354 lines
14 KiB
Markdown
354 lines
14 KiB
Markdown
---
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stage: Create
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group: Source Code
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info: To determine the technical writer assigned to the Stage/Group associated with this page, see https://about.gitlab.com/handbook/product/ux/technical-writing/#assignments
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---
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# Repository **(FREE)**
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A [repository](https://git-scm.com/book/en/v2/Git-Basics-Getting-a-Git-Repository)
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is where you store your code and make changes to it. Your changes are tracked with version control.
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Each [project](../index.md) contains a repository.
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## Create a repository
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To create a repository, you can:
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- [Create a project](../../../user/project/index.md#create-a-project) or
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- [Fork an existing project](forking_workflow.md).
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## Add files to a repository
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You can add files to a repository:
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- When you create a project.
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- After you create a project:
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- By using [the web editor](web_editor.md).
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- From the command line.
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## Commit changes to a repository
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You can [commit your changes](https://git-scm.com/book/en/v2/Git-Basics-Recording-Changes-to-the-Repository),
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to a branch in the repository. When you use the command line, you can commit multiple times before you push.
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- **Commit message:**
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A commit message identifies what is being changed and why.
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In GitLab, you can add keywords to the commit
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message to perform one of the following actions:
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- **Trigger a GitLab CI/CD pipeline:**
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If the project is configured with [GitLab CI/CD](../../../ci/index.md),
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you trigger a pipeline per push, not per commit.
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- **Skip pipelines:**
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Add the [`ci skip`](../../../ci/pipelines/index.md#skip-a-pipeline) keyword to
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your commit message to make GitLab CI/CD skip the pipeline.
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- **Cross-link issues and merge requests:**
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Use [cross-linking](../issues/crosslinking_issues.md#from-commit-messages)
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to keep track of related parts of your workflow.
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If you mention an issue or a merge request in a commit message, they are displayed
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on their respective thread.
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- **Cherry-pick a commit:**
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In GitLab, you can
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[cherry-pick a commit](../merge_requests/cherry_pick_changes.md#cherry-pick-a-single-commit)
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from the UI.
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- **Revert a commit:**
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[Revert a commit](../merge_requests/revert_changes.md#revert-a-commit)
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from the UI to a selected branch.
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- **Sign a commit:**
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Use GPG to [sign your commits](gpg_signed_commits/index.md).
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## Clone a repository
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You can [clone a repository by using the command line](../../../gitlab-basics/start-using-git.md#clone-a-repository).
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Alternatively, you can clone directly into a code editor.
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### Clone and open in Apple Xcode
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Projects that contain a `.xcodeproj` or `.xcworkspace` directory can be cloned
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into Xcode on macOS.
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1. From the GitLab UI, go to the project's overview page.
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1. Select **Clone**.
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1. Select **Xcode**.
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The project is cloned onto your computer and you are
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prompted to open XCode.
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### Clone and open in Visual Studio Code
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> [Introduced](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab/-/issues/220957) in GitLab 13.10.
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All projects can be cloned into Visual Studio Code from the GitLab user interface, but you
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can also install the [GitLab Workflow VS Code extension](vscode.md) to clone from
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Visual Studio Code:
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- From the GitLab interface:
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1. Go to the project's overview page.
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1. Select **Clone**.
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1. Under **Open in your IDE**, select **Visual Studio Code (SSH)** or **Visual Studio Code (HTTPS)**.
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1. Select a folder to clone the project into.
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After Visual Studio Code clones your project, it opens the folder.
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- From Visual Studio Code, with the [extension](vscode.md) installed, use the
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extension's [`Git: Clone` command](https://marketplace.visualstudio.com/items?itemName=GitLab.gitlab-workflow#clone-gitlab-projects).
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### Clone and open in IntelliJ IDEA
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All projects can be cloned into [IntelliJ IDEA](https://www.jetbrains.com/idea/)
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from the GitLab user interface.
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Prerequisites:
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- The [Jetbrains Toolbox App](https://www.jetbrains.com/toolbox-app/) must be also be installed.
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To do this:
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1. Go to the project's overview page.
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1. Select **Clone**.
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1. Under **Open in your IDE**, select **IntelliJ IDEA (SSH)** or **IntelliJ IDEA (HTTPS)**.
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## Download the code in a repository
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> Support for [including Git LFS blobs](../../../topics/git/lfs#lfs-objects-in-project-archives) was [introduced](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab/-/issues/15079) in GitLab 13.5.
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You can download the source code that's stored in a repository.
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1. Above the file list, select the download icon (**{download}**).
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1. From the options, select the files you want to download.
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- **Source code:**
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Download the source code from the current branch you're viewing.
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Available extensions: `zip`, `tar`, `tar.gz`, and `tar.bz2`.
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- **Directory:**
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Download a specific directory. Visible only when you view a subdirectory.
