Around a year ago we drafted and implemented an open source policy
(http://osulibrary.oregonstate.edu/ets/guidelines) that says our default
stance is public repositories, both for projects in active development and
those we consider stable or orphaned. Weıre still at the beginning of the
process, so we still occasionally have some private repositories for those
projects with seriously specific scope or projects which we havenıt
invested the time into to make public (via using environment variables for
passwords and such.) However, if youıd like to see some of what weıve
published feel free to check us out - http://github.com/osulp .
Trey Terrell
Programmer Analyst
[log in to unmask]
Oregon State University Libraries
Corvallis, OR 97331
On 7/11/14, 11:59 AM, "Michael Schofield" <[log in to unmask]> wrote:
>Maybe we could share our decisions behind whether we keep our
>github/bitbucket repositories public or private. For the most part, I
>keep web and other non-sensitive code completely public. While there's a
>little red tape around releasing themes we've built as, ah, "packages,"
>intrepid diggers would find most of it on Github.
>
>Obviously all of our database connections / patron apis aren't a part of
>that, but I think largely the health [and independence] of #libweb stuff
>relies on sharing and good-natured ripping off. Even if the code is
>awful, I'm not too concerned with private repos.
>
>Michael
>// www.ns4lib.com
>
>-----Original Message-----
>From: Code for Libraries [mailto:[log in to unmask]] On Behalf Of
>Geoffrey Spear
>Sent: Friday, July 11, 2014 2:23 PM
>To: [log in to unmask]
>Subject: Re: [CODE4LIB] Software to track website changes?
>
>On Fri, Jul 11, 2014 at 1:01 PM, Francis Kayiwa <[log in to unmask]>
>wrote:
>>> Another +1 for Github Issues. If youıre uncomfortable putting the
>>> website in a public repo theyıve given us 50 private repositories for
>>> free and have asked us to spread the word. You can just head over to
>>> https://education.github.com/ and request a discount for your
>>> organization - theyıve been amazing to work with. =)
>>>
>>
>> I had (sample of one) to jump through so many hoops and still couldn't
>> convince them to give me what you got.
>>
>> FWIW All bitbucket needs is a .edu account and they will give you
>> unlimited repos. Sure not as *cool* as github but also has had less
>> bad press than github. ;-)
>
>We use bitbucket for both the free private repos and issue tracking here.
>
>In my experience, their issue tracker is not nearly as good at Github's
>(which isn't particularly surprising since they'd like you to pay for
>Jira.)
>
>Github's education discounts looked to me like they were aimed
>specifically at teaching rather than being free for any use by an
>educational institution when I looked at them, but I don't remember if
>there was specific language that gave me that impression or just vague
>"use github in the classroom!" marketing. I know Jira does actually
>distinguish between "use at an educational institution" and "classroom
>use" in their discounted vs. free policy.
>
>If I could get free Travis for Private Repos along with free Github I'd
>switch in a second; I don't know that the improved issue tracker alone
>would be worth the effort for me.
>--
>Geoffrey Spear
>Metadata Manager
>Health Sciences Library System
>University of Pittsburgh
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