Hi,
If anyone is interested, I have put on my website[1] a git repository
containing the full history of Linux, from 0.01 to now.
It's built from 3 other git repositories:
- the one from Dave Jones from 0.01 to 2.4.0,
- the one from tglx from 2.4.0 to 2.6.12,
- the one from Linus Torvalds from 2.6.12 to now.
I used the "graft" feature of git (thanks to Junio and people
on #git for the tip) to link them together. I also modified
(via a git-filter-branch) the dates of some commits as for
instance all commits from the Dave Jones's repo had the
same date (23 Nov 2007). For this I mainly used the timestamp info
of files on kernel.org. The script and info I used are also
available on my website[2].
Note that because I used the graft feature, this repo is
really just a superset of the one from Torvalds so you can
pull as you would do with the Torvalds repo to get the
latest Linux version.
The reason why I built this repo is that I wanted to study
the history of source code comments in Linux and git annotate
could answer most of my questions automatically. For instance
I wanted to know what comments were written before 1995 that are
still present unmodified in the current Linux version.
But for git annotate to work I needed a git repo with the
full history of Linux. Other people may find my repo useful for other
purpose.
[1] full git repo:
http://aryx.kicks-ass.org/~pad/linux/full-history-linux.git.tar
Then untar it and do a git checkout -f to populate it
[2] script to build the git repo from scratch:
http://aryx.kicks-ass.org/~pad/linux/make-full-linux-history.tgz
Then untar it; make; ./make-full-kernel-history full
Note: you will need to install OCaml first.
PS: Is there a way to put it on kernel.org?
PS2: Some commits have only an approximate date. It was good
enough for what I wanted. If you want more precise date, tell
me, the script is easy to modify.
Hi,
On Fri, Jun 6, 2008 at 6:50 PM, yoann padioleau
<[email protected]> wrote:
> Hi,
>
> If anyone is interested, I have put on my website[1] a git repository
> containing the full history of Linux, from 0.01 to now.
> It's built from 3 other git repositories:
> - the one from Dave Jones from 0.01 to 2.4.0,
> - the one from tglx from 2.4.0 to 2.6.12,
> - the one from Linus Torvalds from 2.6.12 to now.
>
> I used the "graft" feature of git (thanks to Junio and people
> on #git for the tip) to link them together. I also modified
> (via a git-filter-branch) the dates of some commits as for
> instance all commits from the Dave Jones's repo had the
> same date (23 Nov 2007). For this I mainly used the timestamp info
> of files on kernel.org. The script and info I used are also
> available on my website[2].
>
> Note that because I used the graft feature, this repo is
> really just a superset of the one from Torvalds so you can
> pull as you would do with the Torvalds repo to get the
> latest Linux version.
>
> The reason why I built this repo is that I wanted to study
> the history of source code comments in Linux and git annotate
> could answer most of my questions automatically. For instance
> I wanted to know what comments were written before 1995 that are
> still present unmodified in the current Linux version.
> But for git annotate to work I needed a git repo with the
> full history of Linux. Other people may find my repo useful for other
> purpose.
>
> [1] full git repo:
> http://aryx.kicks-ass.org/~pad/linux/full-history-linux.git.tar
> Then untar it and do a git checkout -f to populate it
>
>
> [2] script to build the git repo from scratch:
> http://aryx.kicks-ass.org/~pad/linux/make-full-linux-history.tgz
> Then untar it; make; ./make-full-kernel-history full
> Note: you will need to install OCaml first.
>
> PS: Is there a way to put it on kernel.org?
>
> PS2: Some commits have only an approximate date. It was good
> enough for what I wanted. If you want more precise date, tell
> me, the script is easy to modify.
That's great :-)
I already got my copy and I'll try to use it to study linux evolution
over the years :-)
really good
--
Best Regards,
Felipe Balbi
[email protected]