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Bitbucket Server (discontinued)

Bitbucket Server (discontinued)
Formerly Stash

Overview

What is Bitbucket Server (discontinued)?

Bitbucket Server (formerly Stash) from Atlassian offered a self-hosted source code management solution. The product is no longer available for sale, and support for existing licenses will end in 2024.

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Recent Reviews

Stash for GIT

9 out of 10
April 13, 2017
Incentivized
We switched to stash from TFS across whole organization due some limitations that we facing at TFS, especially on branching. On top of …
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Pricing

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What is Bitbucket Server (discontinued)?

Bitbucket Server (formerly Stash) from Atlassian offered a self-hosted source code management solution. The product is no longer available for sale, and support for existing licenses will end in 2024.

Entry-level set up fee?

  • No setup fee

Offerings

  • Free Trial
  • Free/Freemium Version
  • Premium Consulting/Integration Services

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Alternatives Pricing

What is Bitbucket?

Bitbucket from Australian-headquartered Atlassian offers source code management and version control.

What is GitLab?

GitLab DevSecOps platform enables software innovation by aiming to empower development, security, and operations teams to build better software, faster. With GitLab, teams can create, deliver, and manage code quickly and continuously instead of managing disparate tools and scripts. GitLab helps…

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Product Details

What is Bitbucket Server (discontinued)?

Bitbucket Server (discontinued) Technical Details

Operating SystemsUnspecified
Mobile ApplicationNo
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Comparisons

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Reviews and Ratings

(28)

Attribute Ratings

Reviews

(1-1 of 1)
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Score 6 out of 10
Vetted Review
Verified User
Incentivized
Our entire organization uses Stash for all code repositories. We store code in repositories specific to applications. Each department has control over a section of repositories. Some applications are spread across multiple repositories when they have deep collections of dependencies or scripts. We also use the pull requests system of stash for all code changes. Most if not all departments require two approvers for every pull request to be merged.
  • Integrations with HipChat are solid, informative, and easy.
  • Pull requests are easy to comment on, discuss, approve, deny, and merge. It has a very intuitive workflow.
  • It's difficult to create flexible pull requests that might need to be approved by 4 people and others by only 1 person. All pull requests require the same number of approvers
  • Maneuvering through the git-components of Stash to look at particular branches, diff branches, or view tags can be difficult, tedious, or impossible. Direct support for some more advanced git actions would be appreciated.
  • There is no readme concept (like in GitHub) for a repository.
Stash is good if you can incorporate it into other Atlassian products, and it is certainly acceptable for simple operations, but it is not as good as other products out there such as GitHub or Gitlab. Stash has nothing to truly separate itself from the crowd apart from its integrations with the rest of the suite of Atlassian products.
  • In positive form, having Stash over not having it at all has provided us with a superior repository system over trying to push to some local server instance and manage branches/merging from our local machines.
  • There are no real negatives to using Stash, its only problem is that there are competitors out there that can offer additional features.
Stash was selected before I was at the company, but we're looking at these alternatives and actively considering switching. Stash seems to have all the necessary features we need to make it work, but it doesn't have any bells and whistles or extra special features that we can use to create more advanced integrations with other products like Jenkins or Amazon Web Services.
No
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  • Product Reputation
  • Existing Relationship with the Vendor
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