Folks,
I’m looking for a self-hosted GitHub alternative that I can just plop into Portainer as a docker-compose and get working.
My main interest is in something that sort of works with GitHub - if there’s a way I can pull repos from GitHub into this self-hosted git using a webUI and maybe even push my changes to repos on GitHub, that would be nice. I’m not hard-and-fast on this though as this is mostly an experiment right now and I don’t know why I need this.
What are you folks using to host your super secret local code and why?
What are you folks using to host your super secret local code and why?
This obviously doesn’t help for the rest of your question, but for anything that I don’t want to open source for whatever reason, I just make a bare repo and push it to a folder on my server that has all my bare repos. Literally just git server on my LAN. Nothing fancy. No UI or anything, but I don’t use a UI for git anyway.
If you don’t have a server at home, you could do the same thing but to a folder on your local machine. That obviously means you will have no backup. But you will still have version control in case you want to revert something you did or refer back to an old version.
GitLab or GitTea
Forgejo. Gitlab will be overkill probably.
gitlab can be selfhosted
And is hilariously overkill for what OP seems to want. It’s a pretty large and heavy package that comes with a whole lot of (for OP unnecessary) features.
My experience was that they were definitely overkill until they weren’t, and I was glad to be comfortable in the UI when I wanted to start playing with more advanced features. Something like the sameersbn/gitlab docker image can get you started and grow with you a ton.
I’m using GItea and it’s been working great. Very easy to set up in docker.
Forgejo
Unfortunately not available on TrueNAS
Everything is you just must first learn docker
Why instead of gitea though? I thought the “for profit” stuff was only to provide the original developers of gitea the ability to provide paid support to commercial clients.
Another +1 for gitea. It works quite well and is easy to setup.
Obligatory check : are you sure you really need a forge? (that’s the name we use to designate tools like Github/Gitlab/Gitea/etc). You can do a lot with git alone : you can host repositories on your server, clone them through ssh (or even http with
git http-backend
, although it requires a bit of setup), push, pull, create branches, create notes, etc. And the best of it : you can even have CI/CD scripts aspost-receive
hooks that will run your tests, deploy your app, or reject the changes if something is not right.The only thing you have to do is to create the repos on your server with the
--bare
flag, as ingit init --bare
, this will create a repos that is basically only what you usually have in the.git
directory, and will avoid having errors because you pushed to a branch that is not the currently one checked. It will also keep the repos clean, without artifacts (provided you run your build tasks elsewhere, obviously), so it will make all your sources really easy to backup.And to discuss issues and changes, there is always email. :) There is also this, a code review tool that just pop up on HN.
And it works with Github! :) Just add a git remote to Github, and you can push to it or fetch from it. You can even setup hooks to sync with it. I publish my FOSS projects both on Github and Gitlab, and the only thing I do to propagate changes is to push to my local bare repos that I use for easy backups, they reach have a post-update hook which propagates the change everywhere it needs to be (on Github, Gitlab, various machines in my local network, which then have their own post-update hooks to deploy the app/lib). The final touch to that : having this
~/git/
directory that contains all my bare repos (which are only a few hundred MB so fit perfectly in my backups) allowed me to create agit_grep_all
script to do code search in all my repos at once (who needs elasticsearch anyway :D ) :#!/usr/bin/env bash # grep recursively bare repos INITIAL_DIR=$(pwd) for dir in $(find . -name HEAD -exec dirname '{}' \;); do pushd $dir > /dev/null git grep "$*" HEAD > /dev/null if [[ "$?" = "0" ]]; then pwd git grep "$*" HEAD echo fi popd > /dev/null done
(note that it uses
pushd
andpopd
, which are bash builtins, other shells should use other ways to change directories)I personally use gitea but there is also a community version of gitlab that has way more power than I need.
Gitea can import a repo from GitHub but I don’t know whether it can also push updates out as one never tried to do that.
I picked gitea as I didn’t need all of the extra power of gitlab and they were the first two options I found. I don’t deploy it using portainer but all of my stacks are set up as git repos in portainer and using the webhook feature it’ll auto pull and redeploy whenever I push to it
It now also comes with Gitea Actions and the Act Runner - in case this feature is relevant to you.
https://about.gitea.com/ is a great lightweight alternative that’s heavily inspired by GitHub.
I self-host Gitea and is pretty lightweight and low maintenance. Great solution!
I’m using Gitea. Pretty simple and a decent feature set.
Without knowing why you need a local GitHub like tool is almost impossible to suggest, but I know Gogo’s can keep a remote in sync if you need. Also there is a python tool to backup your GitHub account and or organisation
Have a look at Forgejo which is a soft fork run by a nonprofit organization of Gitea which is owned by a for-profit company.
It need very little system resources and still gives you all the common features you know from commercial Git hosting providers.
And yes, you can mirror existing Git repos using a web UI.
And forgejo runner is basically github actions, I just started automating a lot of my personal projects. (it’s in alpha state, but my basic actions haven’t had any problems)
I also recommend forgejo, I’ve been using it for a while for my personal projects and the ui is still beautiful while being a simple git server at the same time.
I also recommend forgejo. They are also working on adding a federation feature to forgejo just like Lemmy has!
What does federation do here? Will it sync repos? Or just users and comments?
I imagine users, comments and perhaps pull requests.
I’d probably just run gitlab and use the gitlab images, as that’s one of the solutions git recommends