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2017-04-15T14:56:00+02:00 Customizing Gitea customizing-gitea 9 false false
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advanced Customizing Gitea 9 customizing-gitea

Customizing Gitea

The main way to customize Gitea is by using the custom folder. This is the central place to override and configure features.

If you install Gitea from binary, after the installation process ends, you can find the custom folder next to the binary. Gitea will create the folder for you and prepopulate it with a conf folder inside, where Gitea stores all the configuration settings provided through the installation steps (have a look here for a complete list).

If you can't find the custom folder next to the binary, please check the GITEA_CUSTOM environment variable, that can be used to override the default path to something else. GITEA_CUSTOM might be set for example in your launch script file. Please have a look here for a complete list of environment variables.

Note that you have to restart Gitea for it to notice the changes.

Customizing /robots.txt

To make Gitea serve your own /robots.txt (by default, an empty 404 status is served), simply create a file called robots.txt in the custom folder with the expected contents.

Serving custom public files

To make Gitea serve custom public files (like pages and images), use the folder custom/public/ as the webroot. Symbolic links will be followed.

For example, a file image.png stored in custom/public, can be accessed with the url http://your-gitea-url/image.png.

Changing the default avatar

Place the png image at the following path: custom/public/img/avatar_default.png

Customizing Gitea pages

The custom/templates folder allows you to change every single page of Gitea.

You need to be aware of the template you want to change. All templates can be found in the templates folder of the Gitea sources.

When you find the correct .tmpl file, you need to copy it in the custom/templates folder of your installation, respecting any subfolder you found in the source template.

You can now customize the template you copied in custom/templates, being carefully to not break the Gitea syntax. Any statement contained inside {{ and }} are Gitea templete's syntax and shouldn't be touch, unless you know what are you doing.

To add in custom HTML to the header or the footer of the page, in the templates/custom directory there are header.tmpl and footer.tmpl that can be modified. This is useful if you want to add in custom CSS files, or additional Javascript.

Customizing gitignores, labels, licenses, locales, and readmes.

Place your own files in corresponding sub-folder under custom/options.