I just found http://www.indefero.net/ . Company backed and GPL code. Someone with more insight should have a look. Mike On Dienstag 11 Mai 2010 21:29:47 Jeff Mitchell wrote: > We just had a discussion in #kde-git where, essentially, we all voiced > our hesitations about going with Gitorious at this point. I know the > Shortcut guys are in a tough position, but realistically speaking: > > * The code has seen only a handful of commits over the past two months > * Questions on the mailing list are not promptly attended to > * Merge requests for the software have been rotting for very long > periods of time > * The IRC channel is most often a dead zone > * The permission system is still not robust enough, and request for > enhancements go unanswered > > I say all this a someone who has Gitorious set up at work and has people > using it...I'm fearful for its future there, and certainly don't think > given the current situation that KDE switching onto it at this point is > a wise move. Granted, none of us are privy to the Board's discussions, > but we do know that the cost is high. > > The cost will be even higher if we switch to it, even a self-hosted > instance, and end up having to maintain it all ourselves. It is *not* an > easy bit of software to administer. > > This all said, we discussed a few alternatives in #kde-git and I was > asked to put them on this list for discussion: > > ---- > > Git hosting: > * Gitolite -- Gitolite is a rewrite of the venerable Gitosis repository > management tool. It has some nice advanced features like advanced ACL > handling, even on a per-branch basis. This could allow some super nice > things like, for instance, the web site: imagine that we have a test web > server and a production web server. The www repository could have two > branches, one for test and one for production, where work is performed > by a larger number of people on the test branch and those with > appropriate access can pull those changes over to the production branch. > > See http://github.com/sitaramc/gitolite#readme for more details. > > Merge requests: > Nothing but GitHub and Gitorious currently handle merge requests per se, > but Reviewboard's git handling is getting better. > > Git browsing: > cgit -- Gnome's site uses cgit -- see http://git.gnome.org/browse/ It's > really not that bad. That's one option. > > Redmine -- Redmine is a vaguely SourceForge-ish project management > solution that has features for home pages, wiki, documents, files, issue > tracking, code browsing, and more all built in. You can see a screen > shot of its issue tracker tracking itself (i.e. viewing a Git pull of > the redmine repository) here: http://i40.tinypic.com/1zvx4hv.png > > It's not the nicest thing in the world, but it's clean and simple, and > can do diffs and effective browsing. > > Another really nice thing about Redmine is that its issue tracking is > pretty decent (check out http://www.redmine.org/projects/redmine/issues > ). Plus, it has built-in support for changing issue state based on merge > commits, which is super nice. > > ---- > > At this point, if I had to pick a solution for us, I'd say Gitolite + > Redmine, with migration of our Bugzilla over to Redmine. I think this > provides a pretty nice capability, allowing each project to have its own > issues, wiki, news, repository, and so on yet still be a part of the KDE > whole. Clean separation, yet still unity. We could even still throw cgit > on top, allowing for multiple ways of browsing code depending on > individuals' preferences. > > I'm willing to set up and host any of these tools on my server (which is > an official KDE server) if anyone wants to trial them. > > --Jeff _______________________________________________ Kde-scm-interest mailing list Kde-scm-interest@kde.org https://mail.kde.org/mailman/listinfo/kde-scm-interest