Initially, LinkedIn was just another site where you could find jobs. It was simple to use, simple to connect with others; it even had some friendly groups with meaningful discussions.

And then it gained monopoly as the “sole” professional network where you could actually land a job. If you are not on LinkedIn now, you are quite invisible in the job market. Recruiters are concentrated there, even if they have to pay extremely high prices for premium accounts. The site is horrible now: a social network in disguise, toxic and boring influencers, and a lot of noise and bloated interface to explore.

When Google decided to close their code.google.com, GitHub filled a void. It was a simple site powered by git (not by svn or CVS), and most of the major open-source projects migrated there. The interface was simple, and everything was perfect. And then something changed.

GitHub UI started to bloat, all kinds of “features” nobody asked for were implemented, and then the site became a SaaS. Now Microsoft hosts the bulk of open-source projects the world has to offer. GitHub has become a monopoly. If you don’t keep your code there, chances are people won’t notice your side projects. This bothers me.

Rant over. I hate internet monopolies.

  • herescunty@lemmy.world
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    “Show us your GitHub”

    Sure, here it is

    “Looks empty”

    Ya, I code for work, it’s all in private repos or in Azure Devops.

    “So you don’t contribute to open source in your free time?”

    No, I spend free time with my family. Again, I code for work, why on earth would I also use my free time for extra coding

    “Thanks for your time but…”

    Nah thanks for yours, I don’t wanna work for a company that expects me to code for them for for 8 hours and then go and code for someone else for free for more hours. That’s not a healthy work life balance, dickhead.

    Edit: well this blew up (in a small lemmy kinda way). To clarify, before I coded for a living I coded as a hobby. Since I now do it full time, I don’t have any itch to scratch, I get my fill 40 hours a week. I’d ONLY be contributing to keep my GitHub looking a certain way for recruiters that one year in five I’m jobseeking and that feels like a waste of time. In reality it’ll probably be dark green the week before I started interviewing when I updated my website and then nothing before that until the last time I was interviewing.

    Also, I chose to have a family and that takes effort, time and precedence over hobbies for me. If you also made that choice and you can code full time, have a healthy relationship with your wife and kids and still find time to have hobby code projects, all power to you. I don’t have the energy to open the laptop back up and get into something by the time the kids are in bed and I’ve spent some time with the wife. I’m not staying up into the night so a recruiter can glance at a chart and judge me to be a good or bad dev by how green it is.

    How do I improve my skills over time? Tbh if the company I’m working for doesn’t allow me to block out a couple of hours to half day a week for learning I’m at the wrong company. I read, follow along with tutorials, experiment and think about how what I’m learning could be applied to the product I work with. Then if an opportunity to apply it comes along, I take it and either fail fast or bring something new, of value to the table.

    Yup, the chart still goes green with contributions to private company repos, but those contributions also ain’t from my personal GitHub account, they’re from the one linked to my work email and I imagine they’ll close that account pretty quickly when I leave. Idk how that works tho, I only worked in one team in my whole dev career that seriously uses GitHub as source control, and they’re being moved to ADO as we type. GitHub is the go to for FOSS, but I don’t work in FOSS, I work in enterprise software and there’s much better enterprise git providers than GitHub (imho, ymmv). You can even throw the question back “do you actually use github here? If so can you tell me what lead you to go with that instead of other source control providers?” or side step it “I don’t really use github but I’m experienced in Azure DevOps and Team Foundation Server plus I’m fluent in git command line so I’ll be able to skill up in GitHub specifics pretty quickly if I need to”. Interviews are two way streets, I’m interviewing a company as much as they’re interviewing me, I have standards on where I’ll choose to work.

    If you want a portfolio, I’ve got one, it’s on my website, the url of which is on my cv. Knock yourself out, sign up if you like, it’s public. I even updated it just for you last week.

    Y’know why recruiters ask to see your github? Because they read in a book or a blog somewhere that that’s what they should ask when interviewing developers. 21 year old graduate developers looking for their first junior position, sure, maybe. That isn’t all devs tho.

      • Sundray@lemmy.sdf.org
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        …or surgeons who perform surgery in their free time.

        I suspect surgeons doing surgery in their off hours wouldn’t be just weird, but also very creepy.

      • custom_situation@lemm.ee
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        there are tons of developers and technical folks that still find it fun and enjoyable to work on personal projects.

        i mean, how else do you build new skills or gain familiarity without stuff you don’t use at work?

