Show HN: Sourcebot, an open-source Sourcegraph alternative

github.com

246 points by bshzzle 2 days ago

Hi HN,

We’re Brendan and Michael, the creators of Sourcebot (https://github.com/sourcebot-dev/sourcebot). Sourcebot is an open-source code search tool that allows you to quickly search across many large codebases. Check out our demo video here: https://youtu.be/mrIFYSB_1F4, or try it for yourself on our demo site here: https://demo.sourcebot.dev

While at prior roles, we’ve both felt the pain of searching across hundreds of multi-million line codebases. Using local tools like grep were ill-suited since you often only had a handful of codebases checked out at a time. Sourcegraph (https://sourcegraph.com/) solves this issue by indexing a collection of codebases in the background and exposing a web-based search interface. It is the de-facto search solution for medium to large orgs, but is often cited as expensive ($49 per user / month) and recently went closed source (https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=41296481). That’s why we built Sourcebot.

We designed Sourcebot to be:

- Easily deployed: we provide a single, self-contained Docker image (https://github.com/sourcebot-dev/sourcebot/pkgs/container/so...).

- Fast & scalable: designed to minimize search times (current average is ~73ms) across many large repositories.

- Cross code-host support: we currently support syncing public & private repositories in GitHub and GitLab.

- Quality UI: we like to think that a good looking dev-tool is more pleasant to use.

- Open source: Sourcebot is free to use by anyone.

Under the hood, we use Zoekt (https://github.com/sourcegraph/zoekt) as our code search engine, which was originally authored by Han-Wen Nienhuys and now maintained by Sourcegraph (https://sourcegraph.com/blog/sourcegraph-accepting-zoekt-mai...). Zoekt works by building a trigram index from the source code enabling extremely fast regular expression matching. Russ Cox has a great article on how trigram indexes work if you’re interested: https://swtch.com/~rsc/regexp/regexp4.html

In the shorter-term, there are several improvements we want to make, like:

- Improving how we communicate indexing progress (this is currently non-existent so it’s not obvious how long things will take)

- UX improvements like search history, query syntax highlighting & suggestions, etc.

- Small QOL improvements like bookmarking code snippets.

- Support for more code hosts (e.g., BitBucket, SourceForge, ADO, etc.)

In the longer-term, we want to investigate how we could go beyond just traditional code search by leveraging machine learning to enable experiences like semantic code search (“where is system X located?”) and code explanations (”how does system X interact with system Y?”). You could think of this as a copilot being embedded into Sourcebot. Our hunch is that will be useful to devs, especially when packaged with the traditional code search, but let us know what you think.

Give it a try: https://github.com/sourcebot-dev/sourcebot. Cheers!

peterldowns a day ago

Re-asking [0] as a top-level question, since it has gone unanswered: do you intend to make a business out of this project in some way, or is it a "real" open source project?

I know that intentions can change, but I'm curious how you see it. Sourcegraph was pretty clearly always going to be a business-type-of-project, and like most business projects, relicensed everything to their custom enterprise license. Originally it was Apache 2 [1].

I love open source and I write a lot of it myself [2]. I use the MIT license, just like you've done here, and I admire that. I don't think you owe me or anyone else anything, and the MIT license makes that clear.

I am very interested in this project and I'd love to extend and contribute to it, but only if it's an actual open source project. Seems like every devtools-focused startup these days calls themselves "open source" but fails to actually build a community, because in reality it's just a marketing gimmick. Because the project is actually a company, the people involved never try very hard to build a community of contributors. When the company invariably cannot make money with an open source product, the code gets relicensed to be closed-source. The few people who had contributed end up getting played. That's what happened to Sourcegraph!

So: open source, or open source "for now"?

[0]: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=41715776

[1]: https://github.com/sourcegraph/sourcegraph-public-snapshot/c...

[2]: https://github.com/peterldowns

  • spmurrayzzz 14 hours ago

    Not the author, but given that this is a relatively small UI wrapper of a zoekt[1] backend, it seems like the risk here is isolated to the upstream Sourcegraph-maintained search dependency. By relatively small, I mean that the total SLOC for UI code in the entire project is around ~3.5k (compared to the backend which is currently 25x the size). Seems difficult to ascribe any enterprise motivations given that and additionally the UI seems very useful as-is even if you had to fork it and build a new community from there.

