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The Sourcehut Project Hub, Hacker News

I’m happy to announce that the SourceHut project hub is now available for general use! This is one of the most important developments in the progress of the SourceHut alpha thus far. If you want to see how it works interactively, try checking out the SourceHut project , add your own projects , or browse the public project index . For a more wordy introduction, read on.

Screenshot of the public project index on the SourceHut project hubScreenshot of the public project index on the SourceHut project hub

So why is the project hub necessary and / or interesting? SourceHut is composed of many small Unix-style tools for software development, which each “do one thing and do it well ”. These tools are things like git hosting, bug tracking, mailing lists, CI, and so on. This allows you to use them independently and compose them however you please, which maps well onto the reality of how many projects are organized. Compare this to platforms like GitHub, GitLab, Gitea, and so on, where resources like bug trackers and pull requests map 1: 1 to a git repository, even when it doesn’t make sense.

In reality, many projects have dozens of git repos but would prefer to receive bug reports in one place, for example. There are many ways projects are organized, and with a one-size-fits-all approach, many of them are forced to resort to meta-repositories, bots to chase down lost users posting things in the wrong place, and so on. Additionally, this insistence on a single git repo being the face of your project is very developer-centric. Only a fraction of visitors to your project actually want to browse the source code – many others are looking for documentation, bug reports, support channels, and so on; and frontloading the source code can be intimidating.

The ability to freely compose resources on SourceHut to suit your project’s needs addresses this. The primary disadvantage of our approach has been difficulty in finding out what resources belong to which projects, and getting around between them. The new project hub addresses this with a single “hub” for your project, with a more general introduction to the project and links to the each of the tools your project is using. You can have zero, one, or any number of git or Mercurial repos, mailing lists, and bug trackers, in any combination Which is useful for your needs, and the project hub will organize them for you. It streamlines the workflow for new projects and will make it easier for new users to figure out how to get started on SourceHut.

The project hub also solves a problem which has long been a matter of interest to SourceHut users: discoverability. How do you find what projects are hosted on the platform? The hub solves this with the public project index . Each public project which you create on the hub is listed here, and you can search through all of them to discover interesting projects to use or contribute to. I’ve also added a list of featured projects, where I will be hand-picking interesting projects to share.

This version of the hub is the MVP , and there’s more development I want to do in the future. Some of this includes:

emailing me directly . Enjoy!       

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