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            “programming” is so broad though. surely there’s room to have it be both work and a hobby ?

            i mean, it is for me and lots of folks i know.

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              Yeah same as artists, would you rather commission an artist who says ‘i don’t really like art it’s just a 9-5’ or someone who say ‘art is a passion, I love creating and am part of various art communities to develop and grow my skills’

              Musicians, writers, photographers, all the creative industries are full of people totally dedicated to their passion or at least deeply interested in their field - of course people are going to want to employ someone that constantly improves and evolves their knowledge and skills

              • hellishharlot@lemmy.world
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                Even artists don’t end up working on art every chance they get though. Most professional artists are just that. It’s the artists who haven’t made it yet that are making art in their off time

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                If you know an artist who works 40 hours a week at a minimum wage job and then paints for 40 hours a week in their free time then you know an artist that works 80 hours a week

        • hassanmckusick@lemmy.discothe.quest
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          i mean, how else do you build new skills or gain familiarity without stuff you don’t use at work?

          Woodshedding. I can not learn as fast if I’m weighed down by the idea that every piece of code I check-in needs to be production ready.

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      I get where you come from. I don’t code after work much, but if nobody did, there wouldn’t be much OSS. As for that interviewer, he’s a dickhead.

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      Fintech is easy to deal with in this regard.

      “do you have code samples you can share?”

      “would you be happy if an employee interviewed elsewhere and used your codebase for work samples?”

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      What they’re asking for is a public portfolio.

      Obviously, you can’t give them code that legally belongs to a past employer and they’re not allowed to look to avoid accusations of copyright infringement.

      Especially if they do any reverse-engineering for interoperability, there must be zero suspicion that they were inspired by code they’re not allowed to use.

      This is where open source contributions under permissive licenses come in.

      Something shown to work in a real project is also viewed better than out of context code snippets.

      When you’re essentially saying you have nothing to show them, you’re indistinguishable from someone who actually has nothing and is lying about their skills, so the onus is on the interviewers to vet you, which for various reasons may not be possible, so they’d rather just move on to someone with a clearly proven track record.

      • hellishharlot@lemmy.world
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        Ok but the original point still stands. Coding outside of work and at work is poor work life balance. Even my own projects I do are to learn not solve an actual problem in the world with code.

      • DrQuint@lemmy.world
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        And a public portfolio is the CV that states “I worked for this company making thier products”. They might ask for the specific products, but there’s a chance some people never made public ones.

        Github is for college and thesis projects. That’s what most people have on there.

        The correct answer to these recruiters is still not stated yet. When they say

        “Your github is empty”

        People should answer

        “I only produce code that actually makes money”.

        • herescunty@lemmy.world
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          Indeed. A clearly proven track record is a given, in that I worked at software company x y & z for a number of years each as a developer in these technologies and with these good references. You don’t need to see my individual contributions to understand that holding several multi-year dev positions at enterprise software houses tells you a lot.

          Tbh, if my track record is in question I don’t expect to be at an interview, I expect my CV to be on a no pile.

          I think the real issue is that recruiters learn how to interview graduate junior dev candidates and apply it across the board. When you interview mid/senior devs with years of experience for senior roles which require years of experience, maybe “do fizzbuzz” and “show us your open source work” is a little patronising, no?

          Might just be me tho, maybe I’m just a prick. Could be.

    • custom_situation@lemm.ee
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      you can show activity without showing the details of the activity. which is at least demonstrating you’re active.

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    At least, there’s Codeberg, run by a German nonprofit, who’s challenging the monopoly. It is aimed exclusively for FOSS projects, private repositories are forbidden. They are running Forgejo as their bloat-free software forge server.

    Now, I think every Web2 website must be operated by a nonprofit.

    • Laxaria@lemmy.world
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      From my PoV it’s probably many of these projects are effectively public good spaces. Hosting a code repository has become less of an esoteric thing and turning into a public good benefit (like a physical library but virtual for code). Spaces like Reddit and Twitter are todays analogous of a public discussion forum in a park or at a bar.

      Internet tools have become so ubiquitous they are critical to serve public needs and public benefits. However these internet spaces are increasingly commercialized and privatized, which runs against them being valuable public goods (see the difference between Wikipedia, run primarily for public benefit, and Wikia/Fandom).

