- cross-posted to:
- [email protected]
- cross-posted to:
- [email protected]
We all know who’s the real steward of free software and federation
*smiles in anticipation*
legit had to draw the vector logo of Gogs for this, smh
edit: actually… it already exists, oopsie (ᵕ—ᴗ—) smh my head
Gitlab is also thinking of going to federation. It will be interesting as git is already a federated protocol, now our prs, follows, stars, ect will also be federated between different instances.
Once again, SVN is victorious.
I will never bow down to the trunk!
Lol! Woops. I’m on my phone and it autocorrected.
Yea lol
Actually, what did you mean to say @[email protected] ?nvmI recently looked this up again and it looks like the person who started the federation work in Gitlab got a new job and isn’t really working on it any more. So sadly this seems to be on hold as Gitlab the company is not themselves investing staff-hours into federation.
Aww, this is a terrible day for rain…
That is too bad, but also at the same time I kind of lost hope for Gitlab after they jumped on the AI hype train, if they’re going full corporate they probably wouldn’t be a good candidate for Federation (both because other people would defederate them and because they wouldn’t want to because competition).
I’ve read in some issue tracker that the gitbal guys aren’t really interested in federation. It makes sense, they are a business. Seems that having push mirrors is a premium feature, so federation would go contrary.
I’d love to be proven wrong though.
I want all that so bad
I hope Gitlab has helped the contributor out in their work, last I heard it was just one person on it
Yeah GL has this strange thing where part of it is open source, but not all.
Yeah it’s called open core and it’s basically every open source SaaS product where you can either:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Open-core_model
Even a single security fuckup on the scale of GitLab’s mistake earlier this year means I will not consider using their codebase.