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Available extensions: `zip`, `tar`, `tar.gz`, and `tar.bz2`.
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- **Artifacts:**
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Download the artifacts from the latest CI job.
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The checksums of generated archives can change even if the repository itself doesn't
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change. This can occur, for example, if Git or a third-party library that GitLab uses changes.
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## Repository languages
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For the default branch of each repository, GitLab determines which programming languages
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are used. This information is displayed on the **Project information** page.
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![Repository Languages bar](img/repository_languages_v15_2.png)
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When new files are added, this information can take up to five minutes to update.
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### Add repository languages
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Not all files are detected and listed on the **Project information** page. Documentation,
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vendor code, and most markup languages are excluded.
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You can change this behavior by overriding the default settings.
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1. In your repository's root directory, create a file named `.gitattributes`.
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1. Add a line that tells GitLab to include files of this type. For example,
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to enable `.proto` files, add the following code:
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```plaintext
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*.proto linguist-detectable=true
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```
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View a list of
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[supported data types](https://github.com/github/linguist/blob/master/lib/linguist/languages.yml).
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This feature can use excessive CPU.
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For more information, see the [troubleshooting section](#repository-languages-excessive-cpu-use).
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### Supported markup languages
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If your file has one of the following file extensions, GitLab renders the
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contents of the file's [markup language](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lightweight_markup_language) in the UI.
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| Markup language | Extensions |
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| --------------- | ---------- |
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| Plain text | `txt` |
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| [Markdown](../../markdown.md) | `mdown`, `mkd`, `mkdn`, `md`, `markdown` |
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| [reStructuredText](https://docutils.sourceforge.io/rst.html) | `rst` |
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| [AsciiDoc](../../asciidoc.md) | `adoc`, `ad`, `asciidoc` |
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| [Textile](https://textile-lang.com/) | `textile` |
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| [Rdoc](https://rdoc.sourceforge.net/doc/index.html) | `rdoc` |
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| [Org mode](https://orgmode.org/) | `org` |
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| [creole](http://www.wikicreole.org/) | `creole` |
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| [MediaWiki](https://www.mediawiki.org/wiki/MediaWiki) | `wiki`, `mediawiki` |
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### README and index files
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When a `README` or `index` file is present in a repository, GitLab renders its contents.
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These files can either be plain text or have the extension of a
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[supported markup language](#supported-markup-languages).
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- When both a `README` and an `index` file are present, the `README` always
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takes precedence.
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- When multiple files have the same name but a different extension, the files are
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ordered alphabetically. Any file without an extension is ordered last.
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For example, `README.adoc` takes precedence over `README.md`, and `README.rst`
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takes precedence over `README`.
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### OpenAPI viewer
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> [Introduced](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab/-/issues/19515) in GitLab 12.6.
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GitLab can render OpenAPI specification files. The filename
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must include `openapi` or `swagger` and the extension must be `yaml`,
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`yml`, or `json`. The following examples are all correct:
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- `openapi.yml`
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- `openapi.yaml`
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- `openapi.json`
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- `swagger.yml`
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- `swagger.yaml`
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- `swagger.json`
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- `gitlab_swagger.yml`
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- `openapi_gitlab.yml`
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- `OpenAPI.YML`
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- `openapi.Yaml`
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- `openapi.JSON`
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- `openapi.gitlab.yml`
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- `gitlab.openapi.yml`
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To render an OpenAPI file:
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1. Go to the OpenAPI file in your repository.
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1. Between the **Display source** and **Edit** buttons, select **Display OpenAPI**. When an OpenAPI file is found, it replaces the
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**Display rendered file** button.
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## Repository size
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> [Introduced](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab/-/issues/368150) in GitLab 15.3, feature flags `gitaly_revlist_for_repo_size` and `gitaly_catfile_repo_size` for alternative repository size calculations.
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FLAG:
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On self-managed GitLab, by default GitLab uses the `du -sk` command to determine the size of a repository. GitLab can use either
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`git-rev-list` (enabled with feature flag `gitaly_revlist_for_repo_size`) or `git-cat-file` (enabled with feature flag
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`gitaly_catfile_repo_size`) instead. To switch between different calculation methods, ask an administrator to
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[enable or disable](../../../administration/feature_flags.md) these feature flags.
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The **Project information** page shows the size of all files in the repository. The size is
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updated, at most, every 15 minutes. The file size includes repository files, artifacts, and LFS.
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The size can differ slightly from one instance to another due to compression, housekeeping, and other factors.
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Administrators can set a [repository size limit](../../admin_area/settings/account_and_limit_settings.md).
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[GitLab sets the size limits for GitLab.com](../../gitlab_com/index.md#account-and-limit-settings).
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## Repository contributor statistics
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All code contributors are displayed under your project's **Repository > Contributor statistics**.
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The graph shows the contributor with the most commits to the fewest.
