From a technical PoV: AFAIK Forgejo's Orgs are "good enough" for cloud SaaS offerings. On GitHub, e.g., you can enforce certain security restrictions and logins for everyone interacting within their org etc.
So the only way would be to actually host an instance for every govt client so you can put the whole instance behind your orgs SSO etc.
I would also love to see governmental and public service organisations use and contribute to @forgejo . But @Codeberg is an organisation by and for individual enthusiasts and I don't think they would be interested in setting up the kind of service agreements that would be required (I'm a member, but I don't speak for Codeberg, not on the board or anything).
When forge federation gets better, I think most orgs should have their own vcs forge.
I assume there are similar projects in each state and probably one hosted by the EU that I‘m not aware of.
Thanks! I know about https://code.gouv.fr for France too (and off the top of my head @bzg also had repos on SourceHut)
But I think the European public sector could get the most of open source by getting behind a common project and hosting organization, and fund its maintenance :)
1. Because its hard to get budget to donate, usually you offer grants or have contract law that requires you to do calls for bids
2. Once you manage to give some money to anyone you are not legally needed to, it's the first on the chopping block.
Another example is GitHub's centralized notification system and project management: How can federated instances provide the same experience across many individual instances w/ Forgejo?
Thanks! I appreciate this might be an issue in a fragmented ecosystem, but would it be a problem if the public sector agreed on using a specific instance?
Be it @Codeberg, if they agreed to, or an instance specifically set up by and for the public sector.
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The public sector can be enormous, just look at "alphagov" on GitHub... 1700 repos and counting. I think on a governmental level, a country should run its own Git platform, not use Codeberg.
Other opinions welcome!!
For actual development: imo, codeberg is not "solid" enough *yet*.
Aha I’m not sure I see what compliance issue come with it? Would love to hear more about it.
What do you think is missing to make Forgejo or Codeberg solid enough to host development of public sector projects?
Those policies should be questioned, but they're a thing...
Oooh I see! Thanks @promovicz :)
What do you think would be the happiest path for the European public sector to soften its dependency to GitHub?
A space for Bonfire maintainers and contributors to communicate