admittedly I haven't used gitlab to the extent I have with bitbucket/gitlab - but so far I haven't found anything missing personally - in fact there a lot of things in gitlab that I wish were in the others. A lot of the github enhancements lately have been things that gitlab had first.
The only real downside at the moment is for public open source github is still the place everyone is expecting you to be. Its hard enough for small projects to be noticed on github, putting them somewhere else means nobody will ever see them just browsing. But for private or private-for-now projects gitlab seems to be the best fit for me currently.
Not OP, but as a majority user of Gitlab the only downside is integrations. By that I specifically mean Codeship. It's just not considered a first class citizen to some yet, which is unfortunate.
To be completely honest - probably nothing. This is a legacy issue on our end, not yours. I haven't even taken the time to explore migrating our GH/Codeship builds to GL CI. We essentially mirror our repos amongst both offerings at the moment, running builds via Codeship until either they support GL and we can drop GH, or we get the time to spend on a proper Codeship => GH CI migration and we can drop Codeship. Anyone's guess what will win out at this point :)
For us at Codeship, it has nothing to do with not taking GitLab seriously, not treating them as first-class citizen, etc. We'll add GitLab support, hopefully, sooner than later. There are simply other feature requests that are more important for existing customers that are already using Codeship.
Sure, and just to be clear that wasn't me straight griping. Completely understand you guys have priorities. Just doesnt change the fact that it's an existing pain point for heavy Gitlab users.
The only real downside at the moment is for public open source github is still the place everyone is expecting you to be. Its hard enough for small projects to be noticed on github, putting them somewhere else means nobody will ever see them just browsing. But for private or private-for-now projects gitlab seems to be the best fit for me currently.