Isn't the Elasticsearch feature just for EE? Or are you planning to release it for CE too? I just upgraded to 8.4.4 and didn't see any of it (not that I look so well).
Hi, I'm planning on migrating away from stash to most likely gitlab in the next few weeks. One thing that keeps coming back among my team is where is the real search power. I followed the work your team did with EE and Elastic and was curious if you will plan to back port it into CE?
all i read is that it's EE, but will it be brought to CE is the bigger question, and how does that fall into your current roadmap for upcoming releases in CE?
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Follow up, do you plan on adding any code intelligence to your EE search, such as being done by the team at sourcegraph.com?
The way I see it is like this...
github, sourcegraph & gogs all are missing the ability to categorize repositories in groups. This is a must when you have a lot of repos, thanks for including it.
gogs = super fast, minimalistic but solid.
github = $$$$$$
stash/bitbucket = nickel and diming over features & $$$$
sourcegraph = not mature enough, missing code intelligence for majority of the languages we use
gitlab ce = great feature set, bad search and some performance struggles (that i see you are addressing)
in the end, we are likely to go with your product, but the search in CE almost hurts my feelings to use. (me: search for "test" in all repos: 0 results. search for "test" in specific repo: 1 result. me: scratch my head)
all in all, really excited to kick stash out and give my team a deeper feature set to play with.
Thanks for taking the time to come here, I'm late to the party.
I'm at Sourcegraph. We have code intelligence for more languages coming soon and have improved performance, etc., by quite a bit lately. Email me for more info (we're waiting a bit longer to announce the improvements publicly).
Can you elaborate on nickle and diming over features? Most of the required features are built-in for Stash/Bitbucket Server. Code Search is on the roadmap and we are actively working on it.
I lost my mom to cancer almost two years ago. I read this in reddit [1] and I liked it: "She didn't lose the battle - the cancer didn't live on either. At worst it was a draw, at best she took that fucker down with her."
I'm nowhere near a ruby developer, so i don't understand how most of the things works, but had cero trouble installing gitlab. Even when it throws some strange (for me) errors on some gems, it was just a matter of googling to solve the problem.
Some years back i was able to tolerate when a webapp needed serious fiddling in a) apache configs, b) php configs and c) manual mysql database setup.
Nowaday i expect something to run and have as few steps to install as possible. It wasn't even so much the many steps in between but the stuff that just didn't work as given in the installation guide. Turned out that some answers were in the gitlab Troubleshooting Guide. And then some stuff just didn't work, because at that point resque was removed (if i remember correctly, i don't even know what resque is and i don't really care, tbh). Now, after this took me 2 hours to get it running, half a day was spent with a) log in, b) find something not working, c) google, d) log into server and fix, e) repeat.
I'm no ruby guy, too, but i would've thought this goes much smoother nowadays.
I was using Gitlab for 1 or 2 weeks back then, but when the password reset didn't work it really made me think if i want to go through all that again on the next major update. So i turned to gitblit (which i rejected before because it can't do pull requests).
Edit: Don't get me wrong, i liked the Gitlab interface, it's very polished and nice, and what was working was working fine. Still i wouldn't want to maintain it. Maybe it's all better now with 5.0 :)
I'm sorry to hear you had trouble installing GitLab before. Installation should be a lot better now. We replaced resque with sidekick. Also there are pre installed images available from http://bitnami.com/stack/gitlab
Ah, sounds great. I think you should really advertise those packages more! To be honest the 5.0 installation guide still looks terribly long. No way i would go through that again. BUT now there are packages.. hopefully for 5.0 soon.
To avoid confusion, blizzard recently added something called EPM (effective actions per minute). Those are the one who counts. APM can be spammed or increased a lot by, for example, selecting all the larva in all your hatcheries and making units pressing one key. Pro players have a constant ~200 APM, not only for those moments.
It's kind of hard to find stock on buyvm since everytime they got something new, it's selled soooo fast. Sometimes you can find some stock on their irc channel and their mailing list.
've been a customer since about a year ago and can't be happier.