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Butler's Log

Agentic Version Control Benchmarks Grit: rewriting Git in Rust with agents Git Merge 2026 Agent-safe Git with GitButler We’ve raised $17M to build what comes after Git Announcing the GitButler CLI for Linux The Great CSS Expansion A couple of git nits Simplifying Git by Using GitButler Introducing the GitButler CLI GitButler 0.19 - "Commander Keen" But Head: Crafting a Custom Font MCP vs RAG: Two Very Different Ways to Gain Context Getting Started With GitButler Agents Using the GitButler MCP Server to Build Better AI-Driven Git Workflows Using GitButler With Multiple GitHub Accounts Advent of Code! Upcoming GitButler Events Use GitButler for your Gerrit workflow Integrating GitButler and GitHub Enterprise Butler Flow: shipping code faster (but less like Alfred, more like CI on steroids) - Part 3 Butler Flow: shipping code faster (but less like Alfred, more like CI on steroids) - Part 2 Butler Flow: shipping code faster (but less like Alfred, more like CI on steroids) - Part 1 Grid Happens: Because Flexbox Wasn’t Enough Using Cursor Hooks for automatic version control Deep Dive into the new Cursor Hooks A Responsive Item Counter with CSS only GitButler 0.16 - "Sweet Sixteen" GitButler's Claude Code tab Git Mini Summit 2025 Videos Automate Your AI Workflows with Claude Code Hooks Managing Multiple Claude Code Sessions Without Worktrees GitButler 0.15 - "Quirky Quinceañera" 20 years of Git. Still weird, still wonderful. GitButler's new patch based Code Review (Beta) Going down the rabbit hole of Git's new bundle-uri How to do patch-based review with git range-diff How Core Git Developers Configure Git Why is Git Autocorrect too fast for Formula One drivers? Stacked Branches with GitButler Git Merge 2024 Talks are Up GitButler 0.13 - "Lucky Baseball" Fearless Rebasing Git Merge 2024 Why GitHub Actually Won GitButler is joining the Open Source Pledge The New Era of Town Hall Chat The Future of Open Source GitButler is now Fair Source Git Merge 2024 GitButler 0.12 - "Stingy Baker" The Birth of THE MERGE GitButler for Windows Fixing up Git with Autosquash The Git Zeitgeist Git Worktrees and GitButler DevWorld Git Slides Git Tips and Tricks Git Tips 1: Oldies but Goodies Git Tips 2: New Stuff in Git Git Tips 3: Really Large Repositories FOSDEM Git Talk Opening Up GitButler Debugging Tauri in VS Code Advent of GitButler Code Signing Commits in Git, Explained Virtual Branches Alpha Our We Are Developers Adventure Building Virtual Branches DevDays in Vilnius The Future of Software and Open Source Introducing GitButler
GitButler's Annual Open Source Pledge Report
Scott Chacon · 2025-09-10 · via Butler's Log

GitButler is a member of the Open Source Pledge, which requires an annual blog post report. This is that report.

GitButler's Annual Open Source Pledge Report

Last year, GitButler was one of the first companies to join Sentry in it's Open Source Pledge, an effort to encourage organizations that depend on open source software to give back and help with OSS sustainability.

As we said in our initial post last year when joining the project, we're proud to help open source become more sustainable and support the projects we've depended on.

The guidelines of the pledge are to donate $2000 per full time developer that you employ to open source projects, organizations or maintainers.

Last year we had an average of 5 full time developers, which works out to an annual pledge of $10k USD.

In 2024-2025, we donated:

  • $6,000 to the Tauri project (through GitHub sponsors)
  • $3,000 to the Svelte project ($250/mo through OpenCollective)
  • $1,050 to our dependency tree via Thanks.dev

This works out to $2010 per developer re-investment in the Open Source projects and libraries that we use to build GitButler.

We also directly sponsor the GitOxide project heavily, but as we're actively directing the bug fixes and feature development, it's not counted according to the pledge guidelines.

If you want to know more about our feelings around the future of Open Source and the reasoning behind our joining the pledge, check out my talk at WAD World Congress in Berlin last year:

Skip straight to the end where I talk about the issues and the Open Source Pledge

We continue to hope that if you're a company that is likewise standing on the shoulders of all of this amazing Open Source software to build whatever it is that you're building, you'll join us in joining the Open Source Pledge or otherwise supporting the developers that you clearly depend on.

Speaking of which, the Open Source Pledge just yesterday published a blog post highlighting us (well, me), including very old photos of me and my origin story. Check it out:

A very nice story about me and GitButler, from the Open Source Pledge team

A very nice story about me and GitButler, from the Open Source Pledge team

Scott Chacon

Written by Scott Chacon

Scott Chacon is a co-founder of GitHub and GitButler, where he builds innovative tools for modern version control. He has authored Pro Git and spoken globally on Git and software collaboration.