Thansk for everyone who recommended #Codeberg to their friends, collaborators and favourite projects.
Although not everyone moved to Codeberg because of this (which is fine!), we spread awareness about alternatives and that development does not equal #Git**b. This is what matters!
Thank you and keep going - Tell your friends! π
@lightweight I suspect that in most cases, "enterprise" editions are mostly just their specific server configs anyway, along with other stuff that wouldn't be inappropriate or useless to publish. Anything in #GitLab that the self-hosting community actually has a need for tends to get moved to the "#FOSS" edition once someone makes a case for it.
@tyil what about just using a SaaSS that uses free code under the hood, instead of #Slack? Something like: * #Gitter.im - gratis, owned and hosted by #GitLab * #Wire - free for personal use, with extended features for paying enterprise users. * #Zulip - gratis hosting for free code and open source projects @Gina
A #QOTO update for all those using our NextCloud or GitLab services (free for anyone hosting open-source projects). We recently figured out why most of you have had trouble uploading large files to NextCloud or using the CI on GitLab. Turns out our Nginx reverse proxy had a 10M limit on file size.
The issue has since been fixed. If anyone has any continued problems let me know.
@fr33domlover currently a user of various #GitLab instances (including the flagship), and occasional filer of bugs, feature requests etc on other forges. Interest in Sourcehut compatibility is motivated by a general desire to reduce fragmentation, and increase the #NetworkEffect of decentralized replacements for corporate #datafarms (in this case GH).
So #GitLab Pages has finally rolled out their automatic #LetsEncrypt integration for hosted web sites. It's quite painless and automatically renews certs. So glad that I don't have to manually do this or maintain some brittle CI-based scripts anymore.
If you've got a GL-hosted site, take the next 90 seconds and go secure it!
Does anyone know if GitLab.com still have plans that allow customers to use their own domain, since they shut down GitHost.io? If so, is there a way to tell for sure whether a #GitLab instance using an organizational domain name (eg https://gitlab.e.foundation/) is self-hosted, or hosted by GitLab? I'm maintaining a list of independent instances, in the hopes this will be helpful to #ForgeFed when they're ready to roll out a beta: https://wiki.p2pfoundation.net/List_of_Community-Hosted_GitLab_Instances