Mercurial > kallithea
view docs/usage/locking.rst @ 3385:d21c762f5c4b beta
revision extraction function shouldn't be so eager, just extract commits that are
surrounded with spaces, or they are at beginning of the whole string
- wrote tests for that
- used parametrized for other tests
author | Marcin Kuzminski <marcin@python-works.com> |
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date | Tue, 19 Feb 2013 20:35:25 +0100 |
parents | 8b8edfc25856 |
children | e73a69cb98dc |
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.. _locking: =================================== RhodeCode repository locking system =================================== | Repos with **locking function=disabled** is the default, that's how repos work today. | Repos with **locking function=enabled** behaves like follows: Repos have a state called `locked` that can be true or false. The hg/git commands `hg/git clone`, `hg/git pull`, and `hg/git push` influence this state: - The command `hg/git pull <repo>` will lock that repo (locked=true) if the user has write/admin permissions on this repo - The command `hg/git clone <repo>` will lock that repo (locked=true) if the user has write/admin permissions on this repo RhodeCode will remember the user id who locked the repo only this specific user can unlock the repo (locked=false) by calling - `hg/git push <repo>` every other command on that repo from this user and every command from any other user will result in http return code 423 (locked) additionally the http error includes the <user> that locked the repo (e.g. “repository <repo> locked by user <user>”) So the scenario of use for repos with `locking function` enabled is that every initial clone and every pull gives users (with write permission) the exclusive right to do a push. Each repo can be manually unlocked by admin from the repo settings menu.