Comment by static_noise
8 years ago
Migrating from GitHub to GitLab
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VYOXuOg9tQI
this adresses some of the issues.
8 years ago
Migrating from GitHub to GitLab
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VYOXuOg9tQI
this adresses some of the issues.
It doesn't solve the number one issue: External references to your project will all still point to github.com since that's where the project homepage (aka README.md) is.
If GitHub does get sold to MS and I end up moving to GitLab, I'll probably push one last commit to the GitHub repo adding a header saying the project has moved, with a link to the GitLab repo. It's not perfect, but it wouldn't be too bad.
Until MSFT/GitHub does what Sourceforge.net did - taking over project sites from projects which moved away and adding malware (adware/spyware) into those ;)
(I believe with all critique on Microsoft they aren't as bad, but want to exemplarize the risk)
2 replies →
I expect Google could be convinced to accept certain files or metadata in a README as equivalent to a 301 permanent redirect, meaning searches will remain effective. That would account for a lot, especially if Chrome begins to honour it.
Actually, the #1 issue is that everyone can easily file an issue/contribute in other ways at Github without having to create another account to do so.
You can sign in with your Github account to gitlab.com.