Hi Richard,
I will say that you didn't wait!
You have until May 1st before Gitorious goes down.
There's now a push for Kallithea to get going, and Gogs looks pretty
robust with pull-request functioning anticipated *very* soon.
https://gitbull.org/ is offering 100% free-software ethical Kallithea
hosting and
https://notabug.org/ is offering the same with Gogs.
Like you, I am not sure either is quite ready for prime-time. However, I
think there's a chance we'll see progress over just the next month that
makes one or both be a viable enough and promising option…
So, if you wait a month and then go with GitHub or GitLab, *then* I will
more understand. But we can wait a month, right? I mean, a decent amount
of progress on those sites happened within a couple weeks… Not that I'm
actually expecting amazing progress, but give 'em a chance?
Respectfully,
Aaron Wolf
Snowdrift.coop
On 03/21/2015 12:20 AM, Richard Fontana wrote:
Hi everybody!
I'm hoping to refocus attention on copyleft-next again soon (yes I
know I've said that before, but I *mean* it now!).
Originally the canonical public repository for copyleft-next was under
my personal github account
(
github.com/richardfontana/copyleft-next.git). Due in large part to
ethical criticisms from bkuhn (and with the quixotic hope of getting
bkuhn to contribute), I changed that to
gitorious.org/copyleft-next/copyleft-next.git while keeping the github
repository in sync. (I also for a while mirrored the gitorious
repository on fedorahosted and in a github organization account but
didn't keep those up to date.)
As you probably know by now, GitLab has acquired Gitorious and
Gitorious will apparently be shutting down in a few months.
I thought I'd use the Gitorious Apocalypse as a good excuse to
investigate self-hosting a github-like web application.
bkuhn has recommended Kallithea, the RhodeCode fork which not long ago
became a Software Freedom Conservancy member project. I'm a bit
familiar with use of Gitlab, and I have read a bit about gogs recently.
So this evening I tried installing all three of them, and am sorrty to
say failed completely.
So as far as I'm concerned it is fairly clear that Kallithea and Gogs
are not quite ready for actual real-world use. I'll continue to follow
them from a distance to see if they mature or at least have
installation instructions I can make some sense out of.
As for Gitlab, it was the one of the three I was disinclined to use
because of its permissive-core open core-ish model (could be worse,
though). However, with Kallithea and Gogs being non-viable, Gitlab was
my only hope. But attempts to install the Gitlab 'community edition'
CentOS package according to instructions failed, by which point I was
too frustrated to do anything but abandon these self-hosting experiments.
So with some sadness, I am currently intending to return to the roots
of copyleft-next and making the github repository the canonical one. I
may look into a simpler self-hosting solution using a minimalist web
frontend like gitweb which I imagine might be easier to get running.
Don't say I didn't try.
RF
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