Dne úterý 16. srpna 2022 11:39:46 CEST jste napsal(a):
On Di, Aug 16 2022 at 11:15:08 +0200, Vojtěch Zeisek wrote:
I then wonder what is <https://gitlab.opensuse.org/> ...?
It requires infra login, so it's not available to mere mortals. It's currently used for our salt setup in infra. We were planning to migrate to code.o.o for that too, but we aren't done setting up CI/CD and migrating it over from gitlab runners.
And then there seems to be empty <https://gitlab.com/openSUSE> ... Ehhh... Why do we need all this, and <https://github.com/openSUSE/> and I-don't-know-what-else...?
gitlab.com one is mostly reserved space so that somebody malicious doesn't reserve it.
Regardless this important issue, this distribution of code elsewhere (not mentioning <https://bugzilla.opensuse.org/> and <https://build.opensuse.org/> - where to report which issue is always confusing for me) is terrible messy.
build.o.o isn't a good place to report issues for distributions, it's always gonna be bugzilla.
I really think we should have *one* location, preferably hosted by openSUSE, regardless what it is.
You forgot that openSUSE has svn.opensuse.org (it seems that the main page is broken, but you can still access repos on there just fine), and there was large presence on gitorious, you can have a look how many old repos are archived there, it's some cool history. You can also find some dead links on various wikis to Novell svn server, I think we lost some stuff when that died, like old artwork sources.
Hm, and I found some (probably abandoned) projects on SourceForge. What a diversity. ;-) Of course I don't wish to "command" developers where to host their code, but I guess everyone can imagine how chaotically the situation looks from outside. But this isn't point of this thread, sorry. -- Vojtěch Zeisek https://trapa.cz/ Komunita openSUSE GNU/Linuxu Community of the openSUSE GNU/Linux https://www.opensuse.org/