staticman
Gitbucket
Our great sponsors
staticman | Gitbucket | |
---|---|---|
10 | 12 | |
2,371 | 9,062 | |
- | 0.2% | |
0.0 | 9.2 | |
about 2 months ago | 8 days ago | |
JavaScript | Scala | |
MIT License | Apache License 2.0 |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
staticman
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free-for.dev
Staticman - Staticman is a Node.js application that receives user-generated content and uploads it as data files to a GitHub and/or GitLab repository, using Pull Requests.
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Commenting system for Hugo
Staticman
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Add A Comment System To A Jekyll Blog Using Staticman - 1 / 2
Another possible solution to add dynamic content to a GitHub website is to use staticman. On the opposite of the previous solutions using external databases, staticman creates files in your repository, updating your website statically. It is free and open-source but not as straightforward to implement as disqus. The nice thing is that it will store all your comments in your git repository, so there is no risk of losing them.
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Setup Your Free Portfolio With A Blog Using GitHub Pages
This article is part of a series showing you how to quickly and freely build and host your own Jekyll blog on GitHub Pages. This series will also cover more advanced topics like adding a comment system directly in our code using Staticman and adding privacy-friendly but still free analytics using Umami.
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Build A Portfolio With A Blog Using GitHub Pages
We will also cover more advanced topics like adding a comment system directly in our code using Staticman and integrating free privacy-friendly analytics using Umami.
- Selfhosted open source alternative to GitHub/GitLab
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Show HN: I'm working on a open-source, self-host alternative to Disqus
I'm late to the game, but I'm surprised that no one has mentioned StaticMan yet:
https://github.com/eduardoboucas/staticman
Just uses Git(Hub) to triage and approve comments for your static sites, like Jekyll.
- Mardi Cuisine 20210302
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Disqus, the Dark Commenting System
Alternatives from my notes (never used them IRL):
* https://github.com/eduardoboucas/staticman
* https://github.com/schn4ck/schnack
Gitbucket
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Anyway to build my own github server at home for private use? I have hundreds of apps and want to keep them private
Gitbucket (https://gitbucket.github.io/)
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code snippets - what do you use?
GitBucket
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An Open Source apps Leads to XSS to RCE Vulnerability Flaws
Link: https://github.com/gitbucket/gitbucket
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GitHub incident 2022-03-23
Another self-hosted project in the space that i've seen was GitBucket, although it runs on the JVM (not necessarily a bad thing, just different from Go): https://gitbucket.github.io/
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Python For Everyone: Mastering Python The Right Way
Version control Systems eg. Github, Bitbucket, Gitbucket help in version control of your code and generally storage of your code. It can also serve as a visual reminder of the progress you make eg. on Github there is a monitoring system that shows how many days you are active on the platform.
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GitHub Down again 11/27/2021
> Git itself decentralizes source control, and yet we all want to use single-point-of-failure Github.
This is pretty much why both the organization that i work for, as well as i personally for my homelab use self-hosted GitLab instances: https://about.gitlab.com/
Though in practice there are a lot of other options out there, like Gitea (https://gitea.com/) and GitBucket (https://gitbucket.github.io/), though maybe less so for alternative source control systems (e.g. SVN has been all forgotten, however that's a personal pet peeve).
Not only that, but i also utilize my own Sonatype Nexus (https://www.sonatype.com/products/repository-oss?topnav=true) instances to great success: for doing everything from mirroring container images that i need from DockerHub (e.g. due to their proposed removal policies for old images and already adopted rate limits), to mirroring Maven/npm/NuGet/pip/Ruby and other dependencies, so i don't have to connect to things on the Internet whenever i want to do a new build.
That not only improves resiliency against things on the Internet going down (apart from situations where i need something new and it's not yet cached), but also improves performance a lot in practice, when only the company servers need to be hit, or my own personal servers in the data center for my cloud hosted stuff, or my own personal servers in my homelab for my own stuff.
Admittedly, all of that takes a bit of setup, especially if you happen to expose anything to the web in a zero trust fashion (permissible for my own stuff, as long as i'm okay with manually managing CVEs just to probably get hacked in the end anyways, but definitely not that any corporation with an internal network would want to do), but in my eyes that's still worth the effort, if you value being in control of your own software stack and the ecosystem around it.
