« BackGitHub Incidentgithubstatus.comSubmitted by aggrrrh 3 days ago
  • bakje 3 days ago

    Perhaps the gemini-cli bot arguing with itself is taking its toll

    https://github.com/google-gemini/gemini-cli/issues/16750

    • MattIPv4 3 days ago

      https://github.com/google-gemini/gemini-cli/issues/16723 is even worse, GitHub shows `5195 remaining items` in the collapsed timeline.

    • lol768 3 days ago

      Jeez, what a mess. Some of those issues have over 5000 events on them.

      I really hope that didn't send emails out to people.

      • pdimitar 3 days ago

        I could not resist to put my sarcastic comment about RAM price increases serving a good cause in there.

        • dgxyz 3 days ago

          Having just had to buy 4TB of RAM, I appreciate this.

          • MisterTea 3 days ago

            That's like 100,000 USD. I keep thinking about making a rap video wearing a 10 TB gold chain surrounded by big booty girls with their naughty bits covered in m.2 SSD's while dissing the AI industry. Though I cant afford the RAM :-/

            • TheJoeMan 3 days ago

              It’s sad that I can’t interpret if you mean to actually shoot your rap video on film, or have an AI generate it lol. Either way you’re going to need RAM.

              • kps 3 days ago

                Shooting on film doesn't need any RAM. Unfortunately the price of silver is also through the roof.

              • dgxyz 3 days ago

                Yep that much. 64Gb DDR5 ECC sticks (128Gb don't exist at the moment apparently). They declined the PO 6 months ago. That'll teach 'em.

                I was pissed that there weren't any sticks heading to the recycling out of the nodes otherwise I would make myself that chain :)

                • dpacmittal 3 days ago

                  Use Veo

                  • zxcvasd 3 days ago

                    like most rap videos do with cars/jets/mansions, just rent the ram sticks for a few hours!

                    • bigfatkitten 3 days ago

                      And the cinema equipment to make the video itself.

              • omoikane 3 days ago

                Maybe the bots need rule of ko.

                https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rules_of_Go#Ko

                • embedding-shape 3 days ago

                  Haha, reminds me off bringing down office mail servers by accidentally creating loops of emails back in the day... What is old is new again, but this time with probabilities :)

                  • johnisgood 3 days ago

                    Wonderful, lmao.

                  • nullfish 3 days ago

                    I suspect the migration to Azure is continuing to go well

                    • rvz 3 days ago

                      Yes indeed. 6 years of non-stop outages across the platform every month.

                      Even self-hosting would have been more stable than sitting on GitHub as predicted more than half a decade ago. [0]

                      Now there is no 'CEO of GitHub' to contact this time (Satya does not care).

                      [0] https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=22867803

                      • ascendantlogic 3 days ago

                        This feels more like Copilot-as-platform-engineer to me

                        • DeepYogurt 3 days ago

                          Github's been running on vibe code for a while now and it's starting to show

                        • someguyiguess 3 days ago

                          I did not come to hacker news expecting comedy gold but you have done it my friend!

                          • undefined 3 days ago
                            [deleted]
                        • corvad 3 days ago

                          Github's recent reliability has honestly been abysmal. Not surprised.

                          • ferguess_k 3 days ago

                            Unless some major customers are moving away, I don't think they are going to seriously care about it.

                            • corvad 3 days ago

                              I suspect some companies may already be considering it. Especially with the wealth of alternatives today.

                              • g947o 3 days ago

                                Companies are already using on-premise GitHub server, if they are using GitHub in the first place. There are many other self hosted solutions which are quite common in enterprise environment.

                                • supriyo-biswas 3 days ago

                                  In my experience companies are moving into GitHub for Copilot and GHA.

                                  • appplication 3 days ago

                                    GHA maybe, but copilot is just another mid tier player in a congested space.

                                    • NewJazz 3 days ago

                                      Doesn't stop folks from wanting to buy the MS brand. Execs are really out of touch these days.

                                      • olyjohn 2 days ago

                                        These days? lol

                                      • ChromaticPanic 3 days ago

                                        It's a cheap mid tier player. You get more tokens per dollar.

                                    • nine_k 3 days ago

                                      What kind of alternatives do you see as viable for large(ish) commercial users?

                                      • toephu2 3 days ago

                                        GitHub on-prem. Officially called GitHub Enterprise Server. You can have GitHub, but hosted on your own servers.

