
Improve Git monorepo performance with a file system monitor
Monorepo performance can suffer due to the sheer number of files in your working directory. Git’s new builtin file system monitor makes it easy to speed up monorepo performance.
Monorepo performance can suffer due to the sheer number of files in your working directory. Git’s new builtin file system monitor makes it easy to speed up monorepo performance.
The recent changes to improve protocol security on GitHub.com are now coming to GitHub Enterprise Server, starting with version 3.6.
The open source Git project just released Git 2.37. Take a look at some of our highlights from the latest release.
Git Merge, the conference dedicated to bringing the Git community together returns on September 14-15 in Chicago, Illinois.
The history of pre-receive hooks, how we discovered that the performance was problematic, and how we went about safely replacing them.
Another new release of Git is here! Take a look at some of our highlights on what’s new in Git 2.36.
Ensuring secure access to your source code is more important than ever. Git Credential Manager helps make that easy.
The open source Git project just released Git 2.35. Here’s GitHub’s look at some of the most interesting features and changes introduced since last time.
To celebrate this most recent release, here’s GitHub’s look at some of the most interesting features and changes introduced since last time.
The new sparse index feature makes it feel like you are working in a small repository when working in a focused portion of a monorepo.
If you’re a GitHub Enterprise Cloud customer, you can now set up a stream of audit log and Git events to Splunk or an Azure Event Hub.
We’re changing which keys are supported in SSH and removing unencrypted Git protocol. Only users connecting via SSH or git:// will be affected. If your Git remotes start with https://, nothing in this post will affect you. If you’re an SSH user, read on for the details and timeline.
The open source Git project just released Git 2.33, with features and bug fixes from over 74 contributors. Here’s a look at some of the most interesting features and changes.
It’s been a busy time of the year for our Hubbers (GitHub employees). We’ve been shipping products, getting ready for launches, and taking some much needed time off for the…
The latest version of GitHub Desktop allows you to squash commits, squash and merge, reorder, amend your last commit, check out a branch from a previous commit, and more.
Build what’s next on GitHub, the place for anyone from anywhere to build anything.