One of the best, free and fast downloads from the largest Open Source applications and software directory - SourceForge.net, is currently suffering from temporally technical problem.
A centralized location for software developers to control and manage free and open-source software and application site SourceForge seems working fine but actually website is suffering for some technical issues. As users clicks on any of the links on the site, it redirects to the Error-404.html page, which reads the following message -
Some of the software links are working fine but most of the links are redirecting to the error page. According to the tweet time the site was having problem from 9:30 PM (IST) and after 2 hours also the issues has not been fixed.
UPDATE:- 6:33AM (IST)
Approximately after 9 hours of the technical issue, SourceForge is back in track. SourceForge operational twitter account have also confirmed about the issue resolved.
A centralized location for software developers to control and manage free and open-source software and application site SourceForge seems working fine but actually website is suffering for some technical issues. As users clicks on any of the links on the site, it redirects to the Error-404.html page, which reads the following message -
The sourceforge.net website is temporarily in static offline mode.Just beside the error message SorceForge operation twitter account shows a tweets about the error. On the twitter account SourceForge tweets, there is 500 error on the SourceForge, and they are working to fixed it.
Only a very limited set of project pages are available until the main website returns to service.
There's instability and frequent 500 errors on the #SourceForge site currently. We're working on getting this fixed ASAP.
— SF.net Operations (@sfnet_ops) February 10, 2015
UPDATE:- 6:33AM (IST)
Approximately after 9 hours of the technical issue, SourceForge is back in track. SourceForge operational twitter account have also confirmed about the issue resolved.
#SourceForge We are back at full capacity.
— SF.net Operations (@sfnet_ops) February 11, 2015