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 se...@matveenko.ru wrote:
On Wed, Dec 12, 2012 at 5:27 PM, John McKown
john.archie.mck...@gmail.com 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: se...@matveenko.ru
github: http://lnkfy.com/1
linkedin: http://lnkfy.com/S
--
--