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      Overall codeberg has been pretty decent, it’s where the Kbin project is located. There’s been a few outages over the last few weeks but overall it’s pretty good.

      • Justin@lemmy.jlh.name
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        Github has had some outages recently too. Codeberg’s recent outage was particularly bad, but not serious.

      • raubarno@lemmy.ml
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        Yes, I also experienced some outages and thus delayed pushing (which made me re-think again of overusing git submodules).

        Nevertheless, I migrated my works from my server and Github to Codeberg recently.

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        Section 2.1.2 of Codeberg Terms of Service says:

        Private repositories are only allowed for things required for FLOSS projects, like storing secrets, team-internal discussions or hiding projects from the public until they’re ready for usage and/or contribution. They are also allowed for really small & personal stuff like your journal, config files, ideas or notes, but explicitly not as a personal cloud or media storage.

        So it’s not for proprietary projects anyway.

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    Github has always had being a job site be it’s secondary feature.

    Except that it has a slightly higher bar of entry to recruiters and recruitment bots spreading toxic positivity, and anyone asking for a job is able to prove (at least some of) their value by showing off their code and how they participate publically in other repos (if at all).

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    I see two points in your argument:

    Everything becoming a social network

    People working at tech companies have to justify their salary somehow and this is low hanging fruit for adding ‘features’ as all people feel some need for connection. Feeling that a place is alive with other people will motivate your more to engage with it, rather than say, your own Git hosted server. I don’t mind the social features added to GitHub as long as they don’t take the main stage, like it did in the LinkedIn transformation.

    GitHub monopoly of open source

    GitHub has for most of the time been the main place for open source. I don’t see a monopoly as necessarily bad as long as it remains focused on some values other than profit. I would rather have one big Wikipedia than a shitload of small fractured Wikipedias. Can it become a problem going forward, like it did with Reddit? Definitely, but I am cautiously optimistic. And in the worst case, git is heavily decentralized by design so you’re one git remote add && git push away from moving. Migrating issues would be a bit more of a hassle, but surely there are solutions. And CI is not easily portable, but not a huge amount of work to convert to other formats.

    • Justin@lemmy.jlh.name
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      Codeberg can automatically migrate code and issues from Github using a personal access token iirc.

      Github packages and especially CI/CD are the real vendor locking antifeatures. All of the actions and scripts that your app/company depends on to run are completely locked to github.

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      SourceForge went to shit when it was the de-facto location for free and open source software, now GitHub is where Sourceforge used to be. When will people learn?

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    Has GitHub actually done anything negative? Your comments really just sound like fear mongering, I can’t see any actual issues.

    What is the bloat you’re referring to? The UI is clean and simple. Navigating and searching code is intuitive. The issue tracker is basic but reliable. Releases are clear. GitHub Actions are complex but featureful and incredibly useful. GitHub Packages are basic but useful. GitHub Copilot is damn impressive.

    • triarius@programming.dev
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      They scanned open source repos and made an LLM out of it. Now companies can profit from open source code without contributing back to the ecosystem. The only contribution they make is the money they pay to Microsoft for Copilot. So Microsoft is profiting from OSS code and stifling its community.

      Does this outweigh the free hosting of the code? IDK

      • CoderKat@lemm.ee
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        Now companies can profit from open source code without contributing back to the ecosystem.

        They could literally always do that. Unless they changed the software, most open source licenses required nothing but maybe a mention of attribution (which no one will ever read). And some don’t even require that. They could also always use FOSS tools to develop software without contributing anything back. How is Copilot different from that?

        And honestly, Copilot is pretty amazing for devs. Why would I care that Microsoft profits off it when it benefits us too? While I love FOSS and all else equal would choose it every time, it’s unreasonable to expect everything to be free and open source. People have to make a living somehow and open source rarely pays the bills.

        I’m not sure how Microsoft is stifling the community either. They seem to have been running GitHub great and they’ve made a lot of great dev tools in recent years. I used to absolutely loath Microsoft, but these days they’re mostly alright in my book (at least from a developer PoV). Stuff like how they’ve handled GitHub, creation of WSL, VS Code, etc have all been great.

        • philm@programming.dev
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          yeah mostly (apart from big corporate and all the related issues), most of the stuff feels a little bit bulky/sluggy because of the overuse of web-technology (say Teams or VS Code (while being a great editor there are much faster ones)).

