our promise: Independent Free/Libre Software forever!
What does Forgejo offer?
If you like any of the following, Forgejo is literally meant for you:
- Lightweight: Forgejo can easily be hosted on nearly every machine. Running on a Raspberry? Small cloud instance? No problem!
- Project management: Besides Git hosting, Forgejo offers issues, pull requests, wikis, kanban boards and much more to coordinate with your team.
- Publishing: Have something to share? Use releases to host your software for download, or use the package registry to publish it for docker, npm and many other package managers.
- Customizable: Want to change your look? Change some settings? There are many config switches to make Forgejo work exactly like you want.
- Powerful: Organizations & team permissions, CI integration, Code Search, LDAP, OAuth and much more. If you have advanced needs, Forgejo has you covered.
- Privacy: From update checker to default settings: Forgejo is built to be privacy first for you and your crew.
- Federation: (WIP) We are actively working to connect software forges with each other through ActivityPub, and create a collaborative network of personal instances.
Learn more
Dive into the documentation, subscribe to releases and blog post on our website, find us on the Fediverse or hop into our Matrix room if you have any questions or want to get involved.
Get involved
If you are interested in making Forgejo better, either by reporting a bug or by changing the governance, please take a look at the contribution guide.