On Aug 23, 2016, at 01:22 PM, Nick Coghlan wrote: >You noticed that, too, huh? :)
Oh yes! Mailman 3 is hosted on GitLab, and I host almost all my personal projects there, so I also get their newsletter. >While the update makes me even more keen to move some of our work projects >away from GitHub and back to GitLab (which we were already considering for >reasons related to GitHub's limited access control management options for >private repos), I didn't see anything that made me go "Yes, we absolutely >need this for CPython". Agreed, for now. Of course, friendly competition is always good, and I use GitHub for plenty of things, but I do really like GitLab. Some things are better/easier on one or the other hosting platform, but for CPython, I think much more important to get us in git soon, and we can fairly easily migrate to a different hosting platform later if we want. We already have a python-devs group and a python unofficial mirror, which I think we should keep up-to-date as we complete the move to GitHub. >After all, GitLab's "migrate away from GitHub" features are hardly going to >get *worse* over time, so the risk of CPython actually getting *stuck* on >GitHub is very low. That means the main persistent workflow changes in the >current migration are moving code review away from the issue tracker and into >the repository management system, enabling bots to handle certain mundane >review tasks (checking for CLA signatures, running the tests) and switching >to self-service management of SSH keys for client authentication. +1 of course. It'll be a huge, good change for our workflow. I know that switching to git will make *me* more motivated to start contributing again. Cheers, -Barry
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