wow, those are awesome projects! and really usable too!
I actually really liked bacillus. The minimalism is perfect, and seems like a great option to projects that would benefit with its own hosted CI server.
Oh, and while messing with it I accidentally triggered four jobs, oops sorry :P
If I had a server and domain just laying around I certainly would setup one for personal projects. I wonder as well if it would be possible to display the most recent job status in the project's repo interface (maybe with an external image card in the markdown).
Thanks, glad you checked them out! Don't worry about triggering jobs, it's a demo instance, doesn't hurt if you do some builds. There's a rate limit of 8 jobs concurrently and the build artifacts are cleaned up pretty frequently.
If you wanted to use it as a local build manager thingie, it would be pretty easy to set up in a container (ugh) or locally and just point at localhost:<port> ... with your web browser. But go stuff is usually so easy to build it might not be worth it :)
Unsure what you mean about the recent job status idea -- can you elucidate more? I'm open to cool ideas...
simpleutils, a small alternative coreutils package. It's the only actual Go project I have right now and it's nothing impressive, but I really am enjoying making it. It's been a blast seeing it being useful in my day-to-day life as well.
Ooo, neat! I have heard there's a push to build a whole coreutils in Rust, but I'd rather have a Go version if I had to choose to replace the time-tested C versions :) I'll check those out for sure.