Selfhosted
A place to share alternatives to popular online services that can be self-hosted without giving up privacy or locking you into a service you don't control.
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But ci/cd though
Jenkins has fairly solid Gitea/Forgejo integration :)
forgejo supports woodpecker CI I thought?
Why not forgejo's built in ci/cd? Its worked great for me so far?
just use a make file like a civilised human being
I would like to use bare repos because I don't share with anyone else and don't really need the web-ui for issues or wikis or anything.
However, I need git-lfs and if I understand correctly, that doesn't wont work with a bare repo over ssh.
I was using gitea a while back and they had a way to dump repos and db, but there didn't seem to be a way to restore. That being the case I switched to gogs which has been great. It was only recently I learned that gogs wasn't very active and there was some kind of security breach. Mine is only accessible on my LAN so not particularly worried about security.
Anyhow, looking at forgejo now it seems like there still isn't a great way to restore from backup? I guess that might not matter to me if I'm only interested in the repos and no comments or other stuff that might be in the database.
Forgejo + Tailscale. Forgejo is the app behind Codeberg so it's battle tested. I switched to it from Gitea after the controversy.
I finally decided to make the move off github a couple weeks ago and ended up self hosting with Forgejo. It was really easy to set up, and my buddies and I are loving it. Provides a robust web interface and handles pull requests with automatic merges and all that. I haven't had any issues thus far
Forgejo is the way
I love Forgejo, I'm glad you are happy with it too. Their upgrade process is pretty minimal/straightforward (at least it has been so far) and their runner configuration is a bit heavy to set up initially (I maybe took the security recommendations a bit too intensively despite the fact that I'm running a completely private site, but allowing systems that run arbitrary commands automatically is legitimately a bit intimidating) but has been really nice and reliable now that it's working.
Gitea is the answer, configure/install with docker. I have had mine going for a few years now and haven't had to touch it besides updating the docker container which I automated.
why gitea instead of forgejo?
Why forgejo instead of gitea?
Forgejo was soft forked from Gitea after they went commercial and changed the license (I think). If there aren't any so far, expect pay walled features eventually.
Forgejo turned into a hard fork after communication issues between the teams. I haven't looked too deeply into it (as I don't really care about the fact that it's a hard fork now). This means while it used to be a drop-in replacement allowing you to go back and forth between the two, it's now an active conversion, I think.
Thanks for answering my question instead of only downvoting like half the other chuckleheads. Guess I'll migrate to Forgejo if my Gitea instance ever gets too old.
You should probably migrate now, forgejo is currently a soft fork that is fully compatible, but in the future they are planning to hard fork and not be compatible. Well, they are in the process of doing so right now.
Good to know, I'll look into it this weekend.
Same, but fuck the docker overhead
Just curious - what do you mean by the docker overhead?
CPU, RAM, disk space, network translation, management abstraction, buried logs ...
Didn't use docker then fairly sure there is a Deb for it.
I've used Gitea before, Frogejo also looks pretty good
If you're looking for a bare bones solution, and you already have a machine that you can SSH into, you could just use that. There are desktop GUI/TUI apps galore that you can use to inspect commits, branches and such.
At work I'm in the process of planning a move from Subversion to Git. So I've been looking at Forgejo, a hard fork of Gitea maintained by Codeberg. It has all the important features of other forges like GitLab and Gitea. But is completely open source.
@idunnololz I'm running gitea and tailscale. Sadly I had not heard of Forgejo at the time or I might have went with it instead. (Might switch over if i get bored or an itch one afternoon). Works great for me though.
Forgejo seemed to be the winning answer so I tried setting it up. Total setup time was less than 10 minutes.
Just a heads up... I haven't looked at this since forever ago (when foregjo was gitea), but make sure you have a restore plan. I think there's a dump command but no restore.
If all of the below doesnt work out, you can host git by itself. I did that at an office once.
https://gist.github.com/Kreijstal/28fc987270b71849505bbc89b3f2d90a steps look correct.
But for me forgejo worked out well for my side projects and mirroring.
I’ve set up a few gitlab servers at companies and it’s always been well received. Doing it from scratch may be more complex than you want, but I think there are docker images for a more turnkey type solution. And the option of building CI/CD pipelines in the future is always nice to have.
Just host a bare git repo.
I'd prefer it to have a website UI just in case I want to take a quick look at something when I'm not home.
Over a VPN, right? I always recommend not exposing services to the Internet if you can avoid it.

Jokes aside, yes.
It's monstrous, but gitlab installs from one big RPM on a base box; and with one config file you're up.
While I agree, out of the box the configs ARE NOT for home lab use.
I second the option of Git + SSH. That will scale to one hundred repos. And if you don't want the repos to be checked out, use "git clone -n" to not do that. It'll just be dozens of repos which only have the minimal .git/ directory. All other repos that specify this one as the upstream will have no issues pulling or pushing code.
You won't have PR features nor a web UI though.
Self-hosting gitlab?
Surely this is the correct answer.
GitLab is awesome and has good CI-CD
Idk, I had not heard of gitea or forgejo before. Personally I really want strong & flexible CI/CD, and Don't know what the alternatives have to offer there, but it would be worth looking into. GitLab is pretty resource-heavy even for low user count.
I'd go for Forjego or Gitea.
Acronyms, initialisms, abbreviations, contractions, and other phrases which expand to something larger, that I've seen in this thread:
| Fewer Letters | More Letters |
|---|---|
| Git | Popular version control system, primarily for code |
| SSH | Secure Shell for remote terminal access |
| VPN | Virtual Private Network |
3 acronyms in this thread; the most compressed thread commented on today has 6 acronyms.
[Thread #157 for this comm, first seen 11th Mar 2026, 23:20] [FAQ] [Full list] [Contact] [Source code]
I personally don’t host yet anything, but do know of a friend with a functional Gitea at home