this post was submitted on 13 Nov 2025
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[–] somewa@suppo.fi 20 points 3 days ago (8 children)
[–] Kissaki@programming.dev 7 points 2 days ago (6 children)

Looks like it's just random commenters taking random guesses because those have happened before.

What is a “repository reset”? One commenter writes:

There was a temporary similar “outage” back in July with rewritten history, apparently something inappropriate was recorded in the repo history they wanted cleaned out. The repo came back after that. I have no idea if this is the same thing, or if they just got tired of maintaining it.

Seems strange to me. You can prep locally and then force-push. I don't see why rewriting history would require taking the repository down.

[–] orygin@piefed.social 4 points 2 days ago (1 children)

Plus won't the forks on GitHub keep the history before the "reset"?
Afaik, forks on GitHub are basically the same underlying repository, just a branch associated with another user. They won't be able to really purge anything from these other branches.
Plus anyone who has a local copy of the repo or an automatic mirror somewhere else, will have the changes available.

[–] Kissaki@programming.dev 1 points 2 days ago

Yes, forks remain as they are. Yes, the fork network has a shared data repository on GitHub.

Consequently, rewritten history will break history compatibility, possibly requiring manual fixups on forks or work based on it.

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