What is your opinion of the various online Hosted SVN providers? How do they all compare? I'm looking for thoughts on Assembla, Unfuddle, BeanStalk, CVSDude, ProjectLocker, and any others that I forgot to mention. Thanks for your insight and input.
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I've used assembla.com for the past year or so and they've been brilliant. No downtime (that I've noticed), and when it's entirely free, what's not to like? Update: As of 17th October, Assembla doesn't offer free private hosting. You can still get publicly visible spaces for free, but a private space will cost US$3 per GB per month + US$2 per User per month. This is pretty reasonable IMO. |
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We are using unfuddle (the free plan) for about a year: very easy to setup and realiable. |
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I have worked for control freaks who want all the family jewels kept in the house. A related question is: What would it take to persuade the boss to go with a hosted svn instead of in-house? There'd have to be a big advantage. For the case of svn, it's pretty easy to set up, even for a non-pro developer. Even being free (as in beer) won't cut it; the question arises of who pays their electric and internet bill? Scientists and others with long-term archiving concerns will won't be impressed by a solution that looks good for the next year but no one knows where it'll go later on. How do we know the hosting company won't go belly up in six years? One situation where hosted svn may make sense, is when a small working group with no permanent location, servers under their control, or cooperative institutional IT support, wants to establish a repository for a project. Another situation: for students who want to get familiar with working with svn but don't want to monkey with setting it up, and have no long-term intentions with it. |
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Regardless of where you host your source control, if your code is valuable, remember to make an offsite, offline backup. Something that won't be lost to fire, theft, earthquake, lightning, or malicious deletion. |
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We've been using CVSDude (Team-plan for 30 USD/month) for a year os so now. And while they never really screwed up, I also can't recommend them for numerous reasons.
On the brighter side...
Personally, I just signed up with hosted-projects.com (2 week trial), primarily because they are in my timezone and I can pay them through wire and to evaluate some other options for us. Also, their interface is rather basic but it all works so well. I like that. :) If wire transfer wouldn't be a concern, I'd recommend unfuddle. Assembla has too many bells and whistles for my taste. :) |
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I've used BeanStalk pretty much since they started. They had a rough moment or two at first, but have recently moved data centers and with that move I have had zero problems with them. They have an excellent UI for web browsing. Could not be happier and the price is great. Security/privacy is always a concern I guess, but I don't worry about it much. I'm the only developer and just use Beanstalk as a single place to store my code as I work on it. |
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+1 for Assembla. A easy to use out of the box svn with trac and other tools. Kind Regards |
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I have been using Assembla for several months now and overall I am very satisfied. It is very simple to setup and get going with. I am using it on a small remote team and would definately recommend it for this type of environment. We have used the hosted svn, Trac-issue tracking, and wikis without any serious issues. |
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I am using assembla.com for student projects. Collaboration over assembla is great, though not using each and every feature of assembla. I'd recommend it without a doubt, unless you need absolute privacy... then a self-hosted (SSL) solution would be my choice. I use a self hosted SVN for personal projects, which do not need collaboration and 100% stability, because I tend to joyfully wreck my own server ;) |
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I've used Assembla for a while now and it's great. Once very nice thing is that your repositories are available via http AND https which helps if you are sometimes firewalled. |
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I have used Assembla, which is the first free svn hosting site I found that didn't force me to disclose my source code to the public. |
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+1 for Assembla too! I'm been using it for more than 1 year and it's great! There are new tools and features that are very usefull... Cheers from Argentina! |
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I've been using ProjectLocker for around 6 months now and it has worked very well. I would definitely recommend it. |
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I'm with www.hosted-projects.com (Germany-based), and am pleased. Includes Trac, SSL and optional extra roll-your-own 3rd-party backup. |
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I've written a post on the topic: |
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+1 for Assembla |
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+1 for Assembla, even with the new pricing. Student plans are still free though. |
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+1 for Assembla. I've been using assembla for the past few months and it works great. You've got your options with them too. If you're a student you can get them to give your class free hosting, or simply place your project on public. Otherwise its cheap and def worth small price. |
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+1 for Unfuddle. We've loved it! |
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I like Beanstalk. It's cheap, much faster than it was before, has private repos with SSL, and integrates with Basecamp, Lighthouse, and Twitter. |
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My only concern about online providers is privacy. I am not saying that the hosting companies will take your code and run away with it (or sell it) but there is always the chance. Perhaps a disgruntled employee? I am a control freak and runs my own subversion server on a DSL line. But of course, I don't have that many users. If you're serious about the code you will be hosting I suggest invest on a decent server and put it online somewhere. That's just my opinion. |
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used versionshelf for a couple of months now, seems just fine. |
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With free accounts on shared SVN it's hard to find a private one. I'd say just setup SVN and trac on your webserver. |
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Is open-source an option? I've used Google code for a few small projects, and I've been very pleased. I also like all the other features that come along in addition to source control. Currently, they're still on Subversion 1.4. |
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I've used both OpenSVN and DevjaVu for personal projects. Of the two, I prefer DevjaVu, as OpenSVN is often slow. Otherwise, both are fine. |
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We've also been evaluating various hosted SVN providers. I'll add CodeSpaces to the list which has a pretty slick web UI and offers the usual SVN goodness. One of the issues which has prevented us from yet adopting a single provider is the network latency we are experiencing from some providers. |
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Linode and DIY with your own linux if you run ISV. I use ssh+svn with an Ubuntu server there, stable and fast. And of course you can just do a lot more there besides hosting SVN :) |
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+1 for Assembla, great tools, now with pre-configured spaces: http://www.assembla.com/preconfigured_spaces A few clicks setup to start a real project, something like IDE project templates. |
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wush.net works for me. |
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I have only good things to say about GeekISP. CVS/SVN, Trac, database, SSH, (oh yes, and web hosting if you need it), with great user support. |
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