Mercurial > kallithea
view docs/usage/locking.rst @ 6553:e9ac5698281d
tg: minimize future diff by some mocking and replacing some pylons imports with tg
No actual tg dependency yet, just a temporary hack faking tg as an alias for
pylons.
Based on work by Alessandro Molina.
author | Mads Kiilerich <mads@kiilerich.com> |
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date | Sat, 24 Dec 2016 01:27:47 +0100 |
parents | 5ae8e644aa88 |
children |
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.. _locking: ================== Repository locking ================== Kallithea has a *repository locking* feature, disabled by default. When enabled, every initial clone and every pull gives users (with write permission) the exclusive right to do a push. When repository locking is enabled, repositories get a ``locked`` flag. The hg/git commands ``hg/git clone``, ``hg/git pull``, and ``hg/git push`` influence this state: - A ``clone`` or ``pull`` action locks the target repository if the user has write/admin permissions on this repository. - Kallithea will remember the user who locked the repository so only this specific user can unlock the repo by performing a ``push`` command. - Every other command on a locked repository from this user and every command from any other user will result in an HTTP return code 423 (Locked). Additionally, the HTTP error will mention the user that locked the repository (e.g., “repository <repo> locked by user <user>”). Each repository can be manually unlocked by an administrator from the repository settings menu.