I selfhost a forgejo instance, which is the underlying framework for codeberg (and they maintain forgejo).
Federation is in the works, they say.
If i was going to have any projects public, this is where i would do it.
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I selfhost a forgejo instance, which is the underlying framework for codeberg (and they maintain forgejo).
Federation is in the works, they say.
If i was going to have any projects public, this is where i would do it.
I also selfhost forgejo and im really happy with it. (I moved from GitLab.) Personally I cant wait for federation (which GitLab is also working on). If it were so be implemented, then ppl could actually contribute so projects on selfhosted git servers, which I am really looking forward so.
Federation like that sounds perfect, and would definitely help out for the current situation I see where projects are officially on, say, Gitlab but still accept pull requests on GitHub. I'm sure that involves some annoying manual process (although should be less hassle than the code review!)
I've also got a self hosted Forgejo instance. I'm patient and really excited by the future prospects of federation.
It'll be really nice to keep my code and tooling entirely within my home while still being able to share and collaborate with others though those federated exchanges of community & code.
Newbie here, what is the difference between code berg and forgejo?
Codeberg is the hosted forgejo instance from codeberg E.V. Codeberg ev also forked gitea 2022 and spearheads the development of forgejo
Forgejo is a git server, forked by Codeberg from Gitea after Gitea got bought up by a for-profit corporation.
Codeberg is a non-profit organization which runs a public instance of the Forgejo git server.
You can make an account on Codeberg.org, save repos there, and contribute to other repos, like on Github. Or you can run your own Forgejo instance to use either privately or open up to public use.
Gitea wasn't bought, the people running the project held the trademarks and decided to move the trademarks to a new for-profit entity they created in order to provide git related services for some fee structure that isn't clear to me. Largely it's CI/CD service that they are looking to sell.
Similar situation, and I follow the Forgejo development. I've found the codeberg individuals that I've interacted with to be very good at what they do. They give me confidence in the wider platform.
The interface is the best I know of, a lot like pre-Microsoft github. Especially important to me is that It doesn't intercept my browser's built-in shortcuts like github now does, or require javascript or bury things under submenus like gitlab does.
The promise of federation is appealing, too.
I plan to use it for new public projects, and might even move my old ones over.
Good UI, good name, good ethics. I like it. And theyre working on federation
What does federation for git mean?
You can open an issue using an account from a different forgejo instance. You can comment from your lemmy account, ideally you can also subscribe to issues and releases from lemmy/mastodon
Oh, that sounds great!
It's pretty good, open source and they have a nice UI, I've never used it for my own projet (I use Gitlab) but I'm following some projects on there and it is always better than github!
I just discovered it recently, and started adding stuff. I feel a lot more comfortable about my coffee here than other places. I like it!
However, I'm worried that future employers may ask me to "share my GitHub" with them, leading me to try to explain to a potential employer what "a Codeberg" is.
Do you want to work for someone that doesn’t understand there are alternatives to GitHub? Label it as your portfolio or VCS on your resume and share the link instead of GitHub when asked. If it causes issues( that’s a great weed out on your end.
Just say and lable it as your public git repo.
ex: "Here's my public git repo."
Same. I thought about setting up a mirror on Github, just so I wouldn't run into a situation like that.
Pretty easy to set up a remote for GitHub in Gitea.
I like it a lot. Much better UI than GitHub and perfectly reliable and not directly feeding all my code into Microsoft's license violations. I also recently heard that you can't search through GitHub repos anymore without an account, so that's another reason for Codeberg to me.
Two things to be aware of:
From their terms of service:
They (private repos) 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.
I'd guess that most private git repositories are small enough to fall under this category (unless you track large non-text files in git). This also seems like a very reasonable policy, considering that they're a non-profit and they want to focus on supporting open source projects.
Little bastion of hope for tbh. Clean UI, open source, supported by a nonprofit, community driven and work towards ActivityPub federation on it.
I'm over proprietary and profit driven products focused on trapping me in their ecosystems.
I've been using it heavily for the last 6 months. It's been great, considering it's running on a shoestring, volunteers, etc.
Also, this: https://drewdevault.com/2022/03/29/free-software-free-infrastructure.html
Yeah i like it besides anything that isn't owned by big corpo like MS is a plus. Seems to have good ethics / privacy policy and is also community led . and they are working on federation yeah definetly good. Will suggest switching op .
I love it enough to donate. Forego is an awesome project.
Using it right now. The uptime back then was abysmal, the sites are often unresponsive. They seems to have fixed those things now, I have migrated all of my active project to codeberg from gitlab now.
Had no trouble getting access to their CI, my request took less than a day for my one AGPL-licensed project. Also has a weblate instance. In the past the UI could have been a little laggy with large diffs but that improved somehow. Not too many 3rd party integrations supported though and not as feature-rich as Gitlab, but still very friendly UX that'd probably cover your GitOps needs in 90% of the cases.
They also got really good ToS, see tosdr.
Thanks, I didn't know this website
I recommend you to explore sourcehut as well, if you're not afraid of something different to gitlab/github workflows.
I've been using it for a while, can highly recommend it. Migrating stuff from github was quite easy.
Moved most of my stuff there a while ago, has been pretty great.
If you're looking for collaboration or audience I'd stay with github. It's too prevalent to skip for alternative niche with account signup and that elsewhere as a barrier.
If that's no concern to you it's viable.