On Wednesday, June 17, 2020 05:58 PM IST, Johnny Billquist <[email protected]> wrote:
> On 2020-06-17 14:24, Mayuresh wrote: > > On Wed, Jun 17, 2020 at 02:07:46PM +0200, Johnny Billquist wrote: > >> I could go on about my objects, and the possible risks and issues, but I > >> think if this rant isn't enough to start you thinking, I doubt any more > >> text > >> from me will change anything. > > > > Risk management is important. Given we do that, utilizing such services to > > our benefit isn't so bad - for example as a mirror rather than primary > > storage. > > > > I mean I'd not completely hold myself back from using such services, if I > > can benefit from them, as long as I am not being critically dependent on > > them. > > What is the benefit then? Now I'm being curious... > > I mean, if we would be having the primary repository our self, and just > have them be a mirror. Just a simple way of adding resources? Is the > load of people checking the code out that big? How much can we save > there then? Or what other benefits do you see? do you think high-quality, performant hardware and high-volume, quality network connectivity turns out to be as low-cost as "free" (service from github)? i second that idea of having a budget git repository on hardware owned by "the netbsd foundation" which is mirrored by github and takes care of all the load of all developers checking in/out their code. the project could save big-time on costs, have a safe primary repository of all the code, while reaping all the benefits of a large corporation offering free high-performance services to be at the developer-facing end.
