backport #23629 To make versioned documentation less surprising, 1.19 should have the same technology.
9.5 KiB
date | title | slug | weight | toc | draft | menu | ||||||||||
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2019-11-21T17:00:00-03:00 | Usage: Automatically Linked References | automatically-linked-references | 15 | false | false |
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Automatically Linked References in Issues, Pull Requests and Commit Messages
Table of Contents
{{< toc >}}
When an issue, pull request or comment is posted, the text description is parsed in search for references. These references will be shown as links in the Issue View and, in some cases, produce certain actions.
Likewise, commit messages are parsed when they are listed, and actions can be triggered when they are pushed to the main branch.
To prevent the creation of unintended references, there are certain rules for them to be recognized. For example, they should not be included inside code text. They should also be reasonably cleared from their surrounding text (for example, using spaces).
User, Team and Organization Mentions
When a text in the form @username
is found and username
matches the name
of an existing user, a mention reference is created. This will be shown
by changing the text into a link to said user's profile, and possibly create
a notification for the mentioned user depending on whether they have
the necessary permission to access the contents.
Example:
@John, can you give this a look?
This is also valid for teams and organizations:
@Documenters, we need to plan for this. @CoolCompanyInc, this issue concerns us all!
Teams will receive mail notifications when appropriate, but whole organizations won't.
Commit messages do not produce user notifications.
Commits
Commits can be referenced using their SHA1 hash, or a portion of it of at least seven characters. They will be shown as a link to the corresponding commit.
Example:
This bug was introduced in e59ff077
Issues and Pull Requests
A reference to another issue or pull request can be created using the simple
notation #1234
, where 1234 is the number of an issue or pull request
in the same repository. These references will be shown as links to the
referenced content.
The effect of creating this type of reference is that a notice will be created in the referenced document, provided the creator of the reference has reading permissions on it.
Example:
This seems related to #1234
Issues and pull requests in other repositories can be referred to as well
using the form owner/repository#1234
:
This seems related to mike/compiler#1234
Alternatively, the !1234
notation can be used as well. Even when in Gitea
a pull request is a form of issue, the #1234
form will always link to
an issue; if the linked entry happens to be a pull request instead, Gitea
will redirect as appropriate. With the !1234
notation, a pull request
link will be created, which will be redirected to an issue if required.
However, this distinction could be important if an external tracker is
used, where links to issues and pull requests are not interchangeable.
Actionable References in Pull Requests and Commit Messages
Sometimes a commit or pull request may fix or bring back a problem documented in a particular issue. Gitea supports closing and reopening the referenced issues by preceding the reference with a particular keyword. Common keywords include "closes", "fixes", "reopens", etc. This list can be [customized]({{< ref "doc/administration/config-cheat-sheet.en-us.md" >}}) by the site administrator.
Example:
This PR closes #1234
If the actionable reference is accepted, this will create a notice on the referenced issue announcing that it will be closed when the referencing PR is merged.
For an actionable reference to be accepted, at least one of the following conditions must be met:
- The commenter has permissions to close or reopen the issue at the moment of creating the reference.
- The reference is inside a commit message.
- The reference is posted as part of the pull request description.
In the last case, the issue will be closed or reopened only if the merger of the pull request has permissions to do so.
Additionally, only pull requests and commit messages can create an action, and only issues can be closed or reopened this way.
The default keywords are:
- Closing: close, closes, closed, fix, fixes, fixed, resolve, resolves, resolved
- Reopening: reopen, reopens, reopened
Time tracking in Pull Requests and Commit Messages
When commit or merging of pull request results in automatic closing of issue it is possible to also add spent time resolving this issue through commit message.
To specify spent time on resolving issue you need to specify time in format
@<number><time-unit>
after issue number. In one commit message you can specify
multiple fixed issues and spent time for each of them.
Supported time units (<time-unit>
):
m
- minutesh
- hoursd
- days (equals to 8 hours)w
- weeks (equals to 5 days)mo
- months (equals to 4 weeks)
Numbers to specify time (<number>
) can be also decimal numbers, ex. @1.5h
would
result in one and half hours. Multiple time units can be combined, ex. @1h10m
would
mean 1 hour and 10 minutes.
Example of commit message:
Fixed #123 spent @1h, refs #102, fixes #124 @1.5h
This would result in 1 hour added to issue #123 and 1 and half hours added to issue #124.
External Trackers
Gitea supports the use of external issue trackers, and references to issues
hosted externally can be created in pull requests. However, if the external
tracker uses numbers to identify issues, they will be indistinguishable from
the pull requests hosted in Gitea. To address this, Gitea allows the use of
the !
marker to identify pull requests. For example:
This is issue #1234, and links to the external tracker. This is pull request !1234, and links to a pull request in Gitea.
The !
and #
can be used interchangeably for issues and pull request except
for this case, where a distinction is required. If the repository uses external
tracker, commit message for squash merge will use !
as reference by default.
Issues and Pull Requests References Summary
This table illustrates the different kinds of cross-reference for issues and pull requests.
In the examples, User1/Repo1
refers to the repository where the reference is used, while
UserZ/RepoZ
indicates a different repository.
Reference in User1/Repo1 | Repo1 issues are external | RepoZ issues are external | Should render |
---|---|---|---|
#1234 |
no | N/A | A link to issue/pull 1234 in User1/Repo1 |
!1234 |
no | N/A | A link to issue/pull 1234 in User1/Repo1 |
#1234 |
yes | N/A | A link to external issue 1234 for User1/Repo1 |
!1234 |
yes | N/A | A link to PR 1234 for User1/Repo1 |
User1/Repo1#1234 |
no | N/A | A link to issue/pull 1234 in User1/Repo1 |
User1/Repo1!1234 |
no | N/A | A link to issue/pull 1234 in User1/Repo1 |
User1/Repo1#1234 |
yes | N/A | A link to external issue 1234 for User1/Repo1 |
User1/Repo1!1234 |
yes | N/A | A link to PR 1234 for User1/Repo1 |
UserZ/RepoZ#1234 |
N/A | no | A link to issue/pull 1234 in UserZ/RepoZ |
UserZ/RepoZ!1234 |
N/A | no | A link to issue/pull 1234 in UserZ/RepoZ |
UserZ/RepoZ#1234 |
N/A | yes | A link to external issue 1234 for UserZ/RepoZ |
UserZ/RepoZ!1234 |
N/A | yes | A link to PR 1234 for UserZ/RepoZ |
Alphanumeric issue IDs: | - | - | - |
AAA-1234 |
yes | N/A | A link to external issue AAA-1234 for User1/Repo1 |
!1234 |
yes | N/A | A link to PR 1234 for User1/Repo1 |
User1/Repo1!1234 |
yes | N/A | A link to PR 1234 for User1/Repo1 |
Not supported | N/A | yes | A link to external issue AAA-1234 for UserZ/RepoZ |
UserZ/RepoZ!1234 |
N/A | yes | A link to PR 1234 in UserZ/RepoZ |
The last section is for repositories with external issue trackers that use alphanumeric format.
N/A: not applicable.
Note: automatic references between repositories with different types of issues (external vs. internal) are not fully supported and may render invalid links.