Talk:Requests for comment/pywikibot git hosting

Try to keep gerrit
Unlikely to happen.

Pro

 * Familiar workflow

Discussion
Can we set up our own gerrit on labs, and move the existing data (old and pending code reviews) to it? That part is probably easy for us to host and maintain, on labs or elsewhere. Continual integration (jenkins/zuul/workers) is going to be the hard part, I assume. John Vandenberg (talk) 02:37, 16 November 2014 (UTC)

Pro

 * We keep integration with the WMF community, including e.g. unit testing
 * Patch workflow comparable to Gerrit

Contra

 * Currently not trivial to contribute without Arcanist installed []

Discussion
Will WMF migrate all Gerrit data into Phabricator? T617 suggests they wont, which means we loose all of our design discussions. NHJ!. Actually, I am a bit stunned that the MediaWiki team might be happy to loose their code review data. John Vandenberg (talk) 02:54, 16 November 2014 (UTC)

Pro

 * Larger developer audience

Contra

 * Different, patch workflow
 * GitHub is closed source

Discussion

 * all that movements of WMF from one platform to one are quite tiring. For me GitHub is even more user friendly that Gerrit and I don't consider "different patch workflow" as a contra point. Rubin16 (talk) 17:17, 15 November 2014 (UTC)
 * If we move to Github, the core development team can use GerritHub https://review.gerrithub.io/, and the 'small changes' (e.g. changes of template names for one wiki) can be done as github pull requests or if they become big changes they can be pulled into GerritHub for more formal review. There is also a good chance that we can migrate the old Gerrit code reviews into GerritHub (for a once off fee, probably, or maybe we can do it ourselves) John Vandenberg (talk) 02:32, 16 November 2014 (UTC)
 * Calling Github closed source is not really fair. They open source a lot of the code used in the infrastructure.  e.g. https://github.com/github/markup .  As an organisation, I would characterise Github as rapidly-pro-open-source - their business model depends on open source.  We care about whether we can get our data out if they ever turn anti-open-source, or a significantly better provider arrives on the scene. John Vandenberg (talk) 02:41, 16 November 2014 (UTC)