          But Github itself is quite convenient for me to use for open source (and for work at that)…

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        I agree with the other comment. It’s Open source after all, they could’ve just crawled the web otherwise.

        Private repos on the other hand is a different story.

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        I write open source code because I want tools to exist that make the world better, coding AI allow me to make better tools faster so I’m very happy if they used some of my code to train it.

        I’ve saved hours of research and key poking thanks to AI, these early ones are just the start especially as people use them to help make everything needed to create better ones. We’ll get to the point where writing a new floss tool will be as easy as describing it briefly.

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        They complied to the law they had to? Is this any different from other hosters?

        • rist097@lemmy.world
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          They had to do it, but this is the downside using a git server hosted in non neutral country. You never know when USA will decide to impose sanctions on a country for whatever reason.

          It is one of the reasons many European companies do not use Github, as it is USA based.

          • sirdorius@programming.dev
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            The only ‘neutral country’ is the middle of the ocean. Pretty hard to host a server out there. You host it in a different place, you have a different set of problems.

            • rist097@lemmy.world
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              Sure, but some countries are more neutral, hosting in Switzerland would be for sure better, while USA is probably the worst choice.

              And you wouldn’t need to worry about it if you could host your own server and be able to communicate with other servers, like Lemmy is doing, you get the best of both worlds

  • heartlessevil@lemmy.one
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    Bro that occurred years ago. Github and linkedin are both owned by Microsoft. It is a funnel from LinkedIn recruitment requiring Github requirements from the recruiters. Unfortunately nobody who is under 30 years old saw these dumb tools getting ripped off.

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    monopoly: the exclusive possession or control of the supply of or trade in a commodity or service.

    GitHub is not a monopoly: it has competition. If you’re upset about it’s market share, switch to GitLab, Bitbucket, or host your own instance. If you’re upset about people not being aware of the other options, be an advocate and spread awareness of the alternatives.

    • zlatko@programming.dev
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      It’s not a monopoly, but it’s still an oversized influence on the market. I think the poster is arguing that: when have you heard a recruiter ask you for your bitbucket account? But they will look at github.

        • sirdorius@programming.dev
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          Yep, ‘Github’ is just a placeholder. If Bitbucket had the biggest market share (god forbid) the recruiter would ask for your bitbucket.

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        I’ve put my gitlab link in my resume and it has never had anyone spark a question. Usually the recruiter isn’t concerned with it saying “github” so much as you try to answer it with something instead of a blank stare / left on read.

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    I’m very split between Github (currently) providing a really nice interface/collection/way to access all kinds of open source projects and the obvious ‘out-of-control centralisation’ by the mega corp Microsoft.

    It definitely got a little bit bloated the last years, but I still think it has a generally nice interface (browse code/review stuff, simple issue/PR system, simple way for CI via actions etc.).

    But I really hope something like https://forgefed.org/ takes off someday, I feel like if the barriers are much lower to get onto a different network with the same user (without registering etc.) decentralisation can lead to more innovation in this space (management of all the stuff that Git doesn’t manage itself, like issues, PRs etc.).

    The beauty of Git though is that it’s decentralized, so you can just mirror it on Github while mainly using a different platform. If you want a bigger userbase interacting/contributing with your project you’ll allow PRs and issues there and if not just add a link to the README that points to the platform you’re using…

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    No, I don’t see how GitHub it turning into LinkedIn. Everything you said are definitely new things GitHub is doing but none of them are things LinkedIn does. LinkedIn is pretty much just Facebook with career applications built-in.

    • sizeoftheuniverse@programming.devOP
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      I am not saying they are competing on the same niche. I am saying both sites started well, and they transformed into something worse, profiting by their monopoly on their specific markets.

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        It sounds like your issue is with capitalism rather than GitHub. The same logic is applicable to many corporations.

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    Honestly, as others have mentioned, I don’t agree its bloated. If anything, its actually missing a few features (like the ability to bulk change many repos with the same issue tags). Also, I like some of the new updates that are being released.

    It doesn’t run slowly in ANY way.

    Furthermore, Sourceforge used to be the monopoly, and honestly, that was FAR more bloated. Projects will be found on any site, if its interesting. I don’t remember ever searching for projects explicitly using Github search (I only use Google). A good project will show up anywhere.

    • philm@programming.dev
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      Well I feel like all the “modern” SPA stuff that got recently added, certainly adds “some” kind of bloat on top, it’s not as snappy anymore as it once was, but I think most of the stuff is improving QoL, so I think it’s reasonable…

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        I’d rather not have to register on every individuals instance for every project, for bug reporting, discussion, or simple changes.

