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From: | Eric S. Raymond |
Subject: | Re: [Emacs-diffs] trunk r116038: On VCS-independent ways of identifying commits, and why they are desirable. |
Date: | Thu, 16 Jan 2014 11:23:53 -0500 |
User-agent: | Mutt/1.5.21 (2010-09-15) |
David Kastrup <address@hidden>: > > Wow. That's a record; I've never actually seen more than three > > transitions before. I will correct. > > Emacs is at the forefront of everything. Or hindfront, or something. RCS. That's...impressive. Most of the venerably ancient project histories I've converted only have the following geological strata 1. Subversion 2. Random crap generated by cvs2svn 3. CVS Layer 2 is the nasty one. Those conversion artifacts tend to trip up Subversion-to-anything converters, especially git-svn. I originally wrote reposurgeon to have a way to clean those up. What I've never seen before is a plain RCS layer visible below the CVS (now that I've been clued in some things in older ChangeLogs make sense.) I guess that's because there just aren't that many projects old enough to predate CVS. Only three out of over forty of mine are. /me wouldn't be surprised to stumble over a fossil trilobite next. -- <a href="http://www.catb.org/~esr/">Eric S. Raymond</a>
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