It's probably much less worth it, if you don't see that as a benefit and don't want to be the one responsible for whatever project you're working on getting hacked, e.g. if you'd fail to patch out the recent GitLab CVE where exiftools could execute arbitrary code, which is probably the case if you don't have the resources to constantly throw at maintenance, in comparison to companies with 100x - 1000x more resources than you have for that sort of stuff.
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How to build a search engine with Ruby on Rails
> Rails doesn't scale? Github's the largest code repository site in the world.
You know, i think i understand both of the viewpoints here. Personally, i'd say that Rails doesn't scale as well as i'd expect it to. You can definitely build scalable systems in it, though you'll end up throwing a whole bunch of hardware resources, when compared to certain other languages and technology stacks, to serve similar load.
For example, right now i self-host a GitLab (https://about.gitlab.com/) instance for managing my code repositories, CI builds and so on. Even with just me using it (alongside some automated processes), it routinely eats up close to 4 GB of RAM, which in my case is an entire VPSes worth and costs me about 60 Euros a year with Time4VPS (affiliate link, if you'd like to check it out: https://www.time4vps.com/?affid=5294) but would cost me way more in AWS, GCP etc. One could argue that that's not too expensive, but not everyone earns a lot of money and running 10-20 VPSes does eventually build up, since i can't afford colocation and my residential homelab setup with a WireGuard tunnel to bypass ISP NAT with a proxy VPS is pretty slow, even if i can afford more storage, RAM and CPU power that way.
Compare that situation to projects like Gogs (https://gogs.io/), Gitea (https://gitea.com/), GitBucket (https://gitbucket.github.io/) and sourcehut (https://sourcehut.org/) - i'd argue that all of them on average use less CPU resources and memory for accomplishing similar tasks. For example, have a look here: https://forgeperf.org/
However, we cannot ignore the fact that using Ruby might have been exactly what allowed for quickly creating the functionality of GitLab and many other platforms and tools out there, GitHub included, so the choice between usable software and innovation in the near future and performant software possibly years from now is a tricky one.
There are probably good arguments for both, but noone can declare either to be better. Personally, i don't mind using Ruby, Python or even PHP when it makes sense and i don't need to worry about scalability from day 0.
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Selfhosted open source alternative to GitHub/GitLab
I saw this on HN and have been using it for the past two weeks for some small hobby projects. The docs are so-so but I got it set up in Docker without much hassle. I've since migrated completely from gitbucket. Great software - I encourage everyone to try it out.
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Scala projects to read through
A Git platform (like github or gitlab) written in Scala. Definitely not a pet project so might be fun to read the code. https://github.com/gitbucket/gitbucket
- Gitly: A light and fast GitHub/Gitlab alternative written in V lang (pre-alpha)
What are some alternatives?
utterances - :crystal_ball: A lightweight comments widget built on GitHub issues
Gitea - Git with a cup of tea! Painless self-hosted all-in-one software development service, including Git hosting, code review, team collaboration, package registry and CI/CD
remark42 - comment engine
Gogs - Gogs is a painless self-hosted Git service
commento - A fast, bloat-free comments platform (Github mirror)
Taiga - Agile project management platform. Built on top of Django and AngularJS
Clone-Wars - 100+ open-source clones of popular sites like Airbnb, Amazon, Instagram, Netflix, Tiktok, Spotify, Whatsapp, Youtube etc. See source code, demo links, tech stack, github stars.
Gitlab CI - GitLab CE Mirror | Please open new issues in our issue tracker on GitLab.com
pages-gem - A simple Ruby Gem to bootstrap dependencies for setting up and maintaining a local Jekyll environment in sync with GitHub Pages
Taiga-front - [DEPRECATED] Project management web application with scrum in mind! Build on top of Django and AngularJS (Frontend Code)
gp-blog - This project is a showcase of how to setup a portfolio website using GitHub Pages, with the main accent put on the blogging part.
Scoverage - Scoverage Scala Code Coverage Core Libs