Ten years ago this week, the Linux kernel community faced a daunting challenge: They could no longer use their revision control system BitKeeper and no other Source Control Management (SCMs) met their needs for a distributed system. Linus Torvalds, the creator of Linux, took the challenge into his own hands and disappeared over the […]
That was only a very rough version. His original plan was to use it as a backend for other VCS. Torvalds handed over the maintainership of the project to Junio Hamano after about 4 months. Much of what we know today as git are contributions from him and others.
None of this is to say that Torvalds didn’t invent it. He invented the content addressed object storage format. But it’s important to understand the actual history of git’s evolution.
Absolute madman. Need to invent a brand new version control system? “Ill just do it over the weekend”
That was only a very rough version. His original plan was to use it as a backend for other VCS. Torvalds handed over the maintainership of the project to Junio Hamano after about 4 months. Much of what we know today as git are contributions from him and others.
None of this is to say that Torvalds didn’t invent it. He invented the content addressed object storage format. But it’s important to understand the actual history of git’s evolution.