COVID-19 update: supporting our employees and community
Learn more about decisions we’ve made to protect our employees, our community, and our customers in response to COVID-19.
Explore the latest blogs from GitHub on all things software development from the newest capabilities on the GitHub platform to research and insights—and guides to help you level up your engineering skills.
Learn more about decisions we’ve made to protect our employees, our community, and our customers in response to COVID-19.
Recently, we’ve had multiple service interruptions on GitHub.com. We know how important reliability of our service is for your projects and teams. We take this responsibility very seriously and apologize…
Starting March 5, we’re hosting an online GitHub Actions Hackathon challenging you to create original Actions.
Quickly find and take action on your notifications with the new notifications experience on GitHub.com
The GitHub Student Developer Pack delivers the best real-world developer tools and training from over 100 partner companies.
We’re excited to share GitHub’s 2019 Transparency Report, a by-the-numbers look at how we handle requests for user data and moderate content on GitHub.
GitHub is now a proud sponsor of Hack Your Future, a not-for-profit coding school for refugees and other people that have limited access to education and the labor market. Learn more about the latest campaign, Behind the Source.
In this deep dive, we cover how our daily schema migrations amounted to a significant toil on the database infrastructure team, and how we searched for a solution to automate the manual parts of the process.
We’re partnering with Microsoft for Startups to make GitHub available for all participants, starting on February 13.
We want your feedback about GitHub’s new command line tool that makes it easier to work with GitHub and reduce friction for many of your common workflows.
We’re bringing GitHub closer to communities in India to better serve students, developers, maintainers, enterprise customers, and everyone helping to create the future of open source.
Additional security features, a new internal visibility option, and more with the latest updates to GitHub Enterprise Server 2.20.
Share your love for open source and learn how to get involved for a chance to win a GitHub hoodie.
Now, anyone can connect an issue to a pull request from the issue directly using the new linked pull request section providing greater context to your workflow.
Manage secrets, make use of self-hosted runners, and more with the GitHub Actions API—now available in beta.
GitHub and Major League Hacking (MLH) came together to organize Local Hack Day: Share.
On 02/02/2020 we took a snapshot of every active public repository on GitHub to be archived for a thousand years in the Arctic Code Vault. Learn about what’s included, how you can help us improve it, and more.
GitHub Desktop brings two features that avoid permission failures: rerouting when pushing to a cloned repository and rerouting when pushing to a protected branch.
Want to contribute to open source, but not sure where to begin? GitHub now helps you find good first issues to get you started.
We’ve recently launched good first issues recommendations to help new contributors find easy gateways into open source projects. Read about the machine learning engine behind these recommendations.
Git 2.25.0 includes a new experimental git sparse-checkout command that makes the existing feature easier to use, along with some important performance benefits for large repositories.
Build what’s next on GitHub, the place for anyone from anywhere to build anything.
Catch up on the GitHub podcast, a show dedicated to the topics, trends, stories and culture in and around the open source developer community on GitHub.