Good, Cheap Subversion Hosting?
Posted on July 13, 2006 in Computers
(last edited on April 29, 2014 at 1:27 am)
(last edited on April 29, 2014 at 1:27 am)
This is a geeky posting; some of you may wish to avert your eyes :-)
I’m running my Subversion server off my cable modem connection, using dynamic DNS to allow outside peeps to get in. I’m thinking of hosting some source code examples publically, and am thus seeking a hosted subversion solution that’s:
- Inexpensive (w/ multiple users and multiple projects)
- Reliable (availability, backed up)
- Usable web interface (that is not ugly or confusing)
- Issue tracking a bonus (if it doesn’t suck)
Thought I’d ask to see if anyone had any strong opinions on this. Assume inexpensive means free to maybe 10 bucks a month. A service that has multiple levels of service and ease of upgrade/downgrade would probably be ideal.
I’ll post what I find in a few days.
14 Comments
If you are interested in having a well integrated versioning + issue tracking system I suggest you to take a look at Trac (if features also an integrated wiki) http://trac.edgewall.org. On the wiki/documentation site there is a page listing commercial services http://trac.edgewall.org/wiki/CommercialServices.
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Hey man,
CVS dude are pretty good, and despite the name, do subversion hosting as well as CVS! They’re free for up to a 2MB project I believe, anything else you pay – a copy ‘n’ paste off their website:
* 200 Megabytes of disk space
</pre>* 4 Authorized accounts
* 1 allowable module/project
* 5 Alert Notifications
* Diffs of files attached to email notifications ?
* Unlimited Monthly transfer
* Unlimited Email Support
* Backups taken every 10 minutes !
Payment.
3 Months USD 30.00
6 Months USD 60.00
12 Months USD 105.00
http://www.cvsdude.com
If all the code/examples are public-access then perhaps rubyforge.org? Has “Anonymous Subversion Access” – and bug notifications.
Not sure why I’m assuming you’ve got Ruby code to share, but I’m sure once you’ve got an account and asked for project space, you can put anything you like on your SVN acct.
Two that come to mind are wush.net and cvsdude.com. I’ve used WebSvn as a web based front-end on a local server.
I’ve thought about hosting source code myself using SVN, so I’ll be interested to see what you dig up.
http://www.tektonic.net/vds.php?op=budget_plans
I just recently moved from linode to tektonic and I’m happy with the switch. You’ll have to admin the server, but you can put whatever you want on it.
I’ve used wush.net in the past, and was very happy with the setup speed, TRAC integration, and cost.
Thanks for all the great suggestions! Someone also wrote in and noted that DreamHost includes Subversion Hosting as part of their plans. Very interesting! Maybe I should move hosts, though that would be a big pain in the butt.
I use dreamhost for svn and I like it allot.
Mark
I was going to mention that I saw subversion as part of my Dreamhost offerings. I have to say that Dreamhost is amazing. I’ve been with them for 6+ years. I’ve never been disappointed and they keep adding new amazing features and never raise the price.
Yep. Second dreamhost. (Or third. Or fourd. Or whatever ;)
I’m with them for all my stuff, and they’re amazing. Little plug – ask somebody who’s got dreamhost to give you a referral code so you get some money off. And they make some money.
(Mine is ‘GROBY’ and gets you $50 off – I’m sure everybody else is willing to share codes with you too ;)
I’m thinking now of either TextDrive or FutureQuest. I’m starting to hit some database problems (probably all those damn plugins I have installed), and I’m experiencing more database timeouts. This is apparently a limitation of pair.com’s database servers, so alas, it’s time to look for a new host.
You might also want to check out Media Temple. ( http://www.mediatemple.net/ ) Comes highly recommended Jeff Zeldman of zeldman.com. And since Media Temple focuses on design clients, it might be a good fit.
You may want to check http://www.hosted-projects.com. For just $7/month you get an unlimited number of subversion repositories, Trac projects and users. Their availability is good and they do off-site backups.
Subversion hosting is REALLY cheap: http://digg.com/software/Is_Subversion_Hosting_SaaS_cheaper_than_doing_it_yourself/