Progress of the GitLab installation and migration scripts has been very good. With some last tests to go, we're confident we can complete installation and migration on Friday March 20th, 2015. The window 08:00h - 12:00h UTC has been designated to perform installation and migration.During that window existing git repositories with public visibility (i.e. http or gitweb access -- git:// access not counted) will be migrated into GitLab [0]. There's no impact on Subversion, CVS, mercurial, darcs or bazaar repositories. Users with git repositories without http or gitweb access, who want to use GitLab for their project are kindly requested to contact the site admins.After the migration, migrated repositories will be removed from their current physical path locations. Repositories will only be accessible through GitLab and stored in a location managed by GitLab. Users who want to make backups should do so by keeping a local clone of their git repository(-ies).As part of the migration, GitLab accounts will be created for all users of the common-lisp.net system. Each user with a .forward file in their home directory on the system will receive an account confirmation e-mail. This confirmation request is valid for 48 hours. All accounts must be confirmed before use - the system blocks accounts until confirmed. Your account can be used immediately after confirmation, even during the migration window. As part of the migration, SSH keys found in the user's home directory will be imported into the user's GitLab account. You will receive an e-mail to confirm this happened.As part of the migration, Gitlab groups will be created, mirroring the common-lisp.net "project" concept. Users currently part of a project by virtue of being member of a unix group on common-lisp.net will be assigned GitLab group membership for the mirror group in the role of Owner. Notification mails are sent out due to the migration process. Projects that wish to use GitLab's more fine-grained permisssions[1] can do so after migration completes.As part of the migration, existing git repositories will be imported into GitLab under the group or account which mirrors the common-lisp.net project or account. All repositories will have a public visibility. Each repository on common-lisp.net becomes a project in GitLab. This means each repository gets an issue tracker and wiki set up. Any project that wishes not to use those can turn those off in the Settings page for the GitLab project after the migration. Due to the nature of the migration process, the Administrator account will be a member of all GitLab projects and groups. This can be corrected after the migration.After the migration, gitweb access won't be available anymore. It will be replaced by URL redirection to GitLab. git:// protocol support won't be available anymore either.While the migration is in progress, SSH access to the system will be blocked to prevent repositories being updated while migrated.Should you want to start a new project in GitLab, please ask the site admins to create a group for it.Please note that this is just one of the steps in the restructuring plan for common-lisp.net. Further steps as indicated in [2] will be executed later and will affect repositories for other version control systems as well as other services.In case of questions please follow up to clo-devel@common-lisp.net: the announcements mailing list is closed for posting.[0] Full list of affected repositories: https://common-lisp.net/gitlab-migration-repository-mapping/ (note: updated today!)--