Jakub Narębski

one of editors of Git Rev News: https://git.github.io/rev_news/

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  • 14 Comments
Joined 1 year ago
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Cake day: July 30th, 2023

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  • I think the biggest issue is dealing with very large code bases, like the code for a mid-large size company. You either go with a monorepo and deal with slowness, Windows-only optimizations and bare minimum partial checkout support.

    Or you go with submodules and then you have even bigger problems. Honestly I’m not sure there’s really an answer for this with Git currently.

    The partial checkout support in Git is getting improved. Take a look, maybe it now solves your problems.

    Support for large repositories via scalar works also for Linux (though not everything is ported; as main body of work on supporting large repositories was created to deal with the size of MS Windows repository, it started with Windows-only support / optimization first).

    There are alternatives to submodules, like https://github.com/chronoxor/gil


  • I think it refers to two things: the title of the book about how Linus create Linux “Just for Fun. The Story of an Accidental Revolutionary”, and the fact that Git had to be created to continue effective work on Linux kernel (after BitKeeper fiasco).

    From the start of the article:

    Linus Torvalds once wrote in a book that he created Linux just for fun, but it ended up sparking a revolution. Git, his second major creation, also an accidental revolution.






  • Not much new here (I think I saw nearly the same description of Git history a short while ago), and there are a few factual errors in there - or at least parts that are not clear.

    1. The “tree” objects have nothing to do with the tree command, and nothing to do with how repo objects are stored on the filesystem. You can display tree objects with “git cat-file -p” (just like any type of objects), but also with “git ls-tree” command.

    2. The “commit” objects also store the reference to previous version (previous commit) in the history, which is very important. It enables Git to perform merges fast and well.

    3. A bit pedantic, but “tag” objects can point to any type of object, though tags pointing to commits are most common.