(note, the GitLab Enterprise Edition, which is provided to the public on gitlab.com, is (like GitHub) trade-secret, proprietary, vendor-lock-in software)
Isn’t EE source-available but proprietary? Plus if you just use the free tier you’re not using any enterprise features
Anyone got a commmand line tool change all my stuff? Because if I have to do change all the remotes all the time, for dozens of projects I’m going to lose my mind.
Also the migration on gitlab/codeberg looked like an amount of effort that doesn’t round down to zero.
Will things like setting up a “stack” in portainer on docker be able to use the github alternatives like codeberg? or will those kinds of things need to be rebuilt?
https://sfconservancy.org/GiveUpGitHub/ more seriously
Isn’t EE source-available but proprietary? Plus if you just use the free tier you’re not using any enterprise features
Anyone got a commmand line tool change all my stuff? Because if I have to do change all the remotes all the time, for dozens of projects I’m going to lose my mind.
Also the migration on gitlab/codeberg looked like an amount of effort that doesn’t round down to zero.
Will things like setting up a “stack” in portainer on docker be able to use the github alternatives like codeberg? or will those kinds of things need to be rebuilt?
They should™ work with any git repo hosted by any method right down to running git-http-backend as a CGI script I would have thought.
Noice, noice!
Thanks for your response, cousin!