I’ve almost completed the move of my business from GitHub’s corporate offering to self-hosted Forgejo.
Almost went with Gitea, but the ownership structure is murky, feature development seems to have plateaued, and they haven’t even figured out how to host their own code. It’s still all on GitHub.
I’ve been impressed by Forgejo. It’s so much faster than Github to perform operations, I can actually backup my entire corpus of data in a format that’s restorable/usable, and there aren’t useless (AI) upsells cluttering my UX.
For listeners at home wondering why you'd want that at all:
I want a centralized Git repo where I can sync config files from my various machines. I have a VPS so I just create a .git directory and start using SSH to push/pull against it. Everything works!
But then, my buddy wants to see some of my config files. Hmm. I can create an SSH user for him and then set the permissions on that .git to give him read-only access. Fine. That works.
Until he improves some of them. Hey, can I give him a read-write repo he can push a branch to? Um, sure, give me a bit to think this through...
And one of his coworkers thinks this is fascinating and wants to look, too. Do I create an SSH account for this person I don't know well at all?
At this point, I've done more work than just installing something like Forgejo and letting my friend and his FOAF create accounts on it. There's a nice UI for configuring their permissions. They don't have SSH access directly into my server. It's all the convenience of something like GitHub, except entirely under my control and I don't have to pay for private repos.
Almost went with Gitea, but the ownership structure is murky, feature development seems to have plateaued, and they haven’t even figured out how to host their own code. It’s still all on GitHub.
I’ve been impressed by Forgejo. It’s so much faster than Github to perform operations, I can actually backup my entire corpus of data in a format that’s restorable/usable, and there aren’t useless (AI) upsells cluttering my UX.