gut
got
gut | got | |
---|---|---|
3 | 12 | |
321 | 128 | |
- | 0.8% | |
0.0 | 6.1 | |
about 2 years ago | 8 months ago | |
Go | Go | |
ISC License | GNU General Public License v3.0 only |
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.
gut
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Show HN: Gut – An easy-to-use CLI for Git
I'm starting to get confused with all the git clients/wrapper out there I first thought you would be https://github.com/sdslabs/gut/ or maybe https://github.com/tillberg/gut or https://github.com/quilicicf/Gut
Choosing a name is hard and all the gut ones are taken (haha...), but maybe at least choose one that isn't used multiple times for the same use case. You probably wrote kt for yourself and I name my programs however I like as well, but man you even registered a domain for it. Let's hope it finds more traction than all the other gut clients
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Show HN: A version control system based on rsync
This was exactly my use case for building gut, https://github.com/tillberg/gut. It's a daemon that wraps git, auto-committing changes for a tree and bidirectionally syncing them between N computers. The wrapped git is autorenamed from git to gut so that it can commit git folders. The gut tools are usable for exploring/manipulating history of this meta-repo, too. I saved myself from disaster a couple times with `gut checkout ...`.
Nowadays I use Syncthing for the same purpose (I learned about Syncthing when I did a Show HN for gut). Dropbox works reasonably well, too.
- Gut: Realtime bidirectional file synchronization based on Git
got
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Show HN: A version control system based on rsync
I've not heard the term "probabilistic tree" and I've having difficulty pulling up references. I suspect it's implemented by subpackage ptree[0]. Do you have resources on what makes probabilistic trees different from hash tables?
[0] https://github.com/gotvc/got/tree/master/pkg/gotkv/ptree
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CDC File Transfer
FastCDC is the same chunking algorithm used in Got.
https://github.com/gotvc/got
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SourceHut terms of service updates, cryptocurrency projects to be removed
Thanks for sharing RocketGit. This is the first time I've heard of it, and yes, it does look like a cool copyleft solution to self-hosted Git.
Another interesting option is Brendan Caroll's got[0], which allows sharing of repositories over INET256[1]. I'm sure there are other P2P approaches to Git, but this one just piqued my interest. Unfortunately it has a naming conflict with OpenBSD's Game of Trees[2].
[0] https://github.com/gotvc/got
[1] https://github.com/inet256/inet256
[2] https://gameoftrees.org/
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Show HN: Encrypted Git hosting should be easy
I work on a project which solves a similar use case.
https://github.com/gotvc/got
Got also does E2EE encryption, but it can additionally encrypt branch names from remote servers.
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What Comes After Git
I've been working on a project "Got". Which deals with the LFS problem, mentioned in the post.
https://github.com/gotvc/got
Got isn't really trying to do software version control better than Git. It's trying to make general purpose file versioning practical, with a workflow similar to Git's.
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Show HN: Let's build an end-to-end encrypted data store
In the same space is the key-value store underlying Got: GotKV. https://github.com/gotvc/got/tree/master/pkg/gotkv
It stores encrypted blobs in any content-addressed store, and provides a copy-on-write key-value store API.
- Got is like Git, but with an 'o'
- Show HN: Got is like Git, but with an 'o'
What are some alternatives?
Gut - Ein Gut git Fluss
cdc-file-transfer - Tools for synching and streaming files from Windows to Linux
envkey - Simple, end-to-end encrypted configuration and secrets management
backup - immutable backups so simple that unborkable
gut - A version control system with gut feeling.
forge - Work with Git forges from the comfort of Magit
gitless - A maintained fork of the simple git interface
Zenko - Zenko is the open source multi-cloud data controller: own and keep control of your data on any cloud.
git-remote-aws - encrypted git hosting should be easy
imsy - simple incremental pull of immutable large files
Gijzafiler-golang - A convenient and secure protocol for file sharing, suitable for AWS
git-branchless - High-velocity, monorepo-scale workflow for Git