On 12 Sep 2013, at 03:01, Roland Haas <[email protected]> wrote:

> Signed PGP part
> Hello all,
> 
> >> For what it is worth, this is only true for private repositories.
> >> For public repositories it is unlimited.  We use BitBucket for
> >> both Enzo and yt, which have more than five committers each.
> > 
> >> https://bitbucket.org/enzo/ https://bitbucket.org/yt_analysis/
> > 
> >> Both of these are managed under "Team" accounts, where
> >> individuals retain their own accounts but can belong to a
> >> collective team organization, manage repositories under that
> >> team, and so on.
> Thank you both Barry and Matthew. This is good news, I had not
> realized there that this only applies to private repos or that there
> is academic licensing.
> 
> Yours,
> Roland
> 
> - -- 
> My email is as private as my paper mail. I therefore support encrypting
> and signing email messages. Get my PGP key from http://keys.gnupg.net.
> 

To summarise, my understanding is that BitBucket allows unlimited users for 
public repositories (our case), and the number of users for private 
repositories depends on the type of account.  Academic accounts (which need a 
unique academic email address, which cannot be associated with any other 
bitbucket account) can have unlimited private repositories, whereas "normal" 
accounts are limited to 5 unless you pay money.  This is better than Github, 
which does not allow any private repositories at all unless you pay money.

I created both "einsteintoolkit" and "cactus" BitBucket team accounts a while 
ago and put some Git mirrors of the current SVN repositories there for testing.

-- 
Ian Hinder
http://numrel.aei.mpg.de/people/hinder

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