The short answer, for Jeffrey Walton, is Yes. The reference codebase has been and will be hosted with git on Savannah. It is only up to 7.0.0 presently. I am going to bring in changes originally proposed for 7.0.1, and then start on a 7.0.2 release with additional patches and fixes from that. Afterward I want to focus on correctness for current gcc compilers and c++ standards (7.1).
The question to ask is how commoncpp/ucommon relates to current c++ standards and practices. The original vision for this included supporting embedded use cases and smaller code sizes than the standard library and templating offered. uCommon, in particular, investigated the use of templating to do shallow wrappers and generic type magic around concrete classes, rather the wholesale code regurgitation found in stl, thereby making code generation smaller and separation easer in shared library and plugin uses. Nobody else seemed to go down this path. Common C++/uCommon also uses a different and simpler way of producing and managing threads while including a whole bunch of thread related and sychronization classes that are normally missing in c++. These too should be considered in respect to how this library will continue to relate to the c++ standard. I am not yet sure if the lists still recognize my email address, so I guess we will find out now.