Giter Site home page Giter Site logo

glowing-umbrella's Introduction

glowing-umbrella's People

Contributors

qoutip avatar

Stargazers

 avatar

Watchers

 avatar

glowing-umbrella's Issues

Enterprise cl

Skip to content
You have unread notifications

Expert Services
GitHub Admin Training (GitHub Enterprise Cloud)
Overview
Prepare your GitHub Enterprise Cloud Administrators to maintain a healthy GitHub environment that supports the needs of your development team. GitHub Admin Training provides your admins with an in-depth understanding of the various options and customizations available on the GitHub platform. Once the basics are mastered, the training will explore opportunities to extend the platform to accommodate the most demanding workflows.

Target Audience
GitHub Application Admins

Key Features and Benefits
Properly configure your GitHub Enterprise Cloud account to meet your organization’s needs
Improve the developer experience by selecting appropriate organization settings
Identify the recommended options and configurations to reach your desired outcomes
Enable protected branches, issues, GitHub Pages and more
Demonstrate daily and advanced user behavior on GitHub
Locate metrics from your GitHub Enterprise organization
Audit critical activities performed on your GitHub Enterprise Cloud account
Delivery Methods
Remote
Unit of Delivery: Class
Participants: Maximum 16
Syllabus
Participants can expect a combination of classroom learning and hands-on activities that build experience and confidence using the GitHub Enterprise Cloud platform.

Working on GitHub
Repository permissions and settings
GitHub Pages
Create branches and Pull Requests
Configure protected branches
Configure required status checks
Security in the cloud
Security alerts
User privacy
Licenses
GitHub Marketplace
Integrations
GitHub Enterprise site administration
Audit account activities
Select repository and organization settings
Administer users
Manage dormant users
Organizations and teams
The GitHub API
Introduction to the GitHub API
Compare REST API and GraphQL
Integrate tests and results using the Status API
Deploy with GitHub
Use webhooks
Scripts and automation
Advanced user behavior and administration
Unhealthy repositories
Changing history with Git
Learning & Business outcomes
After completing this training, admins will be able to:

Administer GitHub Enterprise Cloud
Configure permissions for users and teams
Leverage GitHub features to improve workflows
Audit critical activities
Identify and correct unhealthy user behavior
Prerequisites
Provision the GitHub Enterprise Cloud organization you will be using
All users with computers, accounts, and access for GitHub.com
Ensure all attendees will have administrator access
Designate one administrator to share their screen during activities

How can we help?
Let's build a customized solution that meets all of your needs.

Full name
First and last name
Business email
[email protected]
Company
Acme, Inc
What can we help you with?
Tell us how we can help.
For support questions, head to
github.com/contact
Subscribe to The GitHub Insider
A newsletter for developers covering techniques, technical guides, and the latest product innovations coming from GitHub.

Your email address
Yes please, I’d like GitHub and affiliates to use my information for personalized communications, targeted advertising and campaign effectiveness. See the GitHub Privacy Statement for more details.
Subscribe to our newsletter
Get product updates, company news, and more.

Product
Features
Security
Team
Enterprise
Customer stories
The ReadME Project
Pricing
Resources
Roadmap
Compare GitHub
Platform
Developer API
Partners
Electron
GitHub Desktop
Support
Docs
Community Forum
Professional Services
Premium Support
Skills
Status
Contact GitHub
Company
About
Blog
Careers
Press
Inclusion
Social Impact
Shop
Twitter iconGitHub on Twitter
Facebook iconGitHub on Facebook
Linkedin iconGitHub on LinkedIn
YouTube iconGitHub on YouTube
Twitch iconGitHub on Twitch
TikTok iconGitHub on TikTok
GitHub markGitHub’s organization on GitHub
© 2023 GitHub, Inc.
Terms
Privacy (Updated 08/2022)
Sitemap
What is Git?
GitHub Admin Training (GitHub Enterprise Cloud) | Expert Services | GitHub

