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Comparison of source-code-hosting facilities

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

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A source-code-hosting facility (also known as forge software) is a file archive and web hosting facility for source code of software, documentation, web pages, and other works, accessible either publicly or privately. They are often used by open-source software projects and other multi-developer projects to maintain revision and version history, or version control. Many repositories provide a bug tracking system, and offer release management, mailing lists, and wiki-based project documentation. Software authors generally retain their copyright when software is posted to a code hosting facilities.

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General information

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More information Name, Developer ...
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Features

More information Name, Code review ...
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Version control systems

More information Name, CVS ...
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Popularity

More information Name, Users ...

Discontinued: CodePlex, Gna!, Google Code.

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Specialized hosting facilities

The following are open-source software hosting facilities that only serve a specific narrowly focused community or technology.

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Former hosting facilities

  • Alioth (Debian) – In 2018, Alioth has been replaced by a GitLab based solution hosted on salsa.debian.org. Alioth has been finally switched off in June 2018.
  • BerliOS – abandoned in April 2014[64]
  • Betavine – abandoned somewhere in 2015.
  • CodeHaus – shut down in May 2015[65]
  • CodePlex – shut down in December 2017.
  • Fedora Hosted – closed in March 2017[66]
  • Gitorious – shut down in June 2015.
  • Gna! – shut down in 2017.
  • Google Code – closed in January 2016, all projects archived. See http://code.google.com/archive/.
  • java.net – Java.net and kenai.com hosting closed April 2017.
  • Phabricator – wound down operations 1 June 2021, all projects continued to be hosted with very limited support after 31 August 2021.[18]
  • Tigris.org – shut down in July 2020.[67]
  • Mozdev.org - shut down in July 2020.
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See also

Notes

  1. Anyone can submit Bug Reports without logging in.
  2. Limited to 5 users on free plan (see Pricing – bitbucket.org)
  3. Self hosted version is known as BitBucket Server and only supports Git repositories
  4. Builds are run in Docker containers
  5. Codeberg is only for public open-source code, private repositories exist but are not officially permitted except as needed to support FLOSS projects
  6. Requires one to log in to report a Bug.
  7. Has an open source FOSS edition and commercial Enterprise Edition
  8. Currently only available for security vulnerability updates
  9. Ubuntu
  10. Private repositories can be used to set up a project before going live. However, SourceForge requires that the project remains open source. See SourceForge Support.
  11. GitLab is not fundamentally organized by projects, so the count is somewhat difficult.
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References

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