Gitbackups vs Commvault Cloud
Commvault is one of the largest data management companies in the world, with over $1 billion in total ARR and ~$307M in SaaS ARR. Their Commvault Cloud platform (formerly Metallic) includes GitHub repository backup as part of their SaaS protection offerings. If you are evaluating Commvault for git backup, here is the reality check.
What Commvault Does Well
- Enterprise data management leader — Commvault has decades of experience in data protection. Their platform covers on-premises, cloud, and SaaS workloads comprehensively.
- Compliance and governance — Enterprise-grade compliance features, governance policies, and audit capabilities are built into the platform.
- Scale — Commvault handles data protection at a scale few vendors can match, from terabytes to petabytes across thousands of data sources.
Where Gitbackups Differs
Git Backup Is an Afterthought for Commvault
Commvault's GitHub backup module is a small addition to a massive enterprise platform. Their core business is Office 365, on-premises servers, databases, and cloud infrastructure backup. Git repository backup generates negligible revenue relative to their $1B+ ARR — and the product investment reflects that.
Gitbackups exists for one purpose: backing up your git repositories. Every feature decision, every product improvement is driven by that single use case.
Storage Ownership
Commvault Cloud manages backup storage within their platform. Gitbackups stores everything in your S3-compatible bucket. Your data, your infrastructure, your control.
Weeks vs Minutes
Deploying Commvault Cloud involves enterprise sales cycles, procurement, platform onboarding, and configuration across potentially hundreds of data sources. If you just need GitHub backup, that process is wildly disproportionate.
Gitbackups: sign up, connect GitHub, select repos, choose a schedule. First backup in under five minutes.
Cost Proportionality
Commvault is priced for organizations managing enterprise data protection budgets. Even their SaaS-only tier reflects enterprise positioning. For git backup alone, the cost-to-value ratio is poor.
Gitbackups offers transparent pricing proportional to what you are actually backing up.
Feature Comparison
| Feature | Gitbackups | Commvault Cloud |
|---|---|---|
| GitHub support | Yes | Yes |
| GitLab support | Roadmap | Not yet |
| Automated scheduling | Yes | Yes |
| Storage destination | Your S3-compatible bucket | Commvault-managed cloud |
| Data sovereignty / BYOS | Yes | No |
| Scope of platform | Git backup only | Full enterprise data management |
| Setup time | Minutes | Enterprise deployment |
| Pricing model | Transparent, published | Enterprise / contact sales |
| Target audience | Developers and teams | Enterprise IT / data management teams |
When to Choose Commvault
Commvault makes sense if:
- Your organization already uses Commvault for broader data management and wants to add GitHub backup to the existing platform.
- You need a single vendor for enterprise-wide data protection spanning on-premises, cloud, and SaaS.
- You have the budget and IT staff to manage an enterprise data management platform.
When to Choose Gitbackups
Gitbackups is the better fit if:
- Git backup is what you need — not an enterprise data management platform.
- You want to be up and running in minutes, not weeks.
- You want backups in your own S3-compatible storage.
- You want pricing that makes sense for the scope of what you are protecting.
The Bottom Line
Commvault is an enterprise data management powerhouse. Using it for git backup is like hiring a moving company to carry a backpack. Gitbackups gives you exactly what you need — automated git backup with full storage control — without the enterprise overhead.
Get started with Gitbackups — your repositories deserve dedicated protection.