Status: Investigating reports of connectivity issues(status.github.com)
status.github.com
Status: Investigating reports of connectivity issues
https://status.github.com/messages/2017-08-21
44 comments
I like to think that unbalanced parens accumulate in the soul, just like incomplete sneezes. Ones fate in the next life (perhaps starting equipment) is determined in part by the number of un-matched left parens hanging over ones head at the moment of death.
I bothers me how often I see only closing parentheses in Bash case statement patterns!
I am eating and I felt my stomach literally churn. I think it was a bit of an overreaction but considering they are a popular firm, not so much.
True: https://xkcd.com/859/ :)
It bothers _me_... :-)
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Queue obtuse comment about how this is no big deal because git is distributed source control, ignoring the fact that Github != git and that issues/PRs/etc are pretty important.
Followed up by the comment that we need to stop this monoculture that we are creating and go back to mailing lists.
Which is then countered by people arguing that GitHub was the greatest thing to happen to open source and has introduced so many more people to the OSS community. Perhaps throwing in that a self hosted solution will most likely have worse uptime than GitHub does (which spawns it's own sub-thread of SaaS vs self-hosted solutions)
Then someone says that a higher barrier to entry could help the ecosystem (while muttering something about how many JS libraries there are out there).
I could keep going, but it seems github is working again for me, so off to do some work!
Which is then countered by people arguing that GitHub was the greatest thing to happen to open source and has introduced so many more people to the OSS community. Perhaps throwing in that a self hosted solution will most likely have worse uptime than GitHub does (which spawns it's own sub-thread of SaaS vs self-hosted solutions)
Then someone says that a higher barrier to entry could help the ecosystem (while muttering something about how many JS libraries there are out there).
I could keep going, but it seems github is working again for me, so off to do some work!
> which spawns it's own sub-thread of SaaS vs self-hosted solutions
Our Github Enterprise instance sure has better uptime than Github itself. :)
Our Github Enterprise instance sure has better uptime than Github itself. :)
also means that we cant composer install any project because even if the requirement is cached, each item is checked against github to see if the cached version should be invalidated :/ just took half an hour to complete an install...
This is the second major outage of GH this summer. I'm fearing we should all become less dependent on this single service for bug reporting, merging, etc. and instead leverage the decentralized power of Git to host on a variety of platforms. That way if one is out, you just fall back to another.
Does anyone know of libraries that can sync at least the filed issues between GitHub and GitLab or Bitbucket in near real time? That's the main thing from GitHub that I'm truly missing when there's an outage.
Does anyone know of libraries that can sync at least the filed issues between GitHub and GitLab or Bitbucket in near real time? That's the main thing from GitHub that I'm truly missing when there's an outage.
Is this a major outage? They've been experiencing connectivity issues for ~20 mins. I've been able to connect just fine all the while, as well.
GitHub isn't 'down.'
GitHub isn't 'down.'
For people using GCP, this could be a viable contingency: Mirroring GitHub in GCP Cloud Source Repository https://cloud.google.com/source-repositories/docs/connecting...
Reminder to avoid the github monoculture and move to other git providers as a backup.
Gitlab is open source and has auto-pull from github
Gitlab is open source and has auto-pull from github
Yeah I'm just going to submit a polite request to every variety of package/plugin/whatever manager that I use that somewhere somehow relies on GH to cut that shit out.
gogs is also open source, simpler and smaller than gitlab. also viable alternative i think.
Thank you for extending my todo-list :-)
Actually, if you're looking into Gogs, please look into Gitea instead. It was forked from Gogs because Gogs is done by a single maintainer, who just vanishes for months at a time every once in a while. (Which is not a bad thing per se, but this is precisely why Gitea is set up as a team effort.)
Good to know, I'll be sure to do just that. Much thanks.
Also, it's really not hard to self host your own gitlab server.
I only push public works to Github, anything private is stored in my own Gitlab instance.
I only push public works to Github, anything private is stored in my own Gitlab instance.
Gitlab is always mentioned here as an alternative on most every github outage post. I am wondering if there are gitlab shills ready to fire in these events? There are many other git products as well.
I'm not paid, but I am a proponent for a federated web.
I'm happy to host unlimited number of repos at my own expense[0] if it means people depending less on centralised hosting and allowing them to migrate away when they feel like it.
[0] https://git.drk.sc
I'm happy to host unlimited number of repos at my own expense[0] if it means people depending less on centralised hosting and allowing them to migrate away when they feel like it.
[0] https://git.drk.sc
They also have constant security issues. Some of these security issues make you doubt the quality of the code that Gitlab has...
The only major one that comes to mind is Bitbucket.
Gitlab comes up a lot because its idealistic goals resonate with a lot of the people here.
Gitlab comes up a lot because its idealistic goals resonate with a lot of the people here.
Perhaps instead of assuming everyone else in the universe is a mercenary liar, you could look to other explanations?
I use Gitlab for some specific things. It's worth checking out. If only because it's nice to know what a migration strategy off githib would look like.
I use Gitlab for some specific things. It's worth checking out. If only because it's nice to know what a migration strategy off githib would look like.
Gitlab pays me $50 per upvote (and a bonus based on the number of comments and my comment rank)
I'm sure this is related to the eclipse somehow.
So how many new installs does GitLab[1] get every time GitHub goes down?
[1]: https://about.gitlab.com/
[1]: https://about.gitlab.com/
Does github report RCAs for outages to the public? I'm wondering if these outages are related to their migration to kubernetes. Either way I'd love to learn what's going on and how they resolve these incidents. There's a lot to learn and I find these things super valuable.
Such an outage reminds us all how much we rely on GitHub just working. My 'flow' was suddenly interrupted because I couldn't continue my search for a specific PHP package. Luckily the workday is nearly over in the CET time zone so the impact on my productivity is minimal.
It appears to be down only for some regions.
Some pages (like the github.com landing and userprofile pages) including user sessions seem to be working from here. But not browsing a repository via http. Dunno if git pull is affected.
Not sure if if it's regional but from Switzerland it's been around 1 hour that any kind of connection to github goes in timeout.
It's always been working from Poland from what I could tell. Is this possible?
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I was playing with tails and thought github just didn't allow tor usage. Github's service record is so good that I didn't even stop to consider this might be a technical problem with Github.
I have the GitHub status page bookmarked. Take from that what you will.
It's quite a silly thing to complain about, but I imagine other software engineers also get slightly stressed by seeing an unbalanced paren!
[0]: http://i.imgur.com/cypsCvx.png