    [1] https://github.com/sourcegraph/zoekt

    • peterldowns 14 hours ago

      There's not really "risk" either way, I'm a fan of open source and I'm also a fan of businesses making money, I just don't want to donate time and energy to a business.

      What they've described smells a lot like a thing that needs to become a business — see Sourcegraph — and Brendan [0] and Michael [1] are currently working together at a startup they founded.

      I'm getting tired of seeing other businesses pissing in the pool by claiming to be "open source" purely for the marketing benefits, so I figured I'd ask up front and see what they say.

      Should be a simple answer either way!

      [0]: https://www.linkedin.com/in/brendan-kellam/

      [1]: https://www.linkedin.com/in/msukkari/

      • spmurrayzzz 13 hours ago

        Yea I think I understand your motivation re: not donating your time. I guess my assumption was more-so that the likelihood of 3k SLOC UI project becoming a business seemed incredibly remote. Perhaps that is misguided.

  • bshzzle 13 hours ago

    Thanks for the thoughtful question.

    This is still day 1, so we honestly don't have an answer if we will get to a point where we can monetize - it's too early to tell. However if we do end up going down that road, I don't think generating revenue and being a good steward of open source is mutually exclusive.

    My view is that there is a balance that can exist between open source and building a profitable business that doesn't negatively impact the open source community. Companies that come to mind that I think are striking this balance are PostHog & GitLab.

    • peterldowns 13 hours ago

      Thanks for the reply — to be clear, I understand your answer to be “this is a business but we’re not yet sure how we’ll make money.”

      Great work so far; best of luck!

hanwenn a day ago

Hi!

sorry for not responding to your email, I was swamped.

I looked through the sourcecode, but I can only find UI (ie. browser) code. Does this do anything beyond delivering a more functional and prettier UI on top of an existing zoekt deployment? If no, everybody would be better served if you tried to improve the UI inside Zoekt, which currently is a live demonstration of (my lack of) web app programming skills.

Have you thought of how you will achieve your further goals (eg. semantic search)? That will require server-side changes, but you currently have no Go code at all.

morgante a day ago

Awesome to see another open source player in the space, especially after Sourcegraph went closed source.

It looks like you're working on this full-time (and it's a lot of work to build great code search, as I know from working on my own product).

What are your plans for monetizing / building a sustainable business without inevitably going closed source like Sourcegraph?

  • bshzzle a day ago

    Currently, we don't have any plans of monetizing - the main focus for us right now is building something that people want to use :)

    • peterldowns a day ago

      Do you plan on eventually attempting to monetize in some way, or is this open source as in free software as in you legitimately are just creating a new open source project?

      I understand intentions can change, but there's a difference, and I'm curious to know the answer.

    • quest88 16 hours ago

      In lieu of money, how do you know you're building the right thing? For me, money is a good indicator you're building the right thing and solving the right problem.

mdaniel 15 hours ago

I'll point out that you're missing a stellar opportunity to showcase your own champagne via

  --- a/README.md
  +++ b/README.md
  @@ -1,256 +1,256 @@
  - We do not collect or transmit [any information related to your codebase](https://github.com/search?q=repo:sourcebot-dev/sourcebot++captureEvent&type=code)
  + We do not collect or transmit [any information related to your codebase](https://demo.sourcebot.dev/search?query=repo%3Asourcebot-dev%2Fsourcebot%20captureEvent)
which regrettably currently says "No results found" :-(
threecheese a day ago

Regarding your response to “why not use an IDE?”; do you have any other product-like use cases interest you? The one you mention - search across many repositories - makes a lot of sense for organizations with (for example) a Github Enterprise installation and want to investigate or make changes across multiple components. This is definitely relevant to me, and so I wonder what other cool things can I do with it?

  • bshzzle a day ago

    I think in the immediate term, we would like to talk to as many people as we can that have this "search across many repos" problem such that we can dial in the core search experience.