                                        • NewJazz 3 days ago

                                          So you still pay them, you do the hosting work, and you get a product with worse features than gitlab?

                                          • johnisgood 3 days ago

                                            Yeah, at that point why would anyone choose GitHub?

                                            • bigfatkitten 3 days ago

                                              And it costs you more money than GitLab.

                                              • zxcvasd 3 days ago

                                                but you can be smug when theres a github incident, and thats hard to put a price on

                                                • NewJazz 3 days ago

                                                  You can do that with gitlab.

                                        • pxc 3 days ago

                                          What is the quality-first, high uptime alternative to GitHub? My employer uses both GitHub and GitLab, and while I think GitLab is better, its quality also frankly sucks. It's riddled with bugs that have just been marinating on the issue tracker for years, and the most common "fix" for gnarly bugs in the CI platform is "revise the documentation to reflect the existing (broken) behavior".

                                          • stefan_ 3 days ago

                                            It's amazing, before we even had ChatGPT, GitLab was building so much endless slop halfbaked crap in their pursuit of ever more "enterprise checkboxes". Now they have slowed right down, no doubt collapsing under the escalating maintenance weight of all the nonsense that was created, like the canaries in the vibe coding mines telling us of impending doom.

                                            Now you go to their blog, theres a banner at the top announcing "GitLab Agentic AI whatever is GA (GENERAL AVAILABILITY)" and you try to click it its literally a fucking 404 not found. That's the level of their stability and quality. Try it for yourself:

                                            https://about.gitlab.com/blog/

                                            • fhd2 3 days ago

                                              Maybe it's GU already.

                                            • ferguess_k 3 days ago

                                              *Stupid question*: What is so hard about self hosting one's own repo? I get it must be difficult for a mega corporation, but for companies like us, who have hundreds of repos but only 20 of them are regularly used, and concurrent read/write is relatively light -- considering our largest team is less than 20 persons, so even if all of them are reading/writing from the repo, it doesn't seem to be a huge issue.

                                              Even for a bigger company, say 5x developers (we have about 100+ SWEs and maybe 10-20 other titles who use GitHub), is it really a big thing to self host their own repos? External applications are definitely on another level because you could have hundreds of concurrent visits easily.

                                              What did I miss?

                                              • pxc 3 days ago

                                                > What is so hard about self hosting one's own repo?

                                                Maybe nothing! I was genuinely asking. I still don't know what Actually Good™ forges are out there these days, generally suitable for corporate use in place of the likes of GitHub or GitLab. Forgejo? Something not based on Git?

                                                • ferguess_k 2 days ago

                                                  I guess self-hosting GitHub is the easiest second step for companies that use GitHub? It does have a lot of niceties built around git, which is very crude.

                                                • 0xedd 3 days ago

                                                  [dead]

                                          • jbverschoor 3 days ago

                                            Good thing git is a distributed system

                                            • dgxyz 3 days ago

                                              Virtually no one knows how to do anything with it outside of github.

                                              • TZubiri 3 days ago

                                                You might be surprised, but that's not true at all.

                                                I once read someone commenting "Nobody writes code by hand without looking syntax up".

                                                Man, you are just outing yourself as a complete beginner, the field is way deeper than you imagine and it's not even close.

                                                • dgxyz 3 days ago

                                                  Not really. I've been around a while. Git for about 15 years. Subversion before that. Perforce before that. rcs before that (back down to sun3 machines). Mostly Fossil now for personal things.

                                                  What I am saying is that people learn as much as they need to. They generally don't need to know any more git than is required to interact with github. If anything problematic comes up, they go in with a wrecking ball because they don't truly understand what they are doing. And git has a lot of wrecking balls available.

                                                  If you threw them at raw git and asked them to collaborate with someone they'd be up shit creek. They have no idea how SSH or email works for example.

                                                • nine_k 3 days ago

                                                  Your favorite search engine or LLM will show you in a second, it's really easy.

                                                  The problem is that it's not enough. The fact that Github uses Git specifically is a technical detail; it could use mercurial equally easily, as Bitbucket used to. Github Actions, OWNERS files, PRs and review tools, issue tracker, wiki are all not Git features.

                                                  • dgxyz 3 days ago

                                                    Not a chance. I think you need to spend some time in low ball corporate IT. It's just monkeys throwing faeces at the wall. We only just levered them off subversion...

