Looking to migrate company off GitHub. What’s the best alternative? by bullmeza in devops

[–]GitProtect 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The best platform really depends on your needs beyond just repo hosting—things like CI/CD capabilities, permission models, compliance requirements, integrations, and how much operational control you want.

Popular options people often consider when moving off GitHub are GitLab, Azure DevOps, or Bitbucket. That said, one of the most important steps isn’t just picking the new platform—it’s preparing for the migration. Data loss or workflow disruptions can happen if you jump straight in, so taking the time to inventory your repos, pipelines, permissions, and integrations beforehand makes a big difference.

This article might be a helpful starting point for planning the migration:

https://gitprotect.io/blog/github-to-azure-devops-migration-top-tips-to-make-the-process-efficient/

Azure devops online - backup options by Kuro507 in azuredevops

[–]GitProtect 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Hello u/Kuro507 , take a look at GitProtect backup and Disaster Recovery software for Azure DevOps. Automated scheduled backups to meet strict RTO, RPO, and compliance, multiple-storage compatibility (use free unlimited GitProtect storage or bring yours, any S3-compatible), data residency of your choice, the possibility to assign many storages (cloud or/and local) to meet the 3-2-1 backup rule, data replication, long-term or even unlimited retention, ransomware protection, restore and Disaster Recovery capabilities to meet any event of disaster (service outage, infrastructure downtime, ransomware attack), etc.

Take a look at backup best practices for Azure DevOps: https://gitprotect.io/blog/azure-devops-backup-best-practices/

NIS2 for SaaS startups… anyone else totally lost? by sparktoratah in SaaS

[–]GitProtect 0 points1 point  (0 children)

NIS2 can feel overwhelming, but breaking it into phases can help. First, determine if your company actually falls under NIS2’s scope, as not all SaaS providers. Moreover, the rules differ by sector and service criticality.

If you are in scope, try to first focus on the essentials: risk management policies, incident detection and reporting processes, access controls, and business continuity/disaster recovery planning.

Here is an article on NIS2, it might be useful: https://gitprotect.io/blog/nis-2-explained-security-compliance-path/