        On github it’s easy for me to contribute and communicate. On other platforms, not.

        • exu@feditown.com
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          There’s work to have instances federate, similar to how Mastodon or Lemmy work. And the admin could also enable Oauth2 login with GitHub and GitLab for easier access.

        • shagie@programming.dev
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          You could set up a mailing list for the project and pass around email patches.

          git send-email and git am are core parts of the functionality.

          While https://github.com/torvalds/linux does exist, the workflow for the various modules is described in https://github.com/torvalds/linux/blob/master/MAINTAINERS and the PR bot that shows up on pull requests in the repo: https://github.com/torvalds/linux/pull/782

          … and email is a federated protocol that is resistant to censorship that is associated with having a single server hosting the content.

          • Kissaki@feddit.de
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            Did you reply to the wrong comment?

            I was talking as a user or contributor.

            • shagie@programming.dev
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              If the open source project is managed with local repos and patches are sent via email for consideration and integration, one doesn’t need to register remotes for each individual’s instance of the repo for each project.

              With a bit of adjustment to the “how this works” for the workflow (rather than relying upon GitHub or Gitlab or any other centralized repo), git shines as a distributed version control system that is enabled with git send-email and git am.

              The repo can be published to any of the hosting sites, but the workflow for changes, bug reporting, and discussion happens over email rather than via the implementation specific aspects of one hosting site or another.

              There won’t be the issue of “this repo got taken down from {host} because it was owned by someone logging in from a sanctioned country.”

              Yes, centralized hosting solutions make it easy to do these things… but the federated and distributed way to avoid them is hosting independence by managing the project through email.

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    I wouldn’t say it’s a new LinkedIn, but it’s definitely a defacto monopolio. It pains be that Cargo (the official rust packaging system) is so integrated with it. My own personal hobby projects are self-hosted on a gittea instance right now, but I still have a github account to contribute to a friend of mine’s project which is, sadly, hosted there.

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    Hi! I am new to the programming world, and everything involved. What do you think about gitlab? Many people are using it instead Github. Also I heard about Codeberg, but I dont know anything about it :)

    • rist097@lemmy.world
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      Advantage of Github over Gitlab is code discoverability. My organization hosts Gitlab instance but I would still rather host my open source project on Github instead, because its impossible to collaborate on Gitlab with external users who dont have an account on our instance.

      Once there is a federation feature similar to Lemmy, I would be happy to host everything there.

      • Jack3G@sh.itjust.works
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        1 year ago

        This could be what you’re looking for. Their main implementation is a gitea fork, but I’ve seen mentions of gitlab as well. Unfortunately I don’t think github would ever consider being compatible, that would just lose them users.

        • rist097@lemmy.world
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          1 year ago

          Thanks. There is also a Gitlab issue requesting this feature, which I am tracking.

          It needs to reach a polished state before organizations and university adapt it. So something like what you linked probably wont fly.

      • MagicalVagina@kbin.social
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        1 year ago

        You can use Gitlab exactly the same as GitHub though if you use the hosted Gitlab. I have multiple of my open source projects on Gitlab.com and everyone can access.

        • rist097@lemmy.world
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          Well not really, you would need an account in the organization in order to create issues, pull requests for a privately hosted instance. You can see the public repository but apart from cloning you cannot do anything else.

          While Gitlab.com is centrally hosted, not much different than Github, you still cannot communicate with other Gitlab hosted servers.

          • MagicalVagina@kbin.social
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            1 year ago

            Ah yes this I agree. But it’s not like it’s different on GitHub. I guess I got confused because you said “Advantage of Github over Gitlab is code discoverability.”.
            While no it’s the same? There is no advantage for GitHub

    • Slotos@feddit.nl
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      1 year ago

      https://sr.ht/

      Gitlab adheres to a “one tool for all the jobs” philosophy and tends to be a performance mess for the end user. Every time I had to use it, I wanted not to.

      SourceHut is a counterexample to claims of monolith superiority gitlab makes. Whether it will continue to be that is an open question, but right now it’s quite a joy to use.

