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Ideating Tragit

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There are many, many git forges to pick from. I’m going to make another one—but before I do, I’m going to do a little thinking out loud, and outline the what and why of this side project I’m embarking upon.

Decentralization is hugely important for the long-term health of the internet. Indeed, this quality has been fundamental to the network since its inception. This is easy to forget, and hard to see, now. But email was not always Gmail and git was not always GitHub.1

A big reason that these protocols have become so centralized is because the companies that offer these services have genuinely innovated on form. Google invented effective, user-friendly webmail. They pioneered email’s contemporary security features and user-facing advancements. They were rewarded for that with users.

Nowadays, however, these capabilities no longer require the dedicated engineering of whole teams of Google 10x-ers. With the mature and effective tools and languages available to every developer, the evolution of the open-source ecosystem, and the integration of big-corp features into the open standards of the web, self-hosting does not have to mean settling for less.

This has played out most clearly, again, with email. If you wanted to email people, you used to have two choices: assemble the world’s largest house of cards and hope the incantation you crafted from terrifying words that make no sense like dovecot and mailcow—which represent interconnected services that do things you only sort of understand—actually works with any meaningful consistency, or sell out to the Oligarchs. No longer! Want one open-source binary to take care of sending, receiving, security, accounts, redirects, and everything else? It exists, and it’s called maddy, and I’ve been using it to host my email for years now with no effort.

git, on the other hand, is very much still in the first stage. You can, of course, use GitHub. It is a colossus, practically unavoidable as a developer, and enabled my start as a programmer. The pull request collaboration paradigm they created has totally supplanted the email-based method that preceded it. But if you want your code to live outside of Microsoft’s proprietary claws, the process is far from simple.

My own setup is representative of this problem, and quite janky. It’s a delicate combination of stagit and the built-in git-daemon, running via Docker Compose, pointed at the home folder of a bespoke git user. I push to the server over ssh, relying on some weird nested home directory hack that makes me very uncomfortable in order to have a nice destination string. To publish a repo I have to create two separate magic files, git-daemon-export-ok and stagit-export-ok. Metadata lives in aptly-named files like description and owner.2 I clone and pull with the daemon’s git:// protocol. Any changes mean I have to restart stagit so it will generate the relevant pages again. Collaboration is allegedly facilitated over email with a crabmail instance, but it’s been broken since I first attempted to set it up. The whole thing is rather delicate and rough around the edges, which is maybe the worst combination of characteristics for an important service.

I think there’s a real opportunity here to build something that could have an outsized impact on the self-hosted web. I don’t want my git setup to evoke the same feelings as the word “modem.” I don’t want to compromise. I want big tech capabilities in a small and efficient package. So let’s leverage ecosystem advancements, think deeply about how we can facilitate collaboration, and make something.

Keep an eye out for some form of tangible deliverable in this area sometime (hopefully) soon. I’m probably going to call it Tragit.


1

I have met a profoundly depressing amount of young programmers who cannot distinguish the latter two.

2

The latter of which, of course, is purely aesthetic and has no bearing on security or access rights.