Looking at our internal chat logs it seems that the announcement got us thinking about pages again. But the decision to open source it was based on what kind of people used it (more small organizations than we thought, fewer large organizations than we thought).
I've asked Job to comment too.
BTW We're not sure if we'll limit GitLab.com Pages at some point, see "GitLab Pages with very high traffic (currently unlimited even in the free plan)" from https://about.gitlab.com/gitlab-com/#free-forever Of course you now always have the option to host your own.
The link you yourself share features many comments, including by GitHub themselves, that this wasn't a new limit. They publicised the change earlier in the year.
Hi sytes. Thanks so much for this. I was active on the thread trying to get it added to CE, and it makes a big difference.
One thing GL is still missing in its licensing model is a good story for my usecase. I run a GL install that's open to the public so users can report bugs in my software, but there are only 2 real "internal" users. I picked up 50 "users" last month, who just made an issue or two and drove away.
The current model forces me to choose either CE (no paid features for anyone) or EE ($1950/mo). That is what drives some of the disconnect on features like Pages, I'm not going to pay five figures a year for no matter what's in EE.
But if I could pay $300 a year, and get either some paid features, or paid features for some users, that would be pretty easy. Then there is something to do in this situation besides complain that everything isn't free, and creates more opportunities to get invested into GitLab.
As long as there's a $25,000 gap between price tiers you will have these cases where people are flamewarring about whether some feature makes it into CE.
Just to clarify, our pricing [0] is per year. So the cost for 50 users is $1950 a year, $162,50 a month for Enterprise Edition starter.
We have been thinking about a model that would allow us a more smooth ramp from CE to EE, hence the change to EE starter and Premium. However, this doesn't mean certain attractive features might still land in paid tiers.
Right, but your licensing is per user per year. I add 50 NEW users in a month. Each of them use the product for about 20 minutes, but I believe I would need to license them for an entire year.
If you disable the accounts of users they no longer count towards your license. So you could consider deactivating accounts that have been inactive for more than a month. Anyway, feel free to get in touch with sales@ our domain to discuss the options.
I cannot speak about the licensing, but I can suggest you an alternative: host CE for public access and mirror your repositories there, and have your EE version for internal use only.
The timing is coincidental, at least from my side.
We keep track of all mentions of GitLab on sources such as HN, but also Google+. There I was pointed to this comment [0]. This triggered me to look into the existing issue again [1] and reevaluate.
The data showed that there was no good reason for us to keep GitLab Pages in EE, so it made sense to move it to CE!
As said in https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=13250414 the decision to open source it was based on what kind of people used it (more small organizations than we thought, fewer large organizations than we thought).
EDIT: Job has commented in https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=13250453
The announcement from GitHub might have triggered us. GitHub Pages was limited about 3 days go https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=13227863
Job asked for votes 3 days ago https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab-ce/issues/14605#note_20...
Looking at our internal chat logs it seems that the announcement got us thinking about pages again. But the decision to open source it was based on what kind of people used it (more small organizations than we thought, fewer large organizations than we thought).
I've asked Job to comment too.
BTW We're not sure if we'll limit GitLab.com Pages at some point, see "GitLab Pages with very high traffic (currently unlimited even in the free plan)" from https://about.gitlab.com/gitlab-com/#free-forever Of course you now always have the option to host your own.