                                                    (I use Fossil 100% offline for personal projects for ref)

                                                  • Joe_Cool 3 days ago

                                                    That's a them problem.

                                                    • tonymet 3 days ago

                                                      i still find insightful ways to use git every day. amazing tool. it's a shame for those who only see it as "how to sync my repo with my coworkers"

                                                    • TZubiri 3 days ago

                                                      True, workers can still commit to their local git.

                                                      I've been looking into having a separate git server that we can commit to and add plain ole git hooks to, and just having it be synced with github as a clone.

                                                      • sirmoveon 3 days ago

                                                        Check out Gitea. Its kind of a clone of github but you can self host.

                                                        • sham1 3 days ago

                                                          I'd rather recommend Forgejo (a fork of Gitea developed under the auspices of Codeberg e.V.) instead. The way in which Gitea broke the trust of the community seems like it probably should be avoided nowadays.

                                                      • nine_k 3 days ago

                                                        Git is!

                                                        PRs and code review are not. CI/CD is not.

                                                        I mean, there are solutions, but none of them seems to have a large enough mindshare and efficiency. (Even though Github's code review tools are pretty spartan.)

                                                        • globular-toast 3 days ago

                                                          > PRs and code review are not. CI/CD is not.

                                                          They can be. A PR can be made and code review conducted by submitting a patch to a mailing list. That's how the kernel and, I think, git itself is developed.

                                                          CI/CD is really a methodology. It just means integrating/deploying stuff as soon as its ready. So you just need maintainers to be able to run the test suite and deploy, which seems like a really basic thing.

                                                          • sublinear 3 days ago

                                                            You'd be surprised how far a lot of places got just using git notes and jenkins for a very long time.

                                                        • howToTestFE 3 days ago

                                                          If GH has an issue, it seems to always be around 4pm or 5pm GMT. I'm starting to think that i should avoid any planned production releases around this time.

                                                          • tapoxi 3 days ago

                                                            helm repo add gitlab https://charts.gitlab.io/ && helm upgrade --install gitlab gitlab/gitlab

                                                            I did this in 2019, it avoided so many headaches. CI is better too since there's a nice clean mapping of build -> pod for everything and I can just exec in if something's borked.

                                                            • odie5533 3 days ago

                                                              Things would have to get really bad before I considered managing my own repositories. Trading someone else's headaches for my own.

                                                              • tapoxi 3 days ago

                                                                It's not as bad as you think, I run the helm upgrade when patches come out, the backing store is S3 or managed SQL, it runs a nightly k8s cron called gitlab-backup which tarballs the whole thing into an s3 bucket with a single command restore should disaster strike. (This is part of the product, not a thing I wrote.)

                                                                I probably only babysit it for 30 minutes per year, including all the upgrades.

                                                                • nine_k 3 days ago

                                                                  It depends how high you value your headaches, and how high, your org's downtime. Github not working accrues over the hourly rate of every developer affected, which is likely $70-$100 a hour. 10 hours of outage in a year affecting a team of 10 would cost north of $70k, enough to hire a part-time SRE dedicated just to tend to your Gitlab installation.

                                                                  • zxcvasd 3 days ago

                                                                    >10 hours of outage in a year affecting a team of 10 would cost north of $70k

                                                                    10 hours x 10 developers x $70 per hour = $7000, not $70000.

                                                                    • nine_k 3 days ago

                                                                      Thank you for the correction! This indeed completely changes the picture :-\

                                                                    • TechDebtDevin 3 days ago

                                                                      [dead]

                                                                    • 0xbadcafebee 3 days ago

                                                                      ^ this. the last thing i want is to add to my workload. take my money and make my life easier, even if it means that for one hour every couple months i can't do anything

                                                                      • NewJazz 3 days ago

                                                                        Have you ever actually hosted gitlab?

                                                                        • 0xbadcafebee 3 days ago

                                                                          Not only have I hosted it, I've helped migrate two gitlab instances to github enterprise, because we didn't want to maintain it anymore

                                                                          • NewJazz 2 days ago

                                                                            Don't you still have to maintain github enterprise?

                                                                            • 0xbadcafebee 2 days ago

                                                                              It's the cloud managed one, they have an "enterprisey" license that gives you more features/limits but you don't have to run infra, upgrades, patches etc

                                                                  • nottimbo 3 days ago

                                                                    Microsoft, it's time to hire some SREs.

