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Diffusion User Guide
Phorge Administrator and User Documentation (Application User Guides)

Guide to Diffusion, the Phorge application for hosting and browsing repositories.

Overview

Diffusion allows you to create repositories so that you can browse them from the web and interact with them from other applications.

Diffusion can host repositories locally, or observe existing remote repositories which are hosted elsewhere (for example, on GitHub, Bitbucket, or other existing hosting). Both types of repositories can be browsed and interacted with, but hosted repositories support some additional triggers and access controls which are not available for observed repositories.

Diffusion is integrated with the other tools in the Phorge suite. For instance:

  • when you commit Differential revisions to a tracked repository, they are automatically updated and linked to the corresponding commits;
  • you can add Herald rules to notify you about commits that match certain rules;
  • for hosted repositories, Herald can enforce granular access control rules;
  • in all the tools, commit names are automatically linked.

The remainder of this document walks through creating, configuring, and managing repositories.

Adding Repositories

Repository administration is accomplished through Diffusion. You can use the web interface in Diffusion to observe an external repository or create a new hosted repository.

By default, you must be an administrator to create a new repository. You can change this in the application settings.

Managing Repositories

Diffusion repositories have an array of configurable options and behaviors. For details on the available options and guidance on managing and administrating repositories, see Diffusion User Guide: Managing Repositories.

Repositories can also be managed via the API. For an overview on using the API to create and edit repositories, see Diffusion User Guide: Repositories API.

Repository Clustering

Phorge repository hosts can be set up in a cluster configuration so you can lose hosts with minimal downtime and data loss. This is an advanced feature which most installs do not need to pursue.

To get started with clustering, see Clustering Introduction. For details on repository clustering, see Cluster: Repositories.

Next Steps

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If you're having trouble getting things working, these topic guides may be helpful: