debian-mirror-gitlab/doc/user/project/repository/index.md
2021-06-08 01:23:25 +05:30

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Create Source Code To determine the technical writer assigned to the Stage/Group associated with this page, see https://about.gitlab.com/handbook/engineering/ux/technical-writing/#assignments concepts, howto

Repository (FREE)

A repository is what you use to store your codebase in GitLab and change it with version control. A repository is part of a project, which has a lot of other features.

Create a repository

To create a new repository, all you need to do is create a new project or fork an existing project.

Once you create a new project, you can add new files via UI (read the section below) or via command line. To add files from the command line, follow the instructions presented on the screen when you create a new project, or read through them in the command line basics documentation.

Important: For security reasons, when using the command line, we strongly recommend that you connect with GitLab via SSH.

Files

Use a repository to store your files in GitLab. In GitLab 12.10 and later, an icon identifying the extension is shown next to the filename:

Repository file icons

Create and edit files

Host your codebase in GitLab repositories by pushing your files to GitLab. You can either use the user interface (UI), or connect your local computer with GitLab through the command line.

To configure GitLab CI/CD to build, test, and deploy your code, add a file called .gitlab-ci.yml to your repository's root.

From the user interface:

The GitLab UI allows you to perform lots of Git commands without having to touch the command line. Even if you use the command line regularly, sometimes it's easier to do so via GitLab UI:

From the command line:

To get started with the command line, please read through the command line basics documentation.

Find files

Use the GitLab file finder to search for files in a repository.

Supported markup languages and extensions

GitLab supports a number of markup languages (sometimes called lightweight markup languages) that you can use for the content of your files in a repository. They are mostly used for documentation purposes.

Just pick the right extension for your files and GitLab renders them according to the markup language.

Markup language Extensions
Plain text txt
Markdown mdown, mkd, mkdn, md, markdown
reStructuredText rst
AsciiDoc adoc, ad, asciidoc
Textile textile
Rdoc rdoc
Org mode org
creole creole
MediaWiki wiki, mediawiki

Repository README and index files

When a README or index file is present in a repository, its contents are automatically pre-rendered by GitLab without opening it.

They can either be plain text or have an extension of a supported markup language:

Some things to note about precedence:

  1. When both a README and an index file are present, the README always takes precedence.
  2. When more than one file is present with different extensions, they are ordered alphabetically, with the exception of a file without an extension, which is always last in precedence. For example, README.adoc takes precedence over README.md, and README.rst takes precedence over README.

Jupyter Notebook files

Jupyter Notebook (previously IPython Notebook) files are used for interactive computing in many fields and contain a complete record of the user's sessions and include code, narrative text, equations, and rich output.

Read how to use Jupyter notebooks with GitLab.

OpenAPI viewer

Introduced in GitLab 12.6.

GitLab can render OpenAPI specification files with its file viewer, provided their filenames include openapi or swagger and their extension is yaml, yml, or json. The following examples are all correct:

  • openapi.yml
  • openapi.yaml
  • openapi.json
  • swagger.yml
  • swagger.yaml
  • swagger.json
  • gitlab_swagger.yml
  • openapi_gitlab.yml
  • OpenAPI.YML
  • openapi.Yaml
  • openapi.JSON
  • openapi.gitlab.yml
  • gitlab.openapi.yml

Then, to render them:

  1. Navigate to the OpenAPI file in your repository in the GitLab UI.
  2. Click the "Display OpenAPI" button which is located between the "Display source" and "Edit" buttons (when an OpenAPI file is found, it replaces the "Display rendered file" button).

Branches

For details, see Branches.

Commits

When you commit your changes, you are introducing those changes to your branch. Via command line, you can commit multiple times before pushing.

  • Commit message: A commit message is important to identity what is being changed and, more importantly, why. In GitLab, you can add keywords to the commit message that performs one of the actions below:
    • Trigger a GitLab CI/CD pipeline: If you have your project configured with GitLab CI/CD, you trigger a pipeline per push, not per commit.
    • Skip pipelines: You can add to your commit message the keyword [ci skip], and GitLab CI/CD skips that pipeline.
    • Cross-link issues and merge requests: Cross-linking is great to keep track of what's is somehow related in your workflow. If you mention an issue or a merge request in a commit message, they are shown on their respective thread.
  • Cherry-pick a commit: In GitLab, you can cherry-pick a commit right from the UI.
  • Revert a commit: Easily revert a commit from the UI to a selected branch.
  • Sign a commit: Use GPG to sign your commits.

