You may also want to look at atlassian.com if you're doing enterprise work. They specialize in "behind-the-firewall" solutions. On Dec 12, 2012 7:47 AM, "Serge Matveenko" <[email protected]> wrote:
> On Wed, Dec 12, 2012 at 5:27 PM, John McKown > <[email protected]> wrote: > > Thanks. I had forgotten that encrypting data tends to "randomize" it and > so > > it wouldn't compress very well. What I was thinking was of was GitHub's > > private repositories perhaps containing company proprietary software. It > > might be attractive to a startup which recruits non-local talent and does > > its work via the Internet rather than in an office building. In that > case, > > my paranoia would kick in about the possibility of GitHub being "hacked" > and > > my source stolen or compromised. I guess in this case, it would be wise > for > > the startup to run a GitHub Enterprise virtual server on its own > equipment. > > Or, like I do, have a "git" subdirectory on a machine which contains the > > various repositories and is accessible only via SSH. I.e. keep it "in > house" > > with external developers having an SSH connection to the "git server". > > You may be interested in using gitolite > https://github.com/sitaramc/gitolite to host your repositories "in > house". The setup is easy and you will get many features that github > has. > > > -- > Serge Matveenko > mailto: [email protected] > github: http://lnkfy.com/1 > linkedin: http://lnkfy.com/S > > -- > > > --
