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Posted by
Crista Perlton on September 5th, 2024.
Since we released ProGet 2024 we have received a lot of positive feedback on how the reworked Policies & Compliance Rules have really cut down the time spent managing compliance. Our customers have found them to be “intuitive and incredibly effective.” A particular feature that our users have been really positive about is...
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Posted by
Alex Papadimoulis on September 2nd, 2024.
pgutil is an open-source, cross-platform command line tool that provides a variety of commands to upload/download packages, manage feeds, audit package compliance, assess vulnerabilities, etc. We released pgutil 1.0 alongside ProGet 2024 and over the past several months, we’ve been steadily adding new commands to the tool...
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Posted by
Alex Papadimoulis on August 1st, 2024.
Starting in ProGet 2025, we will begin our multi-year journey of saying goodbye to Microsoft’s SQL Server. In its place, we will be switching to an embedded distribution of PostgreSQL with the option to use your own PostgreSQL Server. We also plan to support both databases for at least two major releases, to make the transition as...
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Posted by
Alex Papadimoulis on July 29th, 2024.
Starting with ProGet 2024.11, you now can create pub (Dart/Flutter) Feeds, along with the extensive list of currently supported feed types. Once again, this feed type came from a feature request on our forums, and we’re happy to announce that we now have official support for pub feeds. A pub feed is used to store pub...
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Posted by
Alex Papadimoulis on July 22nd, 2024.
Last week, we relaunched Inedo Docs, the documentation portal for our products and related tools. Although the content is identical, it’s powered by a proprietary CMS we built from scratch. As a result, the articles load much faster, they’re easier to search, and everything is editable on GitHub. In this article, I’ll talk about why we...
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Posted by
The Inedo Team on July 19th, 2024.
Over the past several years, ProGet has grown quite a bit in both capability and scope. Since our last pricing update in 2018, we’ve added new feed types, expanded our software composition analysis (SCA) features, and continued investing in product development and support. To keep delivering improvements at the level you expect, we’re...
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Posted by
Crista Perlton on July 15th, 2024.
As November rolls around, so does Microsoft’s newest release of .NET. As always, it brings a range of changes and updates. this time with a focus on cloud-native development, AI integration, and performance improvements. Microsoft has listed the changes to expect in their official release announcement, but just as I did with .NET 6...
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Posted by
Kim Pento on March 25th, 2024.
In the past few years, we’ve all seen major cybersecurity drama like Log4J and SolarWinds shake up the open-source world. ProGet’s been on this, with features like vulnerability scanning. But those headlines? They made us feel it’s time to kick our security game up a notch. So, we’re planning to roll out ProGet...
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Posted by
Alex Papadimoulis on November 27th, 2023.
When you upgrade to ProGet 2023.23, you may notice that you can create CRAN Feeds along with the existing, extensive list of supported feeds. This new feed type was borne out of a feature request from our user community, and we’re happy to finally implement these in ProGet. A CRAN feed is used for R packages, which are used...
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Posted by
Alex Papadimoulis on November 10th, 2023.
After upgrading to ProGet 2023.22, you may have noticed that your Debian feeds are now called “Debian (Classic)” feeds. And if you create a new Debian feed, it’ll be listed as a “Debian (New)” feed. This maintenance release also includes a new feed type for Alpine Linux (APK) Packages, and support for...