Ccc

Skip to main content
GitHub Docs
Site policy/GitHub Terms/GitHub Community Guidelines
GitHub Community Guidelines
In this article
Maintaining a strong community
What if something or someone offends you?
What happens if someone violates GitHub's policies?
Appeal and Reinstatement
Legal Notices
Millions of developers across the world host millions of projects—both open and closed source—on GitHub. We're fortunate to be able to play a part in enabling collaboration across the developer community every day, which is a responsibility we don’t take lightly. Together, we all have the exciting opportunity to make this a community we can be proud of.

Our diverse user base brings different perspectives, ideas, and experiences, and ranges from people who created their first "Hello World" project last week to the most well-known software developers in the world. We are committed to making GitHub an environment that welcomes all the different voices and perspectives our community has to offer, while maintaining a safe place for developers to do their best work.

By outlining what we think a safe, welcoming, and productive community looks like at GitHub, we hope to help you understand how best to interact and collaborate on our platform in line with our Terms of Service and Acceptable Use Policies.

We encourage our community members to communicate expectations clearly, moderate their projects where possible, and report any content that may violate our policies. GitHub Staff will investigate any reports of abuse, and may moderate public content on our site that we determine to be in violation of our Terms of Service.

Maintaining a strong community
The primary purpose of the GitHub community is to collaborate on software projects. We are committed to maintaining a community where users are free to express themselves and challenge one another's ideas, both technical and otherwise. At the same time, it's important that users remain respectful and allow space for others to contribute openly. In order to foster both a safe and productive environment, we encourage our community members to look to these guidelines to inform how they interact on our platform. Below, you’ll find some suggestions for how to have successful interactions as a valued member of the GitHub community.

Be welcoming and open-minded - New users join our community each day. Some are well-established developers, while others are just beginning. Be open to other ideas and experience levels. Make room for opinions other than your own and be welcoming to new collaborators and those just getting started.

Be respectful - Working in a collaborative environment means disagreements may happen. But remember to criticize ideas, not people. Share thoughtful, constructive criticism and be courteous to those you interact with. If you’re unable to engage respectfully, consider taking a step back or using some of our moderation tools to deescalate a tense situation.

Be empathetic - GitHub is a global community with people from a wide variety of backgrounds and perspectives, many of which may not be your own. Try to put yourself in others’ shoes and understand their feelings before you address them. Do your best to help make GitHub a community where others feel safe to make contributions, participate in discussions, and share different ideas.

What if something or someone offends you?
While some disagreements can be resolved with direct, respectful communication between community members, we understand that is not always the case. We encourage our community to let us know when they believe content or activity they’ve encountered violates our policies. However, if you run into something or someone on the site that you find objectionable, here are some ways GitHub enables you to take action:

Communicate expectations - Maintainers can set community-specific guidelines to help users understand how to interact with their projects, for example, in a repository’s README, CONTRIBUTING file, or dedicated code of conduct. You can find additional information on building communities on the Communities page.

Moderate Comments - Users with write-access privileges for a repository can edit, delete, or hide anyone's comments on commits, pull requests, and issues. Anyone with read access to a repository can view a comment's edit history. Comment authors and people with write access to a repository can also delete sensitive information from a comment's edit history. Moderating your projects can feel like a big task if there is a lot of activity, but you can add collaborators to assist you in managing your community.

Lock Conversations  - If a discussion in an issue, pull request, or commit gets out of hand, off topic, or violates your project’s code of conduct or GitHub’s policies, owners, collaborators, and anyone else with write access can put a temporary or permanent lock on the conversation. For more information, see "Locking conversations."

Block Users  - If you encounter a specific user who you would rather not engage with, you can block the user from your personal account or from your organization.

Limit Interactions - If your public project is getting unwanted attention, being trolled, spammed, or otherwise, you have the option of setting temporary interaction limits to keep certain users from interacting with your repository. You can even set code review limits to ensure quality contributions on your projects.

