text stringlengths 0 2.67k |
|---|
**Justin Garrison:** You're gonna take a screenshot, aren't you? |
**Autumn Nash:** Yes...! When you go from infrastructure to taco cleanse, and... |
**Justin Garrison:** Did you take the picture? |
**Autumn Nash:** No, wait. Hold on. Okay, wait. Okay, smile. That's better. Do that face. Okay, can we just talk about the \[unintelligible 00:12:08.12\] Taco cleanse, and your fasting, and Ricky Martin CDs. How did we end up here? Okay, keep going. |
**Justin Garrison:** \[12:17\] I don't remember how we ended up here. |
**Autumn Nash:** Instead of listening to Justin's fasting, listen to my taco cleanse. There's even vegan recipes. Vegan. I mean, I'd rather eat steak, but you know, whatever. Whatever. Look at that. I'm gonna send you a copy of this. We've gotta fix you. |
**Justin Garrison:** We're gonna have it in the show notes. The best taco recipes in the show notes. |
**Autumn Nash:** Taco cleanse... |
**Justin Garrison:** We're gonna put one recipe out each week, and we're gonna put it in the show notes. |
**Autumn Nash:** It's important. And coffee recipes. |
**Justin Garrison:** It's gonna be cheese, and flour tortillas, and... I like corn tortillas, actually. Corn tortillas, and cheese, and... |
**Autumn Nash:** It's gluten-free. You see that? That's gluten-free. |
**Justin Garrison:** I mean, I love gluten, though. |
**Autumn Nash:** I love gluten, too. |
**Justin Garrison:** \[unintelligible 00:12:55.19\] We're like this. |
**Autumn Nash:** There's always guys who are like really hot, but then they're like "Oh, I don't eat carbs." |
**Justin Garrison:** That are fighting for Autumn? |
**Autumn Nash:** Yes! They're like "I don't eat carbs", and I'm like, I picked bread. Okay? Not just picking the bear... |
**Justin Garrison:** Do you drink coffee? No? Okay. You're out. |
**Autumn Nash:** Like, it's not jut picking the bear, it's picking the carb. And bread. Okay? Like... |
**Justin Garrison:** This intro is the furthest from anything we were gonna talk about. I think we should just go over to the interview... |
**Autumn Nash:** Okay, go to the interview. I love it so much. |
**Justin Garrison:** We'll talk to Matti... And talk to you all after. |
**Justin Garrison:** Alright, thank you so much for coming on the show. Matti Ranta, technical oversight committee, member of the Gitea open source projects. |
**Matti Ranta:** Yeah. Thanks for having me. Happy to be here. |
**Justin Garrison:** So this episode is just gonna be all Git, and it's gonna be fun... What is Gitea? |
**Matti Ranta:** Yeah, so Gitea is an open source developer platform, self-hosted. It's a single Go binary, it has Git hosting, code reviews, collaborating on issues, package registry and a CI/CD that is GitHub Actions-compatible. So the same YAML that would work on GitHub will work exactly the same way in our CI/CD. |
**Autumn Nash:** So it's basically like open source GitHub. |
**Matti Ranta:** Yeah, exactly. That's kind of our official tagline. |
**Justin Garrison:** So the tea here isn't like rumors and bad talk, it's just like actual -- |
**Matti Ranta:** Exactly, it's Git with a cup of tea. Yeah. |
**Autumn Nash:** Okay, but can we like spill tea while we're like uploading code? |
**Matti Ranta:** You certainly can. You can add in -- in the CI/CD pipelines you can add in secrets, detection, so your tea doesn't get leaked. |
**Autumn Nash:** I like it. |
**Justin Garrison:** I just wish that there was like a Git Dr. Pepper, if that was like a thing... So along with being this open source -- that was a bad joke. No one even laughed. It's okay. |
**Autumn Nash:** Justin doesn't drink coffee, or tea, and he's just... Like, we still love him anyways, but how are you in tech and you don't drink coffee or tea, Justin? |
**Justin Garrison:** I get caffeine. It's alright. But back to Gitea. As an open source project, it's available, you can write it yourself, but there's also a Gitea website. And I'm assuming that the full-blown like "Hey, you can just go start using it", right? |
**Matti Ranta:** Yeah, so we have our flagship instance at gitea.com. Git with a cup of tea. G-I-T-E-A. I have to spell it out, because sometimes people like to add a second T in there. But yeah, so I'm a one-man shop for just managing the infrastructure for it right now, and I've been doing that for a few years now. A... |
**Justin Garrison:** \[16:06\] Okay. So it's hosted over at GitHub, but you can still deploy it over on Gitea. What does that infrastructure look like? What does it look like to run this at some sort of scale? Because I've run Gitea in the past; it's like a single binary. "Oh, look, it's a container. I can run a thing,... |
**Matti Ranta:** Yeah, it actually looks quite a lot similar to running it on a NAS, or a Raspberry Pi, even... Just a little bit more redundancy. When we started off, we had an infrastructure provider that was providing us infrastructure and credits, and we wanted to leverage it, but it was bare metal, so we had to bu... |
**Justin Garrison:** That's a lot of complexity and a lot of ops work for a one-person infrastructure team. |
**Matti Ranta:** Exactly. So we eventually actually just changed it to like a single server, and forgot about stuff entirely. We still get that redundancy with the secondary version, we might say, and just offloading it to the provider over network share. They handle the right version that you're supposed to use now. A... |
**Justin Garrison:** It was down, yeah. |
**Matti Ranta:** It sucked. It would kind of suck. |
**Autumn Nash:** What's your failover whole process like? Because that's a lot of pressure when you're hosting someone else's code, and how they work, and how they can contribute with somebody else. Some websites, if they go down - okay, you can't buy a T-shirt. But if yours goes down, that is major for your customers,... |
**Matti Ranta:** And actually, just a point of clarification, this is just gitea.com. So we don't have any customers of this site. So there's no paid SLA. There's a managed SaaS that is offered through a company, that's gone through the SOC 2 compliance, and has redundancy, has dedicated instances per customer, and it ... |
**Justin Garrison:** Why in the beginning -- you had a cloud provider or a hosting provider that's like "Here's some metal boxes." Why did you pick Kubernetes and Ceph? Those are fairly complex technologies, that have their own requirements. Why did you go straight to that as like the "Let's go do this side"? Instead o... |
There's this fancy new software out of Google, and you can \[unintelligible 00:19:57.25\] scale... It's gonna be great; it's gonna solve all of your problems. And we definitely weren't ready for it at the time. And if we were go to like EKS or GKE, we definitely would be ready for it now. We have a Helm chart that a to... |
\[20:28\] So with all the downsides of that single node, we ended up switching to Amazon for our provider, where we could do a lot more quote-unquote cloud-native stuff, like using like RDS, throwing up the released artifacts into S3, and using CloudFront for a CDN, to just take off all the load that we would be gettin... |
So all the infrastructure stuff is -- I want to say solved right now. There's some issues around global latency. We're moving to the Eastern US, but there's latency issues in like Australia and Europe for that specific region... And so planning on how to make sure the site is globally distributed, with making sure ever... |
Subsets and Splits
No community queries yet
The top public SQL queries from the community will appear here once available.