Project and repository size

A project's size is reported on the project's Details page. The reported size is updated every 15 minutes at most, so may not reflect recent activity. The displayed files size includes repository files, artifacts, and LFS.

The project size may differ slightly from one instance to another due to compression, housekeeping, and other factors.

Repository size limit may be set by administrators. GitLab.com's repository size limit is set by GitLab.

Contributors

All the contributors to your codebase are displayed under your project's Settings > Contributors.

They are ordered from the collaborator with the greatest number of commits to the fewest, and displayed on a nice graph:

contributors to code

Repository graph

The repository graph displays the history of the repository network visually, including branches and merges. This can help you visualize the Git flow strategy used in the repository:

repository Git flow

Find it under your project's Repository > Graph.

Repository languages

For the default branch of each repository, GitLab determines what programming languages were used and displays this on the project's pages. If this information is missing, it's added after updating the default branch for the project. This process can take up to five minutes.

Repository Languages bar

Not all files are detected, among others; documentation, vendored code, and most markup languages are excluded. This behavior can be adjusted by overriding the default. For example, to enable .proto files to be detected, add the following to .gitattributes in the root of your repository.

*.proto linguist-detectable=true

Sometimes this feature can use excessive CPU. Read about troubleshooting this and also more about customizing this feature using .gitattributes.

Locked files (PREMIUM)

Use File Locking to lock your files to prevent any conflicting changes.

Repository's API

You can access your repositories via repository API.

Clone a repository

Learn how to clone a repository through the command line.

Alternatively, clone directly into a code editor as documented below.

Clone and open in Apple Xcode

Introduced in GitLab 11.0.

Projects that contain a .xcodeproj or .xcworkspace directory can now be cloned into Xcode on macOS. To do that:

  1. From the GitLab UI, go to the project's overview page.
  2. Click Clone.
  3. Select Xcode.

The project is cloned onto your computer in a folder of your choice and you are prompted to open XCode.

Clone and open in Visual Studio Code

Introduced in GitLab 13.10.

All projects can be cloned into Visual Studio Code. To do that:

  1. From the GitLab UI, go to the project's overview page.
  2. Click Clone.
  3. Select VS Code.
  4. Select a folder to clone the project into.

When VS Code has successfully cloned your project, it opens the folder.

Download source code

The source code stored in a repository can be downloaded from the UI. By clicking the download icon, a dropdown opens with links to download the following:

Download source code

  • Source code: allows users to download the source code on branch they're currently viewing. Available extensions: zip, tar, tar.gz, and tar.bz2.
  • Directory: only shows up when viewing a sub-directory. This allows users to download the specific directory they're currently viewing. Also available in zip, tar, tar.gz, and tar.bz2.
  • Artifacts: allows users to download the artifacts of the latest CI build.

Redirects when changing repository paths

When a repository path changes, it is essential to smoothly transition from the old location to the new one. GitLab provides two kinds of redirects: the web UI and Git push/pull redirects.

Depending on the situation, different things apply.

When renaming a user, changing a group path or renaming a repository:

  • Existing web URLs for the namespace and anything under it (such as projects) will redirect to the new URLs.
  • Starting with GitLab 10.3, existing Git remote URLs for projects under the namespace redirect to the new remote URL. Every time you push/pull to a repository that has changed its location, a warning message to update your remote is displayed instead of rejecting your action. This means that any automation scripts, or Git clients continue to work after a rename, making any transition a lot smoother.
  • The redirects are available as long as the original path is not claimed by another group, user or project.

Troubleshooting

Repository Languages: excessive CPU use

GitLab uses a Ruby gem to scan all the files in the repository to determine what languages are used. Sometimes this can use excessive CPU if a file type needs to be parsed by the gem to determine what sort of file it is. The gem contains a heuristics configuration file that defines what file extensions need to be parsed.

Excessive CPU use has been reported for files with the extension .txt and XML files with a file extension that is not defined by the gem.

The workaround is to specify what language to assign to specific file extensions. The same approach should also allow misidentified file types to be fixed.

  1. Identify which language to specify. The gem contains a configuration file for known data types. The entry for Text files, for example:

    Text:
      type: prose
      wrap: true
      aliases:
      - fundamental
      - plain text
      extensions:
      - ".txt"
    
  2. Add or modify .gitattributes in the root of your repository:

    *.txt linguist-language=Text
    

*.txt files have an entry in the heuristics file. The example above prevents parsing of these files.