... | @@ -502,6 +502,28 @@ If your repository relies on Transifex for translations, make sure to |
... | @@ -502,6 +502,28 @@ If your repository relies on Transifex for translations, make sure to |
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update the Transifex config to pull from the new branch. To do so,
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update the Transifex config to pull from the new branch. To do so,
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[open a l10n ticket](https://gitlab.torproject.org/tpo/community/l10n/-/issues/new?issue%5Bassignee_id%5D=&issue%5Bmilestone_id%5D=) with the new branch name changes.
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[open a l10n ticket](https://gitlab.torproject.org/tpo/community/l10n/-/issues/new?issue%5Bassignee_id%5D=&issue%5Bmilestone_id%5D=) with the new branch name changes.
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## Find the project associated with a project ID
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Sometimes you'll find a numeric project ID instead of a human-readable
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one. For example, you can see on the [arti project](https://gitlab.torproject.org/tpo/core/arti) that it says:
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Project ID: 647
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So you can easily find the project ID of a project right on the
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project's front page. But what if you only have the ID and need to
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find what project it represents? You can talk with the API, with a URL
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like:
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https://gitlab.torproject.org/api/v4/projects/<PROJECT_ID>
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For example, this is how I found the above arti project from the
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`Project ID 647`:
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```
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$ curl -s 'https://gitlab.torproject.org/api/v4/projects/647' | jq .web_url
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"https://gitlab.torproject.org/tpo/core/arti"
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```
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## Connect to the PostgreSQL server
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## Connect to the PostgreSQL server
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The GitLab Omnibus setup is special: it ships its own embedded
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The GitLab Omnibus setup is special: it ships its own embedded
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