Commit message Age Author Refs
r8776:36a36ebd
i18n: prevent msgmerge fuzzy matching - it is too random
Mads Kiilerich
0
r8775:a900f8dc
i18n: updated translation for French Currently translated at 100.0% (1080 of 1080 strings)
Étienne Gilli
0
r8774:6934c581
i18n: updated translation for Chinese (Simplified) Currently translated at 38.9% (421 of 1080 strings)
qy117121
0
r8773:7a6736f3
i18n: reorder messages after 2e1059de6751
Mads Kiilerich
0
r8772:2e1059de
repo groups: make it possible to remove own explicit permissions, now when group owners always have admin permissions Until recently, group owners very given explicit admin permissions on repo group, and special care was taken to make sure they didn't remove themselves. Now we always give admin permissions to owners, and don't care about the explicit permissions. We no longer add them when creating groups or changing owner. There is no migration step to remove redundant permissions, but we should allow group admins to remove them. This change will thus remove the mechanism for preventing removal of own/owner permissions.
Mads Kiilerich
0
r8771:1aa109ae
repo group: stop giving explicit admin permission to owner on create The repo owner will always get admin permissions when computing permissions, so there is no need to assign these permissions explicitly. Note: Permissions that has been added in the past are redundant but will be kept.
Mads Kiilerich
0
r8770:e27ff6a9
auth: always consider the repo group owner an admin when computing it's permissions When computing repo group permissions in repository_group_permissions(), always give admin permissions to the group owner. That is similar to how repository_permissions() gives admin permissions to the repo owner. The extra computation shouldn't cause any extra database hits or make the computation more complex or expensive, so that should be fine for stable. Note: This will leave behind some (automaticly added) explicit permissions. I consider this a very minor glitch, not worth addressing.
Mads Kiilerich
0
r8769:511b20a6
tests: skip reading Git system and global configuration in test_vcs_operations The parent changeset reduced the dependency on global configuration and made it possible to run tests without any global git configuration. But it is still unfortunate to even look at the global configuration when running tests. Global configuration is already disabled for Mercurial by setting HGRCPATH. Now do something similar for Git. According to the git man page, GIT_CONFIG_GLOBAL and GIT_CONFIG_SYSTEM set to /dev/null will make Git skip reading the configuration files on all platforms. Note that the GIT_CONFIG variables were introduced in Git 2.32.0, so this will not work with all the Git versions supported by Kallithea.
Manuel Jacob
0
r8768:d6d3cb59
tests: stabilize Git committer in test_vcs_operations Git tries to find out name and email in this order: 1. The author can be set e.g. via the `--author` option of `git commit`. 2. If set, the environment variables GIT_AUTHOR_NAME, GIT_AUTHOR_EMAIL, GIT_COMMITTER_NAME and GIT_COMMITTER_EMAIL are taken. 3. If set, various (global) config files are considered. 4. Unless disabled by the user.useconfigonly config, the names and emails are inferred from various system sources such as various fields from /etc/passwd, /etc/mailname and the environment variable EMAIL. The author can be provided on the command line (1), but that is not possible for the committer. It is not an option to modify Git’s configuration files, so the result of (3) depends on the system the tests run on, which should be avoided. A follow-up patch will try to instruct Git to not read the system Git configuration files. (4) is also system-dependent. On some systems, (4) is disabled in the Git configuration. If enabled, Git will try to infer the committer name from the gecko field in /etc/passwd, but will fail if it is empty. The previous code passed the environment variable EMAIL to provide the corresponding email address. By passing the names and emails via (2), we can set the author and committer name and email uniformly and prevent Git from using the system-dependent ways (3) and (4). This will replace the use of of EMAIL. The environment variables were introduced in 2005, so there should be no backwards compatibility problems. The tests will specify --author explicitly in the cases where the actual name matters. We just need default values that can be used for committing when we don't care. We set it as static defaults to: Author: test_regular <test_regular@example.com> Commit: test_admin <test_admin@example.com> Based on changes and research by Manuel Jacob <me@manueljacob.de>.
Mads Kiilerich
0
r8767:0a9ddb8c
setup: avoid setuptools 67 - it can't handle celery's broken pytz dependency With setuptools 67 or later, launching Kallithea fails as: $ gearbox serve -c my.ini --reload 15:56:54,111 ERROR [gearbox] Expected closing RIGHT_PARENTHESIS pytz (>dev) ~^ The `packaging` vendored in setuptools cannot handle the broken syntax `Requires-Dist: pytz (>dev)` in venv/lib/python3.11/site-packages/celery-5.0.5.dist-info/METADATA . The old celery version currently used by Kallithea is wrong, and setuptools has moved on after a reasonable grace period. We thus have to work around and avoid latest setuptools. See https://github.com/pypa/setuptools/issues/3889 .
Mads Kiilerich
0
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