• Aatube
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    113 months ago

    (unforked repos that are forks are also affected.)

    • @[email protected]
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      73 months ago

      Yes, but only in very limited circumstances. If you:

      1. fork a private repo with commit A into another private repo
      2. add commit B in your fork
      3. someone makes the original repo public
      4. You add commit C to the still private fork

      then commits A and B are publicly visible, but commit C is not.

      Per the linked Github docs:

      If a public repository is made private, its public forks are split off into a new network.

      Modifying the above situation to start with a public repo:

      1. fork a public repository that has commit A
      2. make commit B in your fork
      3. You delete your fork

      Commit B remains visible.

      A version of this where step 3 is to take the fork private isn’t feasible because you can’t take a fork private - you have to duplicate the repo. And duplicated repos aren’t part of the same repository network in the way that forks are, so the same situation wouldn’t apply.

      • Aatube
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        43 months ago

        The second situation you listed is incredibly common, as the blog post explains.