Preview access opened Wednesday for Entire’s distributed Git network, which lets developers mirror GitHub repositories so coding agents pull from regional hubs instead of a single centralized service.
GitHub outages and rising agent traffic are the pitch: Entire says decentralization offloads heavy concurrent reads, reduces rate limits, and keeps developers working when a central platform slows or fails.
Initial tests showed about 570,000 clones an hour from one repository and 586 pushes a second—roughly 2.1 million an hour—with the company saying that benchmarks run up to 25x ahead of rivals’ public claims.
Thomas Dohmke, GitHub’s former CEO, is leading the company, which says the network already works with Codex, Claude Code, Cursor and GitHub Copilot while storing session data alongside code.
Entire plans to open-source its backend and later support native public and private repositories, expanding a network that already has servers in the US, EU and Australia.