Gogs


Dec. 18, 2023

Gogs, Gitea, Forgejo

I’ve been really pleased with Gogs - it’s lightweight, was simple to spin up, and has worked perfectly. But then this morning on Mastodon, there’s a post from @Codeberg.org describing a security vulnerability in their Git hosting project Forgejo. This issue also apparently affects Gitea and Gogs - what’s up with that?

I actually already did spend a bit of time comparing Gogs and Gitea before deciding on Gogs, since I’d heard of people running Gitea over the past year or so, but only seen that Gogs seemed to be popular with self-hosters in a Lemmy post I’d read. My first impression was that Gitea was more focused on CI/CD and seemed to have a more complicated install process.

Dec. 6, 2023

Gogs - your own tiny GitHub

(edit: - I’ve had a rethink about my source hosting)

Once you’re familiar with coding tools, like the excellent VS Code , and git , it’s immediately apparent that these tools can be applicable for other purposes. A great example is that I now do my financial accounting in plain text (using beancount ). I have a python script that converts by bank account data in to the beancount format text files, I edit them in VS Code with a plugin that does the syntax highlighting and checks everything balances.