Re: Github woes

2016-02-07 Thread Rikki Cattermole via Digitalmars-d

On 07/02/16 11:22 PM, Wobbles wrote:

Just curious, is there a backup plan for D if github.com goes by the
wayside?

Now that there seems to be community back-lash against it (at least on
reddit) maybe a contingency plan would be useful.

Obviously not today or tomorrow, but you never know what's down the road.


The only thing that we have hosted on Github is code.
So excluding integrations, we could move over to Bitbucket without too 
many problems.


I really wouldn't worry about it. Sure it would upset and add a lot of 
extra work but we sure won't be the only ones in that position.


Re: Github woes

2016-02-07 Thread ZombineDev via Digitalmars-d

On Sunday, 7 February 2016 at 10:22:35 UTC, Wobbles wrote:
Just curious, is there a backup plan for D if github.com goes 
by the wayside?


Now that there seems to be community back-lash against it (at 
least on reddit) maybe a contingency plan would be useful.


Obviously not today or tomorrow, but you never know what's down 
the road.


If Github goes down we would still continue to use git like 
nothing has ever happened. We would just need to switch to a 
different pull request code review system, like GitLab for 
example. Or we can use forum.dlang.org like LKML.


Github woes

2016-02-07 Thread Wobbles via Digitalmars-d
Just curious, is there a backup plan for D if github.com goes by 
the wayside?


Now that there seems to be community back-lash against it (at 
least on reddit) maybe a contingency plan would be useful.


Obviously not today or tomorrow, but you never know what's down 
the road.


Re: Github woes

2016-02-07 Thread Joakim via Digitalmars-d
On Sunday, 7 February 2016 at 10:27:02 UTC, Rikki Cattermole 
wrote:

On 07/02/16 11:22 PM, Wobbles wrote:
Just curious, is there a backup plan for D if github.com goes 
by the

wayside?

Now that there seems to be community back-lash against it (at 
least on

reddit) maybe a contingency plan would be useful.

Obviously not today or tomorrow, but you never know what's 
down the road.


The only thing that we have hosted on Github is code.
So excluding integrations, we could move over to Bitbucket 
without too many problems.


I really wouldn't worry about it. Sure it would upset and add a 
lot of extra work but we sure won't be the only ones in that 
position.


Unfortunately, there's a lot of valuable info in the PR comments, 
that would be lost if github.com went down.  Since D never 
switched from bugzilla to github for bugs, that wouldn't be an 
issue.  Hopefully, we could pull that github PR discussion from a 
backup at archive.org or someplace.


Re: Github woes

2016-02-07 Thread rsw0x via Digitalmars-d

On Sunday, 7 February 2016 at 10:48:49 UTC, Joakim wrote:
On Sunday, 7 February 2016 at 10:27:02 UTC, Rikki Cattermole 
wrote:

On 07/02/16 11:22 PM, Wobbles wrote:

[...]


The only thing that we have hosted on Github is code.
So excluding integrations, we could move over to Bitbucket 
without too many problems.


I really wouldn't worry about it. Sure it would upset and add 
a lot of extra work but we sure won't be the only ones in that 
position.


Unfortunately, there's a lot of valuable info in the PR 
comments, that would be lost if github.com went down.  Since D 
never switched from bugzilla to github for bugs, that wouldn't 
be an issue.  Hopefully, we could pull that github PR 
discussion from a backup at archive.org or someplace.


IIRC Gitlab(FOSS, can self-host) is capable of keeping a perfect 
in-sync mirror of all Github data, I'd have to go review if it's 
still capable of this so don't take my word on it.


Bye.


Re: Github woes

2016-02-07 Thread Nick Sabalausky via Digitalmars-d

On 02/07/2016 05:48 AM, Joakim wrote:


Unfortunately, there's a lot of valuable info in the PR comments, that
would be lost if github.com went down.  Since D never switched from
bugzilla to github for bugs, that wouldn't be an issue.  Hopefully, we
could pull that github PR discussion from a backup at archive.org or
someplace.


It'd be nice if we'd migrate to gitlabs. Not only is it really nice (I 
like it slightly better than github) but it doesn't have github's 
problems with being such a walled-garden.


There's also a github/gitlabs-like tool on sandstorm.io that sounds 
good, although I haven't tried it.