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Gemfury is a hosted cloud package repository for storing public and private software packages. Its core value is that developers can install internal dependencies on any machine using existing package management tools, without having to build, operate, or harden their own private repository servers. The original content emphasizes that it is well suited for code reuse, deployment, and team sharing, with uploads, deployments, and installs all protected via SSL.
In terms of ecosystem support, Gemfury covers RubyGems, npm, PyPI/Python packages, NuGet, Composer, Go Modules, Maven, DEB, RPM, Bower, and more, making it friendly for multilingual engineering teams. Its workflow also fits closely with everyday development practices: packages can be uploaded through the web interface or command line, and installations use a private Repo URL with existing package managers. “No new workflow to learn” is one of its key selling points. On the security side, the source text notes that private Repo URLs include a secret token, and that uploads, deployments, and installations are protected by SSL. For team collaboration, it supports shared accounts and collaborators, allowing collaborators to access shared accounts and upload packages.
Gemfury offers a 14-day free trial with no credit card required. The Public plan is free and suitable for hosting public packages. Personal starts at $9/month and is tiered by number of collaborators, including 1C, 5C, 10C, 25C, 50C, and other levels. Team starts at $25/month and is tiered by the number of private packages, ranging from 10 private packages to 450 private packages. Enterprise requires contacting the company by email. All plans include unlimited versions, SSL Protection, and free setup. Overall, the entry barrier is relatively low, but team costs will rise as the number of private packages or collaborators grows.
The strengths are broad ecosystem coverage, a clear onboarding path, compatibility with existing package managers, and the removal of maintenance overhead compared with self-hosting a repository. For teams using multiple language stacks, centralized hosting of internal packages can be quite convenient. The downsides are that the source text does not state whether self-hosting is supported, nor does it disclose enterprise security capabilities such as SSO, audit logs, fine-grained permissions, or compliance certifications. Documentation is only visible as a navigation entry, so its depth cannot be assessed. There is also no information about payment methods or accessibility from mainland China.
Gemfury is suitable for individual developers, small teams, and organizations that need to quickly set up a private package repository, especially teams using Ruby, Node.js, Python, .NET, PHP, or multilingual technology stacks. If an enterprise has strict requirements around private deployment, intranet deployment, or complex permission auditing, it may still need to evaluate JFrog Artifactory, Sonatype Nexus Repository, GitHub Packages, GitLab Package Registry, or AWS CodeArtifact. Access from mainland China is not covered in the source text, and payment methods are not disclosed. Before committing to a purchase, it is recommended to test network connectivity, CI/CD package pull stability, and billing/payment availability.
⚠ This review is compiled from public sources and does not constitute a purchase recommendation. Verify all facts on the vendor's official site. Verify on gemfury.com official site.
gemfury.com is an United States Dev Tools provider. TG4G tracks its product information, an overall rating of 8.0/10, and a China-accessibility score of Workable. Click "Visit Official Site" to reach gemfury.com directly.