    • jmacc93@programming.dev
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      1 year ago

      Every time I have to try to find things on gitlab I have a generally harder time doing so than on github. Maybe I’m just used to github’s layout, but gitlab’s just seems awkward to me. Also, I think non-tech-savy people will inevitably be confused by having to click “deployments” to get to releases; and on release pages, below where you actually download files, it always says “evidence collection”, which sounds really ominous (for end users)

        • JackbyDev@programming.dev
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          1 year ago

          Just check it out, it has an open source base unlike GitHub. If you don’t like it, that’s fine, but like you do t even want to try it now?

    • stevecrox@kbin.social
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      Gitlab marketing docs heavily mislead you on its capabilities. Technically they are correct, but the way something works is reality isn’t often useful (epic boards are a great example).

      This would be ok, but It’s really tightly integrated and doesn’t provide means for external tools to hook into it usefully.

      For example I think GitLabs CI is the worst on the market but if you integrate another CI you don’t have a means to feedback information into Gitlab.

      • MagicalVagina@kbin.social
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        1 year ago

        For example I think GitLabs CI is the worst on the market but if you integrate another CI you don’t have a means to feedback information into Gitlab.

        You can do almost everything with the Gitlab API so I’m curious what issue you had.
        I’m also not sure why “Gitlab CI is the worst on the market”? I really like in particular that I can have my own gitlab-runner on any machine.

        • stevecrox@kbin.social
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          1 year ago

          I want a build job to be triggered when a merge request is raised/changed to verify merge requests. Primarily I want it to comment/annotate changes so peer review focusses on logic and warnings are clear.

          I can do this with Concourse, Circle, Jenkins and Github Actions on Azure Devops, Bitbucket Cloud, Bitbucket Server & Github. All Gitlab can tell you is pass/fail, which was good in 2003 but seriously lacking in 2023.

          Similarly I want the ability to trigger a release and supply a desired version for the release (or someway to achieve that since our projects follow semantic versioning).

          The release DSL is incomplete and could not work on server/cloud last time I used it. The page claims it can do alot but there is a hole in it and even the writer clearly knew.

          I want the ability to specify multiple reusable pipelines, in a central place. This is not possible in cloud.

          Lastly I would like to have multiple potential pipelines in a repository (e.g. smoke test and release). You can hack this in via variables. This will/won’t work depending specifically on the runner for your job. if self hosted or cloud you’ll notice different parsing behaviour depending on what host it runs on. This is shocking.

          I have an email somewhere where I went through every GitLab CI DSL and documented which didn’t consistently work, which only worked consistently on cloud and which only worked on server. Also things like release that are broken on both.

          The only way to make it work is to use multi stage docker builds and if your doing that build bot and a bash script would be better.

          • MagicalVagina@kbin.social
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            1 year ago

            All of what you said seems completely doable to me.

            Primarily I want it to comment/annotate changes so peer review focusses on logic and warnings are clear.

            You can. See https://docs.gitlab.com/ee/ci/variables/predefined_variables.html

            CI_PIPELINE_SOURCE

            How the pipeline was triggered. Can be push, web, schedule, api, external, chat, webide, merge_request_event, external_pull_request_event, parent_pipeline, trigger, or pipeline

            You have full access to the API and can do whatever you want in the MR too.

            I want the ability to specify multiple reusable pipelines, in a central place. This is not possible in cloud.

            You can, with CI templates. Templates can be in a completely different repository

            Lastly I would like to have multiple potential pipelines in a repository (e.g. smoke test and release).

            I do have different pipelines for staging and production in my projects with no issue.

            • stevecrox@kbin.social
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              1 year ago

              Try to do it and get back to me.

              For extra fun try to do it in cloud and server, you’ll realise some stuffis server only, some cloud only and the docs don’t tell you which one is true

              • MagicalVagina@kbin.social
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                1 year ago

                I’m only using the hosted version, it works. I do have a separate gitlab-runner in GCP at the moment though that is working fine.
                If something doesn’t work for you I suggest creating a ticket?

    • Kissaki@feddit.de
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      1 year ago

      We use gitlab at work.

      If you’re going for hosted, I’d always use github (userbase, UI, free features set). If you’re self hosting, gitlab is a good alternative. Their heavy promotion of and focus on full chain into managed cloud can be irritating and annoying though.

      Gitlab has a free tier too. If you’re curious, try it out.

  • digdilem@feddit.uk
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    1 year ago

    Same has happened in recent versions of Gitlab. Lots of feature creep and UI changes that seem non-intuitive (at least for me)