Dimension scores are derived from public data and fields; weighted into the composite. Reference only.
EasyGit is a personal Git server for macOS users, built around the idea of storing Git repositories in iCloud. Users can still use familiar Git clients to clone, pull, and push, while their data is made available across their own Macs via iCloud. It feels more like lightweight private code hosting than a full development collaboration platform such as GitHub or GitLab.
In terms of features and use cases, EasyGit focuses on private repositories, iCloud storage, and zero maintenance. Repositories are private by default and accessible only to the user; for collaboration, users can send invitations to grant others access. It claims not to limit repository size, number of repositories, or number of contributors, with the practical limit being the available iCloud storage. The copy explicitly mentions getting started from Terminal and Xcode, suggesting solid compatibility with standard Git workflows.
EasyGit emphasizes privacy and security: the app runs in a sandbox, does not directly access repositories, and does not initiate external network connections. It also uses no analytics tools and does not track users. No new account is required; users can rely on their existing iCloud account. In terms of ecosystem, it mainly depends on Apple iCloud, macOS, Terminal, Xcode, and common Git clients. More complete platform capabilities such as APIs, SDKs, CI/CD, issues, and web-based management are not mentioned.
The pricing model is straightforward: a one-time purchase with no subscription and no in-app purchases. However, the page does not provide a specific price, nor does it explain payment methods, refund policy, or team licensing. As a result, its value for money can only be judged based on the absence of subscriptions and the lack of self-hosting maintenance costs.
The advantages are low deployment friction, no server maintenance, private-by-default repositories, good fit for the Apple ecosystem, simple multi-device syncing, and no extra account system. The drawbacks are its strong dependence on iCloud, platform support information only showing Mac OS X 10.12+, and no disclosed details on team permissions, auditing, backup strategy, web collaboration, or enterprise features. It is suitable for individual developers, indie developers, and small private collaborations, but not for teams that need complex permissions, CI/CD, code review, or cross-platform enterprise governance.
Access from mainland China is not explained in the source text. Since the product depends on iCloud, and iCloud in mainland China can vary in regional service availability and network experience, the overall assessment is “partially restricted.” For more stable local team collaboration, alternatives such as GitHub, GitLab, Gitea, Forgejo, or domestic code hosting services may be worth considering.
⚠ 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 easygit.app official site.
easygit.app is an Unknown Dev Tools provider. TG4G tracks its product information, an overall rating of 7.0/10, and a China-accessibility score of Workable. Click "Visit Official Site" to reach easygit.app directly.