simple version control and collaboration

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darcs makes version control simple. darcs hub provides easy repo hosting and collaboration for darcs users, and is 100% FOSS software and a community service you can contribute to ( issues, code, docs ). The philosophy here is Less But Better. Enjoy the simplicity of darcs hub!

FAQ

About

What's darcs?

Darcs is a version control system, broadly similar to Git, Mercurial and others, but with a simpler conceptual model that many people find less costly to learn and use. If you don't have a lot of time to spend learning your version control tool, darcs (and darcs hub) may be a good choice.

What's darcs hub?

Darcs hub is the free darcs repository hosting site operated since 2012 by Simon Michael. It succeeds the older patch-tag.com and darcsden.com sites. It aims to:

provide a reliable, usable and evolving hosting and collaboration hub for darcs users accelerate the development of darcs and its ecosystem, eg through an easier contribution process and increased visibility and dogfooding.

What's darcsden?

darcs hub runs on free software, so you can help make it better (or run your own server). That software is darcsden, an evolution of the software originally developed by Alex Suraci for darcsden.com.

Can I rely on this site?

Darcs hub is currently an all-volunteer effort by Simon Michael with help from the darcs team. However it's robust enough to host your project and to depend on for daily work. We currently host about 800 users and 1600 repos.

Currently, the stability is that of a usable beta; you can expect a serviceable UI, some functionality and performance limitations, decent reliability, and no data loss. Uptime and response time are checked every minute (see link in the footer).

As with all cloud-based services, it's wise to (a) keep your own backups of important data and (b) assume no guarantee of security or privacy. The site is hosted in the US. We do our best and all improvements are welcome.

The roadmap gives some more overview.

What is the backup policy?

The VPS running hub.darcs.net and other sites is backed up nightly, between 0100 and 0300 GMT-8, by Linode's backup system. This keeps three backup images: the one from last night, the one from last Sunday, and the one from the previous Sunday. In other words, there is generally a backup that's one day old, and a backup that's 1-2 weeks old.

You should also keep your own backup(s) of your repositories. Basically, keep one or more copies of the repo elsewhere and up to date, using darcs get and darcs pull. (If you decide to automate this, don't forget to plan for the scenario where someone cracks your darcs hub account, logs in as you and quietly obliterates or modifies your repos.)

How can I help?

Use hub.darcs.net and provide bug reports and feedback

Investigate and clarify open issues

Test the setup process by setting up your own instance: get the latest darcsden get the required dependencies installed, perhaps disabling unnecessary bits with cabal build flags Build with cabal build or make Run as described in the README Investigate and report problems

Contribute code and documentation patches. This is a fun project! It's a web app, so there's quick visual feedback. It's darcs-related, but easier to understand than darcs itself. Developers are online in #darcs, and useful changes will be quickly deployed to this site. fork hub's darcsden or documentation repos darcs get a local copy, make changes, push back to your fork. (Or, edit directly via the web.) Your changes will appear in hub's patch queue and get merged and/or discussed on #darcs. See also the project roadmap and planning board.

Contribute feature/reliability/performance/installability/api improvements to darcsden's dependencies, especially darcs, highlighting-kate, snap, and hsp.

What's new?

Here are darcs hub blog posts, code changes and doc changes.

Also each of the repositories hosted here has its own changes page and feed. Here are a few interesting ones: darcs-reviewed, darcs-screened, darcs-wiki, darcsden, divine-mainline, dnplayer, globalscript, happstack, netwire

Pulling and pushing

How do I get a local copy of a repo?

Via HTTP - works for any public repo and requires no authentication. Examples:

darcs get http://hub.darcs.net/OWNER/REPO darcs get http://hub.darcs.net/simon/darcsden

Or via SSH - works for any public repo, and private repos that you own or are a member of. You'll need to create an account and configure SSH access. Examples:

darcs get [YOU@]hub.darcs.net:[OWNER/]REPO darcs get hub.darcs.net:simon/darcsden darcs get hub.darcs.net:myrepo

YOU is your darcs hub username; you can omit it if it's the same as your local username. OWNER/ can be omitted if the repo is yours.

How do I connect with ssh?

After (or while) creating an account, configure your ssh public key in user settings.