                                                                    • arm32 3 days ago

                                                                      We did hire some, boss! Soshie, Vizzy and Dexter. They're AI, but they're supposed to be way better than a human SRE. At least that's what the Sintra salesguy told us.

                                                                      • rvz 3 days ago

                                                                        So that's what the Tay, and Zoe AI bots were doing all this time after they were cancelled and banned off of Twitter.

                                                                        Working on the GitHub Azure migration and for years it's gone so well so far.

                                                                        • kyleee 3 days ago

                                                                          I hope someone’s been reviewing their work in case they’ve been adding certain german related Easter eggs

                                                                      • lenerdenator 3 days ago

                                                                        Why hire anyone to fix a problem when you can make an AI agent to "fix" it, tell investors about it to pump the price, and not fix anything knowing that you have a monopoly?

                                                                        • VirusNewbie 3 days ago

                                                                          Microsoft doesn't pay well enough to attract good SRE talent.

                                                                          • aruggirello 3 days ago

                                                                            Clippy to the rescue! :-)

                                                                            • ferguess_k 3 days ago

                                                                              Yes we did hire SREs, unfortunately they are in another continent and they only know how to pull others into the chat. We also have some AI too, do you want to try them? They are pretty good SREs, one of them wrote 100K lines of code in a week while another one reviews every line along the way. It was fantastic! Fantastic!! FANTASTIC!!!

                                                                              OK I have no idea about MSFT SREs, just to be /s.

                                                                            • andrewinardeer 3 days ago

                                                                              Days since last GitHub incident: 0.2

                                                                              • imglorp 3 days ago

                                                                                14 incidents this month. So far.

                                                                                • johnisgood 3 days ago

                                                                                  And it is January 16. Jeez.

                                                                              • postexitus 3 days ago

                                                                                I believe it is an Azure outage or some type of MS service - everything on Azure is down.

                                                                                • ctxc 3 days ago

                                                                                  My az services seem to be up.

                                                                                  • zxcvasd 3 days ago

                                                                                    having no issues on azure here, seeing no azure incidents on the status page or any of my admin panels

                                                                                    • deathanatos 3 days ago

                                                                                      > seeing no azure incidents on the status page

                                                                                      … in all seriousness, that is hardly proof that Azure isn't having an outage.

                                                                                      • zxcvasd 3 days ago

                                                                                        if i thought it alone was proof enough, i wouldnt have also included the bit about how i was actively using azure.

                                                                                        its one signal, among others. and in any case, i wasn't trying to prove the parent commenter wrong. i was offering my own signal to the crowd.

                                                                                      • verst 3 days ago

                                                                                        I second this. Not experiencing any Azure issues at this time.

                                                                                    • toephu2 3 days ago

                                                                                      This is why companies should host their own source code on-prem.

                                                                                      • MadameMinty 3 days ago

                                                                                        Angry unicorns seem to be over.

                                                                                        • phtrivier 3 days ago

                                                                                          Fixed in about 30m to an hour.

                                                                                          Definitely annoying, but I'll try the hot take that, contrary to popular belief, GH is not critical infrastructure - or so I hope.

                                                                                          Please tell me no part of the Ukrainian air defense system depends on a gh action hook.

                                                                                          • eddd-ddde 3 days ago

                                                                                            You've heard of infrastructure as code, now presenting air strikes as code!

                                                                                            Need a new secret offensive operation? Create a new JSON file with the coordinates, make a merge request and get Commander approval, merge it, and our new proprietary GitHub action runner will deploy a drone in seconds!

                                                                                            • philipallstar 3 days ago

                                                                                              This is far too simple. The correct way is to generate an NFT that's a screenshot from Google Maps of where you'd like to hit, and a blockchain-watching AI will spot it, figure out where you probably mean and send the coordinates to the fire control system.

                                                                                            • ares623 3 days ago

                                                                                              When millions of man-hours are lost waiting for your service to be back up, I think that deserves a bit of resiliency.

                                                                                              • vaylian 3 days ago

                                                                                                It's not critical, but there's still a lot of reliance on it.

                                                                                                It's also the only reason why I still need IPv4.

                                                                                                • NewJazz 3 days ago

                                                                                                  The status page says things are still not fixed.