user

Inedo Blog


Navigation
CategoryPackage Management
Featured

Package Management

CMPR: Signs You’re a Level 1 in Package Maturity

Posted on October 2nd, 2025.

This article is 1/5 in our series on Centrally Managed Package Repositories, also available as a chapter in our free, downloadable eBook Package Management at Scale Most organizations start here—but few remain at this level for long. It’s worth asking: are you here now? If what follows feels familiar, you’re likely operating at Level 1....

Featured

Package Management

CMPR: Assessing Your Level of Package Maturity

Posted on September 25th, 2025.

This article is part of our series on Package Management at Scale, also available as a chapter in our free, downloadable eBook Modern software development thrives on complexity; polyrepos, microservices, and sprawling open-source ecosystems power innovation, but they can potentially introduce chaos.   We’ve recently posted...

Featured

Package Management

How Using GitLab Packages Leads to Duplicative Work and Operational Friction

Posted on September 16th, 2025.

The GitLab Package Registry is one of the more popular alternatives to GitHub Packages for sharing internal libraries. Like GitHub Packages, it’s built right into the platform, feels familiar, and works smoothly with GitLab CI/CD. For teams already using GitLab, it’s an easy pick. On the surface, it all seems pretty seamless: each...

Featured

Package Management

Package Management at Scale: The Hidden Bottlenecks in the Software Supply Chain

Posted on September 4th, 2025.

This article is part of our series on Package Management at Scale, also available as a chapter in our free, downloadable eBook Most modern apps are built on code developers didn’t write—and barely look at. Instead of copying snippets from StackOverflow or manually downloading libraries, today’s teams pull entire frameworks, utilities,...

Featured

Package Management

How Scaling Development Starts with Centralized Package Management

Posted on September 2nd, 2025.

This article is part of our series on Package Management at Scale, also available as a chapter in our free, downloadable eBook One day, your team’s moving fast, deploying features, shipping builds, handling dependencies without much thought. Then suddenly, something starts breaking. Builds slow to a crawl. Pipelines fail seemingly...

Featured

Package Management

How Bad Distribution Wrecks Your Software Supply Chain

Posted on August 28th, 2025.

This article is part of our series on Package Management at Scale, also available as a chapter in our free, downloadable eBook You’re shipping code faster than ever, but do you really know what’s running in production? In most teams, packages are pulled from the internet, even if you have a CI tool. CI only rebuilds dependencies on the...

Featured

Package Management

Why Curation Matters Now More Than Ever In the Software Supply Chain

Posted on August 26th, 2025.

This article is part of our series on Package Management at Scale, also available as a chapter in our free, downloadable eBook Many teams overlook software supply chain curation until a crisis hits. Vulnerabilities, dependency issues, and malicious packages can slip in unnoticed, surfacing only when it’s too late. Relying on thousands of...

Featured

Package Management

Why Package Management Fails Without Governance

Posted on August 21st, 2025.

This article is part of our series on Package Management at Scale, also available as a chapter in our free, downloadable eBook Managing packages across fragmented, siloed repositories leads to duplicated effort, poor visibility, and inconsistent standards, which is why many organizations turn to centralization. But without clear...

Featured

Package Management

Why Decentralized Teams Need Centralized Package Management Now

Posted on August 19th, 2025.

This article is part of our series on Package Management at Scale, also available as a chapter in our free, downloadable eBook If you’re building software at scale, you’re likely overlooking a critical issue: your teams are drowning in a sea of packages from internal libraries open-source dependencies, Docker images and one-off...