So we've all mostly heard about GitHub, right? But did you know there are other thriving open source hosting platforms out there?
3 min read
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By Henrik Walker Moe, Hanne Olsen
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December 20, 2019
First and foremost, how about some GitHub history. Started in 2008 as Logical Awesome LLC, it changed its name to GitHub in 2010.
It also saw a huge milestone in July that same year, when it reached one million repositories created. GitHub was bought by Microsoft in June 2018 for $7.5 billion, a highly discussed topic that not all GitHub users were happy about. Today, GitHub has more than 40 million users in total, with 44 million repositories created in just the last year
All in all, GitHub has a pretty big share of the market. But it does have some great competitors. Let's take a look at a few alternatives to GitHub.
Let's start with Bitbucket.
Bitbucket has seen a lot of success over the last couple of years and just this year it announced achieving an impressive 10 million Bitbucket Cloud users. It started as a start-up back in 2008, and was aquired by Atlassian in 2010.
In the beginning, it only offered support for Mercurial projects, but rolled out Git support in 2011. Some of the really convenient features it boasts are its integrations with other Atlassian products. To support the whole product team and the development process, one can use Jira, Trello and Confluence together and have an impressing amount of features supporting the development.
Azure DevOps (formerly Team Foundation Server (TFS) and Visual Studio Team System) was released as a platform by Microsoft in 2013 and called "Visual Studio Online". It grew to host many of the features from TFS "as-a-service" on its platform, including work item tracking, extensibility via APIs and supporting different source control systems, e.g. Team Foundation Version Control, Git and more.
Azure DevOps Services' Continuous Integration and Continuous Delivery is using open source for its pipelines. This year Microsoft also released Azure DevOps Server 2019 which can be installed on-premises.
Azure DevOps, GitHub and Bitbucket are proprietary software.
GitLab on the other hand, is a product that both enables open source, and truly embodies its essence. The first commit was made by its founder Dmitriy back in 2011, in a house in Ukraine without running water. Gaining popularity it grew at a steady pace and became a corporation. GitLab Enterprise Edition launched in 2013, and by 2016 it had over 1000 contributers to the source code.
Hosted on its own platform, the code base is still open source and its GitLab Community Edition is distributed under the MIT Expat license.
The story of GitLab's origin to where it is today is a great success-story for its founders, its community and open source! ๐