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Release Radar · March 2021 Edition
The open source community is always hard at work. February's projects were super hard to pick since there are so many amazing releases. These are exciting new releases from some…
GitHub Availability Report: March 2021
In March, we experienced three incidents resulting in significant impact and degraded state of availability for issues, pull requests, webhooks, API requests, GitHub Pages, and GitHub Actions services. Follow up…
Introducing new push notifications, scheduling, releases and more on GitHub Mobile
GitHub Mobile helps you get work done when you’re on the go, wherever you go. You’ve told us that you’d like more options for push notifications and viewing releases on…
Packages: Container registry now supports GITHUB_TOKEN
Packages: Container registry now supports GITHUB_TOKEN
GitHub Capture the Flag results
Earlier this month, we challenged you to a Call to Hacktion—a CTF (Capture the Flag) competition to put your GitHub Workflow security skills to the test. Participants were invited to…
How we found and fixed a rare race condition in our session handling
On March 8, we shared that, out of an abundance of caution, we logged all users out of GitHub.com due to a rare security vulnerability. We believe that transparency is…
Improving large monorepo performance on GitHub
Every day, GitHub serves the needs of over 56M developers, working on over 200M code repositories. All but a tiny fraction of those repositories are served with amazing performance, for…
Highlights from Git 2.31
The open source Git project just released Git 2.31 with features and bug fixes from 85 contributors, 23 of them new. Last time we caught up with you, Git 2.29…
CodeQL Code Scanning: improvements for users analyzing codebases on 3rd party CI/CD systems
CodeQL Code Scanning: improvements for users analyzing codebases on 3rd party CI/CD systems
Scripting with GitHub CLI
It has been a year since we’ve launched the first public release of GitHub CLI. Since, we have added functionality to manage your repositories, comment on issues, enable auto-merge for…
How MLOps can drive governance for machine learning: A conversation with Algorithmia
This post features a guest interview with Diego M. Oppenheimer, CEO at Algorithmia Over the past few years, machine learning has grown in adoption within the enterprise. More organizations are…
Measuring enterprise developer productivity
In a recent paper written by Nicole Forsgren and her colleagues, “The SPACE of developer productivity: There’s more to it than you think,” there is an irony that is hard…
GitHub security update: A bug related to handling of authenticated sessions
Why did I get logged out of GitHub.com? On the evening of March 8, we invalidated all authenticated sessions on GitHub.com created prior to 12:03 UTC on March 8 out…
This week at GitHub InFocus: Code security and DevSecOps
Two weeks ago, we kicked off GitHub InFocus, a global virtual series just for software teams. Last week, we learned what powers a successful DevOps program. Next up: Security. We…
Release Radar · February 2021 Edition
The open source community is always hard at work. February's projects were super hard to pick since there are so many amazing releases. These are exciting new releases from some…
GitHub Availability Report: February 2021
Introduction In February, we experienced no incidents resulting in service downtime to our core services. This month’s GitHub Availability Report will provide initial details around an incident from March 1…
GitHub Security Lab Capture the Flag: A call to hacktion
Save the date! March 17 to 21, take your chance with the GitHub CTF “A Call to Hacktion!” What is a CTF? In software security, a Capture the Flag (CTF)…
Your guide to DevOps automation and CI/CD at GitHub InFocus
Last week we kicked off GitHub InFocus, a global virtual series just for software teams. We discussed the importance of developer experience and innersource—and how key collaboration really is. Next…
The little bug that couldn’t: Securing OpenSSL
Software security doesn't end at the boundaries of your own code. The moment a library dependency is introduced, you're adopting other people’s code and any bugs that come with it.…