Selasa, 11 Agustus 2015

Say Good-Bye to Google Code - code.google.com

Say Good-Bye to Google Code - code.google.com - First announced in March 2017, the Xperia L1 has come to replace Sony’s now discontinued E series. Priced at a surprisingly cheap £169, the L1 is Sony’s newest attempt at shaking up the budget phone market. Its large screen and sleek design make us think of Sony’s higher range of smartphones: it would be hard to single it out as the cheapest model in a line of Xperias. But at such a bargain price, we can’t expect it to perform as well as its more expensive counterparts. So how does the L1 hold up to other low-budget smartphones? Here’s our Xperia L1 review. first time the View branding, well we have collected a lot of data from the field directly and from many other blogs so very complete his discussion here about Say Good-Bye to Google Code - code.google.com, on this blog we also have to provide the latest automotive information from all the brands associated with the automobile. ok please continue reading:

Let us prepare a great farewell party for one of the most used open source project hoster and repository "GOOGLE CODE".



As google code started out in 2006,the search engine giant does not have more see through on their product.So the other competitors like Github exceeds what google code provides the users and according to google's analysis,most of the hosted projects are spam,So they decided to pull the plug out and kick out google code from the internet.

Here below the notice given by google.

As previously announced, most of Google Code will become read-only on August 25th, 2015.
We are still working with Google-affiliated projects (e.g., /p/chromium and /p/android) to get them migrated to other tools and make their projects read-only by the end of the year. These projects will remain read-write until we can transition all their data off of Google Code.

What will happen to the data?

Google Code data will still be accessible, just read-only. You will be able to search for and browse project issues, sync source data, and so on. The Export to GitHub feature will still work as advertised.
However, during this time you will not be able to modify projects. For example: create new issues, push code changes, or even modify admin settings. If you need some administrative action taken, such as deleting a project or setting up an automatic redirect URL, please contact us. (Instructions will also be linked from the /admin page of for project administrators.)

How long will the data remain available?

Google Code's data will remain online for a long time.
Until January 2016 the Google Code Project Hosting service as it exists today will continue to be available. And you will still be able to use version control clients like githg, or svn to access project data.
After January 2016 you will no longer be able to access source code from a version control client; however project data will still be available. We will also be offering project data in more convenient formats for export such as JSON and .zip files. Archived project data will be available throughout 2016 and beyond.
Note that only public data will be archived. If your project has private data, such as issues with the Restrict-View-* label, you will no longer be able to browse those project resources next year. (Public downloads, issues, wikis, etc. will be available.)
Most importantly, project URLs (e.g. http://code.google.com/p/vim) will continue to work, although links to raw source code likehttps://vim.googlecode.com/hg/README.txt will not. But again, Google Code will continue to work as normal until at least January 2016.

Anyways,don't cry open source developers,there is still Github or Bitbucket exists.

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