> GitLab has two version of its software - GitLab Community Edition, the open-source version, and GitLab Enterprise Edition.
I think the context is the comparison with Github. So where is the Github open source community edition with MIT licensing?
> The question then is - what chunk of GitLab will be considered “core” in the future?
None of the additional enterprise features seem to be core features so it's just one core then? Maybe the author is not a native English speaker so it's not clear what a "core" is.
Believe the posters asking how we know that they won't shrink the feature set in the future in comparison to the existing codebase by introducing updates or quality-of-life improvements in the Enterprise version and not in the open version
I think the context is the comparison with Github. So where is the Github open source community edition with MIT licensing?
> The question then is - what chunk of GitLab will be considered “core” in the future?
None of the additional enterprise features seem to be core features so it's just one core then? Maybe the author is not a native English speaker so it's not clear what a "core" is.