Open Source Project Infrastructure?
cpfeifer asks: "Russ Miles wrote about going through the pain of setting up his own infrastructure for his OSS project, AspectXML. He asks: 'Are there tools out there that make this process much easier, and perhaps ones that I could take advantage of by moving my own open source project to? Also what experiences have people had with the different community projects?' Should you start up your own gforge server, host it on Sourceforge, or perhaps look to one of the OSS groups like Apache, Codehaus or Tigris?"
There are no karma whores, only moderation johns
What's great about sourceforge and the like, is that they provide you with all of those in one package, and the bug-management-thingies in the portals beat most alternatives any day.
If you want to setup your own tools, I think it's better to just run the set of services you need, and not bother with a full devel-site, since for one project such a site is going to be mostly bloat, but that naturally depends on the size of your project.
If you want to use one of the existing sites, then the criteria are either those of personal choice, political ones, or maybe a matter of convinience: many people already have accounts on SourceForge, some people on Savannah, and some (but probably fewer) on other sites. (This is only my intuition. There might just as well be sites with userbase much larger than that of Savannah).
Just my totally random .05 euro. Sorry, smaller coins aren't in use in Finland.
Software should be free as in speech, but if we also get some free beer, all the better.
Not only will you get good tools, but most folks look there first. You can always move up to something custom, and SF will still link to your homepage, files, etc (AFAIK).
-Rob
terpmotors.com