    Looking beyond the immediate, I think there is allot of fertile ground with respect to making engineering teams more efficient beyond just regular code search. Semantic code search for example is one of those features that I really wish I had when I was at my last job - would have made onboarding onto new codebases much easier.

    Would love to hear more about your use cases: brendan@sourcebot.dev

maxloh a day ago

Why not just fork Sourcegraph, instead of building the product from the ground up?

jmakov a day ago

Can somebody share the use case of this? Why not just use your IDE?

  • bshzzle a day ago

    yea it's a fair question - an IDE is often more convenient when you have the code checked-out locally. This becomes a pain when you work in a organization with potentially hundreds of repositories that you need to search across (e.g., a org stores their 100+ microservices in separate repos, and you need to find all places where they make a request to your service).

    • Hackbraten a day ago

      I use ghorg in tandem with ripgrep to address that problem. The former is for checking out the main branches of all repositories, the latter to perform the actual search.

  • eptcyka a day ago

    I cannot run Xcode on Linux, I cannot run Visual Studio on Linux, I might not have an IDE set up for the language that I want to inspect. Many reasons. Also, some languages practically require arbitrary code execution to make a build, which I'd much prefer to shove into an isolated VM.

  • metadaemon a day ago

    Finding examples of how others implement similar logic is my biggest use case for code searching, but since GitHub copied SourceGraph, I don't have much of a need for these self-hosted solutions.

    • rafaelgoncalves 12 hours ago

      yeah, github has a nice search now, the only complaint is that you need to be logged on to use, besides this is really nice.

zdw a day ago

Does this make a copy of each repo on ingest?

Can it work against in-place repos, for example if hosted on the same server as a code forge installation?

  • bshzzle a day ago

    Yea exactly - on ingest it clones the repos and will periodically fetch new revisions.

    Currently we don't support in-place repos, but feel free to file a issue and we'd be happy to take a look.

schreiaj a day ago

Can you add repos after starting the container? What about persisting indexes across restarts?

Still, neat. Glad to have an easy to deploy open source tool like this.

  • bshzzle 11 hours ago

    Yes - there is a file watcher that should pickup modifications to the configuration file.

    And you can persist indexes across restarts by mounting a volume to the `/data` directory (e.g., `-v $(pwd):/data`). Indexes are stored in a `.sourcebot` cache directory.

    Thanks for the interest!

ergocoder a day ago

What a milestone. SourceGraph is big enough to have its own open source clone

mattfat5 a day ago

This is well done thanks for the share.

cprogrammer a day ago

Does it support Perforce? i couldn't find it in the schema in the repo.

  • bshzzle a day ago

    No just GitLab and GitHub atm - but please feel free to file an issue for Perforce support.

TavsiE9s a day ago

Any plans for non Github/Gitlab integrations? Gitea/Gogs/etc. maybe?

  • bshzzle a day ago

    yes definitely - mind opening a issue so we can track it?

ashobeiri 2 days ago

This is really exciting. Happy to see someone building an open source solution in this space

j4coh 2 days ago

Cool to see someone carrying on the dream after SourceGraph lost their way.

  • bastawhiz a day ago

    I haven't followed SG closely. Other than licensing, what have they done to fall out of favor?

    • Starlevel004 a day ago

      They started aggressively pushing their (bad) copilot competitor.

      • Squarex 20 hours ago

        What's wrong with Cody? I find it better than Copilot.

    • selimthegrim 15 hours ago

      People were criticizing their hiring and salary structure too recently

IshKebab a day ago

Nice! Still not quite as good as grep.app from an interface point of view. They have instant search-as-you-type results over all of GitHub.

It's not open source but I use it all the time. Far superior to Github's search.

asdev a day ago

sourcegraph is dead with advent of LLMs and AI coding tools right? Github cross repo search is also not bad anymore

  • esafak a day ago

    Wrong. Unless you want to feed the LLM your entire codebase, which is usually infeasible, you need to be able to retrieve relevant context, which relies on understanding the codebase, as Sourcegraph does. Sourcegraph has a product that does precisely this, called Cody.