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![contributors to code](img/contributors_graph.png)
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## Repository history graph
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A repository graph displays a visual history of the repository network, including branches and merges.
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This graph can help you visualize the Git flow strategy used in the repository.
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Go to your project's **Repository > Graph**.
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![repository Git flow](img/repo_graph.png)
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## What happens when a repository path changes
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When a repository path changes, GitLab handles the transition from the
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old location to the new one with a redirect.
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When you [rename a user](../../profile/index.md#change-your-username),
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[change a group path](../../group/manage.md#change-a-groups-path), or [rename a repository](../settings/index.md#rename-a-repository):
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- URLs for the namespace and everything under it, like projects, are
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redirected to the new URLs.
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- Git remote URLs for projects under the
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namespace redirect to the new remote URL. When you push or pull to a
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repository that has changed location, a warning message to update
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your remote is displayed. Automation scripts or Git clients continue to
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work after a rename.
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- The redirects are available as long as the original path is not claimed by
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another group, user, or project.
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WARNING:
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The [CI/CD `includes` keyword](../../../ci/yaml/includes.md) can't follow project
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redirects. Pipelines fail with a syntax error when configured to use `includes`
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to fetch configuration from a project that is renamed or moved.
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## Related topics
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- [GitLab Workflow VS Code extension](vscode.md)
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- [Lock files and prevent change conflicts](../file_lock.md)
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- [Repository API](../../../api/repositories.md)
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- [Find files](file_finder.md)
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- [Branches](branches/index.md)
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- [Create a directory](web_editor.md#create-a-directory)
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- [Find file history](git_history.md)
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- [Identify changes by line (Git blame)](git_blame.md)
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- [Use Jupyter notebooks with GitLab](jupyter_notebooks/index.md)
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## Troubleshooting
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### Repository Languages: excessive CPU use
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To determine which languages are in a repository's files, GitLab uses a Ruby gem.
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When the gem parses a file to determine which type it is, [the process can use excessive CPU](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitaly/-/issues/1565).
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The gem contains a [heuristics configuration file](https://github.com/github/linguist/blob/master/lib/linguist/heuristics.yml)
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that defines which file extensions must be parsed.
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Files with the `.txt` extension and XML files with an extension not defined by the gem can take excessive CPU.
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The workaround is to specify the language to assign to specific file extensions.
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The same approach should also allow misidentified file types to be fixed.
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1. Identify the language to specify. The gem contains a [configuration file for known data types](https://github.com/github/linguist/blob/master/lib/linguist/languages.yml).
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To add an entry for text files, for example:
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```yaml
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Text:
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type: prose
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wrap: true
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aliases:
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- fundamental
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- plain text
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extensions:
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- ".txt"
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```
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1. Add or modify `.gitattributes` in the root of your repository:
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```plaintext
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*.txt linguist-language=Text
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```
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`*.txt` files have an entry in the heuristics file. This example prevents parsing of these files.
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### Search sequence of pushes to a repository
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If it seems that a commit has gone "missing", search the sequence of pushes to a repository.
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[This StackOverflow article](https://stackoverflow.com/questions/13468027/the-mystery-of-the-missing-commit-across-merges)
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describes how you can end up in this state without a force push. Another cause can be a misconfigured [server hook](../../../administration/server_hooks.md) that changes a HEAD ref in a `git reset` operation.
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If you look at the output from the sample code below for the target branch, you
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see a discontinuity in the from/to commits as you step through the output.
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The `commit_from` of each new push should equal the `commit_to` of the previous push.
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A break in that sequence indicates one or more commits have been "lost" from the repository history.
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Using the [rails console](../../../administration/operations/rails_console.md#starting-a-rails-console-session), the following example checks the last 100 pushes and prints the `commit_from` and `commit_to` entries:
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```ruby
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p = Project.find_by_full_path('project/path')
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p.events.pushed_action.last(100).each do |e|
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puts "%-20.20s %8s...%8s (%s)", e.push_event_payload[:ref], e.push_event_payload[:commit_from], e.push_event_payload[:commit_to], e.author.try(:username)
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end ; nil
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```
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Example output showing break in sequence at line 4:
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```plaintext
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master f21b07713251e04575908149bdc8ac1f105aabc3...6bc56c1f46244792222f6c85b11606933af171de root
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master 6bc56c1f46244792222f6c85b11606933af171de...132da6064f5d3453d445fd7cb452b148705bdc1b root
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master 132da6064f5d3453d445fd7cb452b148705bdc1b...a62e1e693150a2e46ace0ce696cd4a52856dfa65 root
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master 58b07b719a4b0039fec810efa52f479ba1b84756...f05321a5b5728bd8a89b7bf530aa44043c951dce root
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master f05321a5b5728bd8a89b7bf530aa44043c951dce...7d02e575fd790e76a3284ee435368279a5eb3773 root
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```
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