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- **Installation**: includes how to install Gitea and related other tools, also includes upgrade Gitea - **Administration**: includes how to configure Gitea, customize Gitea and manage Gitea instance out of Gitea admin UI - **Usage**: includes how to use Gitea's functionalities. A sub documentation is about packages, in future we could also include CI/CD and others. - **Development**: includes how to integrate with Gitea's API, how to develop new features within Gitea - **Contributing**: includes how to contribute code to Gitea repositories. After this is merged, I think we can have a sub-documentation of `Usage` part named `Actions` to describe how to use Gitea actions --------- Co-authored-by: John Olheiser <john.olheiser@gmail.com>
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date | title | slug | weight | toc | draft | menu | ||||||||||
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2019-12-31T13:55:00+05:00 | Advanced: Search Engines Indexation | search-engines-indexation | 30 | false | false |
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Search engines indexation of your Gitea installation
By default your Gitea installation will be indexed by search engines. If you don't want your repository to be visible for search engines read further.
Block search engines indexation using robots.txt
To make Gitea serve a custom robots.txt
(default: empty 404) for top level installations,
create a file called robots.txt
in the [custom
folder or CustomPath
]({{< relref "doc/administration/customizing-gitea.en-us.md" >}})
Examples on how to configure the robots.txt
can be found at https://moz.com/learn/seo/robotstxt.
User-agent: *
Disallow: /
If you installed Gitea in a subdirectory, you will need to create or edit the robots.txt
in the top level directory.
User-agent: *
Disallow: /gitea/