Then test your ssh access like so:

$ ssh YOU@hub.darcs.net

But, the ssh lib we use will probably require special configuration of your ssh client. Eg on unix, add these lines to ~/.ssh/config :

Host hub.darcs.net ControlMaster no ForwardAgent no ForwardX11 no Ciphers +aes256-cbc MACs +hmac-sha1

Also, we only support RSA ssh keys at the moment. If your usual ssh key is eg ED25519, you will need to generate a RSA key for connecting to darcs hub:

$ ssh-keygen -t rsa -f ~/.ssh/darcshub

and add this to the ssh config above to make sure the RSA key is used:

IdentityFile ~/.ssh/darcshub

If in the past you added KexAlgorithms +diffie-hellman-group1-sha1 based on this obsolete advice, you should remove it.

On first connection you will probably be asked to authenticate our host key:

The authenticity of host 'hub.darcs.net (173.255.254.113)' can't be established. RSA key fingerprint is SHA256:3eBJH9dB8ez4tJuxmnEP7dNHRRTk2BAKPuUmcGaoAAM. Are you sure you want to continue connecting (yes/no)? yes Warning: Permanently added 'hub.darcs.net,173.255.254.113' (RSA) to the list of known hosts.

The IP address and fingerprint should be as shown above.

Returning users might see loud warnings about the remote host idenfication having changed, due to a server migration in 2018/06. To fix this, try:

$ ssh-keygen -R hub.darcs.net # remove hub.darcs.net entry from known_hosts $ ssh-keygen -R 173.255.219.222 # remove entry for the old IP address $ ssh-keygen -R 173.255.254.113 # remove any out-of-date entry for the new IP address

On a successful ssh connection, you should see ("failed" is normal as we don't provide shell access):

PTY allocation request failed on channel 0 shell request failed on channel 0

Otherwise, add the -v flag to help troubleshoot the issue:

$ ssh YOU@hub.darcs.net -v

How do I pull new changes from hub.darcs.net?

Once you've got a local copy of a repo, you can merge any new changes from the upstream repo on darcs hub by running:

darcs pull

in your repo. It uses the original get address by default.

How do I push my changes back to hub.darcs.net?

Pushing requires SSH access. If you got the repo via SSH, just

darcs push

If you got it via HTTP, you must configure ssh access and then push to the SSH address:

darcs push [YOU@]hub.darcs.net:[OWNER/]REPO [--set-default]

The --set-default flag will make it remember this as the upstream address, so you can just type darcs push in future.

How do I push to someone else's repo?

You can push to someone else's repo if they've added you as a repo member in the repo settings. Otherwise, make a fork of their repo and push to that, so they can review and merge your changes themselves (on their repo branches page).

How do I create and push to a new repo?

ssh [YOU@]hub.darcs.net init REPO DESCRIPTION (or: log in -> my repos -> new repo) darcs push -a [YOU@]hub.darcs.net:REPO

More

What are repo members ?

In your repo's settings, you can add other darcs hub users as members. They will be able to push to your repo (but not delete changes from it, nor change its settings), and view it even if it's private.

How do I delete changes from my hub repo?

ssh [YOU@]hub.darcs.net obliterate REPO

This runs darcs obliterate in your repo on hub, prompting interactively for each change, most recently pushed first. You must be the repo owner, not just a member. Options like --dry-run are not supported, so you'll sometimes have to figure out which later depending patches also need to be selected for obliteration. Another option is to obliterate locally, then delete the hub repo and re-publish it.

Obliterate rewrites your repo's history, so be mindful - if others have forked your repo and you obliterate, they'll need to do the same or the change will show up again in your branches page.

How do I view a file's raw content ?

Click the file name in the page heading. Currently this forces the text/plain content type.

How do I get a feed of a repo's changes ?

Add /atom to the changes url. Eg http://hub.darcs.net/simon/darcsden/changes/atom.

How do I tell a repo owner that I have some patches they may like to pull?

After pushing some patches to your fork of someone's repo, those patches will automatically appear in the branches page of the parent repo. However, the parent repo's owner may not notice. Currently there are two ways to notify them:

track down their email or IRC name and ping them. Eg look for a nick in #darcs matching their hub username, or check the READMEs in their public repos. if the parent repo has its darcs hub issue tracker enabled, you can open a new issue and attach your new patches as a bundle - this will send them a notification email

Can I reference or close issues with a commit ?

When a patch is pushed to an issue-tracker-enabled repo, and the patch name contains a reference to an open issue, that issue will be closed automatically, and the commit will be mentioned in an issue comment. Here is the syntax. Some valid examples:

some patch (closes #1) resolves #52, blah blah this fixes #100 I think

I think the following are not yet supported:

the issue comment should link to the commit

referencing/commenting an issue without closing it

closing multiple issues at once



More questions ? Ask on #darcs and/or add to the FAQ.