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> pushing to git usually require some access to the repo

Wait, so to comment on an issue I now have to already have push access to that repo? How does that work? E.g. what if I want to comment on a VSCode issue? I'm not a VSCode developer...


michaelmure
Right now, yes, but the idea is to augment the webUI with external auth (e.g. Github OAuth and others) to make it a public portal where anyone can create issues and so on. In that case, the webUI would have access to the git repo, enforce any rules and prevent abuses.

With a single binary deployment, you'd just need a bit of config and a DNS, and you could host a forge-ish for your project.

We are not there yet but it's really not far.

sudoforge
to support the workflow where you, an individual, outside contributor, want to use git-bug to create or comment on an issue on a third-party platform that you do not control, you would:

- install git-bug

- create a directory (and `git init`), optionally fetch/clone the remote repo (but this is not needed)

- create a git-bug identity (`git bug user new`)

- configure a bridge to (for example, using vscode) github (`git bug bridge new`)

- pull issues from the bridge to your local repository's refs/bugs namespace (`git bug bridge pull`)

- create a new issue, or browse existing ones and comment on them at will

- export your activity to the bridge (`git bug bridge push`)

this works without push access to the repository, because when importing to or exporting from a bridge, the API credentials you provide when configuring the bridge are used -- `git bug bridge {push,pull}` does not push your local `refs/bugs` to the remote.

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