While we are passionate about empowering maintainers to moderate their own projects, please reach out to us to Report abuse if you need additional support in dealing with a situation.

What happens if someone violates GitHub's policies?
We rely on reports from the community, as well as proactive detection, to help ensure that GitHub is a safe, welcoming, and productive platform for software developers. There are a variety of factors we consider when we’re made aware of behavior or content not in line with GitHub’s policies. However, our policy enforcement and content moderation approach prioritizes our vision to be the home for all developers. This means:

We optimize for code collaboration. We recognize that code can have multiple uses and we distinguish between how the code is being used on the platform and other possible uses. We also think about how our enforcement actions can affect a potentially complicated web of interdependencies across the platform and aim to restrict as little legitimate content as possible.

We take a human-centered approach to content moderation and we tailor our responses to meet the needs of a specific situation. Our global team investigates the reports we receive on a case-by-case basis—considering context and the surrounding facts—before taking action. This could include taking into account potentially offensive content being posted in a way that lacks context or makes it easy for other users to unwittingly view or interact with while using GitHub. In those instances, we may favor moderation in order to safeguard our community.

Our decisions are rooted in our core belief that serving an interconnected community and empowering human progress through developer collaboration requires a commitment to diversity, inclusion, and belonging.

Where we have decided that moderation action is warranted, these are some of the ways we may respond:

Removing the offending content
Blocking or disabling the offending content
Downgrading the visibility of the offending content
Hiding a user account or organization from public view
Suspending a user account or organization
Appeal and Reinstatement
If your content or account has been disabled or restricted and you seek reinstatement or wish to appeal, please see our Appeal and Reinstatement page for information about the process and use our Appeal and Reinstatement form to submit a request.

Legal Notices
We dedicate these Community Guidelines to the public domain for anyone to use, reuse, adapt, or whatever, under the terms of CC0-1.0.

These are only guidelines; they do not modify our Terms of Service and are not intended to be a complete list. Under those terms, GitHub retains full discretion to remove any content or terminate any accounts for activity that violates our Acceptable Use Policies. These guidelines describe when we will exercise that discretion.

Help and support
Help us make these docs great!
All GitHub docs are open source. See something that's wrong or unclear? Submit a pull request.

Learn how to contribute

Still need help?
Ask the GitHub community
Contact support
Legal
© 2023 GitHub, Inc.
Terms
Privacy
Status
Pricing
Expert services
Blog 13991 loll

Recommend Projects

  • React photo React

    A declarative, efficient, and flexible JavaScript library for building user interfaces.

  • Vue.js photo Vue.js

    🖖 Vue.js is a progressive, incrementally-adoptable JavaScript framework for building UI on the web.

  • Typescript photo Typescript

    TypeScript is a superset of JavaScript that compiles to clean JavaScript output.

  • TensorFlow photo TensorFlow

    An Open Source Machine Learning Framework for Everyone

  • Django photo Django

    The Web framework for perfectionists with deadlines.

  • D3 photo D3

    Bring data to life with SVG, Canvas and HTML. 📊📈🎉

Recommend Topics

  • javascript

    JavaScript (JS) is a lightweight interpreted programming language with first-class functions.

  • web

    Some thing interesting about web. New door for the world.

  • server

    A server is a program made to process requests and deliver data to clients.

  • Machine learning

    Machine learning is a way of modeling and interpreting data that allows a piece of software to respond intelligently.

  • Game

    Some thing interesting about game, make everyone happy.

Recommend Org

  • Facebook photo Facebook

    We are working to build community through open source technology. NB: members must have two-factor auth.

  • Microsoft photo Microsoft

    Open source projects and samples from Microsoft.

  • Google photo Google

    Google ❤️ Open Source for everyone.

  • D3 photo D3

    Data-Driven Documents codes.