Response from Martin Woodward, GitHub’s VP of Developer Relations:

Sorry for the inconvenience @koepnick - while searching across all repos has required being logged in for a long time, when we enhanced the search capabilities earlier in the 2023 we had to extend this to repos as well (see https://github.blog/changelog/2023-06-07-code-search-now-requires-login/).

This is primarily to ensure we can support the load for developers on GitHub and help protect the servers from being overwhelmed by anonymous requests from bots etc.

    • btpOP
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      241 year ago

      I think it kind of flies in the face of what Open Source Software should be. They’re walling off code behind accounts in the Microsoft ecosystem.

      • [email protected]
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        121 year ago

        I think it’s kind of a slippery slope; but I don’t think the search itself being login walled is apocalyptic. As long as anonymous users can clone the repositories and browse the code, I can kind of understand why they don’t want to pay to run an elastic search cluster for bots’ benefit. Presumably in-repo search could be done locally by scrapers’ hardware.

        But if it turns into “login to view this repository” then GitHub will have turned evil.

      • @[email protected]
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        81 year ago

        They’re not walling off any code. They’re restricting use of their server-side search resources. Other repository hosting services don’t have code search at all.

      • phillaholic
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        -31 year ago

        It’s more gating off than walling. If it keeps access and usage free I’m ok with it.

    • @SheeEttin
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      91 year ago

      On its own, it’s not. But it’s going to be one step on the path to shit-town.