![]() You can install this edition on bare-metal or as a virtual machine, and you can also install it as a Docker container. You can install Enterprise Editions on your private servers (behind the firewall) or get it hosted on a private cloud. Getting assistance when upgrading GitLab server (by sharing screens).High Availability (HA) support, including active/active and active/passive solutions.File locking mechanism (exclusively lock files to prevent merge problems).This is a geographically replicated solution for when you have two GitLab sites and you have to accelerate performance. It includes all Enterprise Starter features listed above PLUS the following: Priced at $199 per user per year (or $16 monthly), this edition offers a more rapid response time for customer support and 24/7 support. Full list is available on the website right here) Project importing from to your private GitLab instance.Manage large binaries files with git annex.Branch Permissions by users (preventing unwanted git push and merge).Super-powered search using Elasticsearch.Global code search (it’s like ‘googling’ the code and it enables you to quickly find out code snippets).Multiple issue boards for a project (very useful for watching issues from some different perspectives – for instance if you have several teams on a given project and each team needs a different board).Full analytics (named Contribution Analytics).Full support of users and groups authentications with LDAP, Active Directory, Kerberos and Atlassian Crowd.This includes customer support with a response time of 1 business day, plus extra features, including: This is the basic Enterprise edition, priced at $39 per user per year (or $3.25 monthly). Paid editions can be installed on-premise (at customer’s site) behind the firewall or on a secured private cloud. These cons can be addressed by using any of the paid editions. Upgrades (and their corresponding downtime) are done automatically and users can’t schedule (to more convenient time) or avoid updates.Can be affected by DDOS and DNS attacks.No SLA (Service Level Agreement) and no availability commitment.You can’t open tickets or ask the vendor for help Same as the free on-premise edition above.Ideal for private / small projects you don’t want to set up a server by yourself Free edition in the public cloud (named ).The Enterprise features (described below) are not included.You have to allocate a server (bare-metal or virtual).You need Linux admin knowledge on how to install and setup the server (knowledge in Docker and containers is recommended too).You can’t open tickets and ask the vendor for help No limitation on the number of users (while Atlassian’s BitBucket limits the free edition to 5 users only).Can be used to manage private repositories (while GitHub charges for private repositories).One tool with full environment for software development (from idea to production).Ideal for personal projects or small teams However they do offer quite good value for personal projects or very small projects, open-source or not and usually not commercial. (2) plus more premium features.īear in mind that they both lack customer support and some features are very limited. ![]() The Enterprise Premium Edition offers no. ![]() It offers the free edition plus more features.
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