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GoHome: A simple app to host your Go modules with vanity URLs
  • Yea, that's my main thing. I don't want to be "stuck" on a forge I no longer want to continue using.

    I'm sure you can wire up many ways to do it with a simple CDN, etc. Previously I was using nginx rules to serve it. I know others who use simple static html pages. There are many ways to get it done. My module is just one way that works for me.

  • GoHome: A simple app to host your Go modules with vanity URLs

    Repo: https://git.code.netlandish.com/\~petersanchez/gohome

    I wrote a simple application to easily manage your Go modules that you host on your own domains, backed by sqlite3.

    I know there are quite a few ways to do this (nginx hacks, static pages, other server apps) but none of them scratched my itch. I wanted a simple utility that I can add/edit via my web browser and be done with it. No config file changes, no server reloads, etc.

    Happy to hear all feedback.

    Blog post (if you care): https://petersanchez.com/easily-host-go-modules-on-your-domain/

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  • Well I've been a part of the Sourcehut (one of his major projects) community for many years and have interacted with him many many times. I've never found him to be a drama queen. Is he outspoken? Yea. Does he stand up for what he believes in? Yea. So he usually goes against the grain and catches flack for it.

  • What do y'all think about mailing lists and IRC as sole communication channels?
  • This is ideal for me. I refuse to use Discord period and only use Slack only for direct client work (when they request that we use it.)

    Mailing lists are great imho but I'm older than most people probably on these communities. So I'm very familiar with this.

    I do think a ticket tracker is useful/required though.

  • It's time to let go, Apache Software Foundation
  • At this point, who cares when LibreOffice exists? Though I do get the potential confusion for newbies but there is so much written out there on this topic I feel like it's harder and harder to get confused on the two.

  • El Salvador's leader, criticized internationally for gang crackdown, tells UN it was the right thing
  • I caught the /s.

    I was wondering about this because I understood (perhaps incorrectly) that these powers only exist during the state of emergency. Once it's declared over, it's no longer possible?

    Of course you're right, there is already overreaching happening. Since you live there, let me ask you, how do you feel safety wise?

    For instance here in Nicaragua, it's extremely safe. Violence is basically non-existent (especially coming from Los Angeles where violence is rampant). But of course the government is what it is. So is the trade off worth it?

  • El Salvador's leader, criticized internationally for gang crackdown, tells UN it was the right thing
  • I live in Nicaragua (I'm American) and can say that while yes he does have his critics in Central America, he's overwhelmingly supported in El Salvador and the people are actually safe, which is not normal for the last several decades.

    Sometimes extreme measures are needed. It's like he said when this started, (paraphrasing) "Where were all these countries when we needed help. Where was their training, money, equipment, etc.? Our people are dying and we've had enough! So the world ignored us before and now they want to criticize us. We don't care."

  • What would it take for you to move away from Github?
  • I’d have to read a guide on how to send a patch or apply one from somebody else.

    The guide is about 2 paragraphs and you'd also have to read a guide for how to create an account, fork, clone, push, send PR, etc. for the new normal workflow.

    Commenting on a line of code and following a discussion about it isn’t very legible.

    It's normal email bottom posting usually, pretty simple to follow. The srht UI does a decent job of this for you as well imho.

    There’s no way to mark a discussion as resolved, now way to have a quick overview of the status of all the comments left on a patch

    In email specifically, no. Of course you can mark it resolved if using custom software (ie, srht) that supports it. Not sure what you mean of quick overview, unless you mean via a webpage which again, srht provides. If straight email, you have to cycle through the emails. Which for me, just means typing "j" or "k" instead of page up/down like you would on GH, srht, whatever.

    is it possible to submit a patch with multiple commits and if so how does one see the final result?

    Yes, of course. No clue about seeing them all in one final patch. I suppose that's useful though I've never had an issue going through each patch individually. Maybe a feature suggestion for srht.

    Is it possible to sign my commits?

    I don't see why not.

    I've used email WF, then "github WF", and found srht very refreshing when it launched. I still stuck with BitBucket because I didn't want to take the time to move over but once they removed Mercurial support, we went all in with srht and no regrets. Our code review process via email is so much faster for us now and prior to this move, I was the only person on the team who'd worked with the email WF before.

    Of course, I totally get it's a personal preference and that a lot of younger developers have no experience with the email WF and humans are naturally resistant to change. They probably wouldn't enjoy it either.

  • What would it take for you to move away from Github?
  • Well there are many smaller projects than the kernel that still use the email workflow. To me it's simple, not archaic. You're right though, you definitely would miss out on contributors but that's just the reality of the dev world today.

  • What would it take for you to move away from Github?
  • We run our own SourceHut instance because I hate all the social dopamine crap built into GH. I hate you need an account just to participate in a repo. I hate the heavy UI (sometimes it's better than others).

    Also, srht supports hg as well as git.

  • InitialsDiceBearhttps://github.com/dicebear/dicebearhttps://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/„Initials” (https://github.com/dicebear/dicebear) by „DiceBear”, licensed under „CC0 1.0” (https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/)PE
    Peter @deddit.petersanchez.com

    Just a dude on the fediverse. More on my personal website

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