Reputation: 705
I'm wondering if there is any way to know who has checked out my project hosted on GitHub? This would include people who have forked the project directly on GitHub, as well as people who may have cloned the repository using standard git clone
commands.
Upvotes: 65
Views: 206164
Reputation: 91
Let us say we have a project social_login. To check the traffic to your repo, you can go to: https://github.com/{username}/social_login/graphs/traffic
Upvotes: 9
Reputation: 349
In your repository, go to the Insights
tab and then to the traffic
section. You can see the number of visitors and clones made of your repository there.
Upvotes: 0
Reputation: 589
Go to the traffic section inside graphs. Here you can find how many unique visitors you have. Other than this there is no other way to know who exactly viewed your account.
Upvotes: 7
Reputation: 4246
I believe this is an old question, and the Traffic was introduced by Github in 2014. Here is the link to the description of Traffic, that tells you the views on your repositories.
Upvotes: 14
Reputation: 84343
You have no way to see who has checked out your repository using standard git commands such as git clone
, but you can see who has forked your repository on GitHub using the Network Graph Visualizer. At the time of this answer, you can access this feature in at least two ways:
For example, here is a partial screenshot of the rbenv network graph:
The "Members" tab at the top of the Network Graph will also show you a different view, listing the names of the people who currently have forks on GitHub. It obviously will not show people who cloned outside of GitHub, or folks who have subsequently deleted their forks.
Upvotes: 24
Reputation: 3754
If by "checked out" you mean people who have cloned your project, then no it is not possible. You don't even need to be a GitHub user to clone a repository, so it would be infeasible to track this.
Upvotes: 44