This is incredibly, incredibly sad: admin.phacility.com/phame/post/vie
introduced Phabricator to me 6 years ago, and we implemented it at my company after a month-long test. It was life-changing software.
Conversation
Replying to
Phab saved our asses a ton of times.
My boss would ask: "Why did we decide not to implement this feature? A customer is asking." And within 5 mins I could go from git blame to the specific task documenting why we chose not to implement something. Everything was linked.
1
More importantly, Phab's code review workflow encouraged every change to be squashed into a single commit, to be rebased on top of master. It made deployments and rollbacks trivially simple: secure.phabricator.com/book/phabflavo
(This was how tasks were ALWAYS associated with one commit.)
2
The interface was also incredible for tracking development across many devs. I remember an intern sitting on a couch, writing his internship report simply by going through his Phab activity.
And I remember saving Fridays for reviewing the activity of EVERY dev in my org.
1
1
The only knock against Phab was the lack of good CI support. And I think Gitlab and Github may have finally caught up.
Phabricator was truly incredible software. I'm very sorry to see it go.
2
1
(Now I'm debating shutting down my account with them, and digging up the old Ansible playbook I wrote to install Phabricator on a server. Not sure if I want to run my own instance forever, though ...)
1
15 hours later: yeah, I now run all my projects on a self-hosted instance of Phabricator, mirrored to GitHub.
2
2
Well, this is good news:
Quote Tweet
We want to talk to people who love Phabricator and think GitHub code review needs improvement: forms.gle/PvUdXESUNVU8XT

