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11 Years After Git, BitKeeper Is Open-Sourced (phoronix.com) 197

An anonymous reader writes: Eleven years after Linus Torvalds developed Git after a falling out with BitKeeper for managing the Linux kernel source code, BitMover Inc has finally decided to open-source the BitKeeper VCS. The latest BitKeeper release has made the code open-source under the terms of the Apache 2.0 license. The community edition code is available from BitKeeper.org. Does BitKeeper now stand a chance against free software systems like Git and SVN?To offer some context, Larry McVoy, the CEO of BitMover -- the company that makes BitKeeper -- offered free BitKeeper licenses to various open source projects -- Linux kernel utilized it as well. However, later, Australian computer programmer Andrew Tridgell reverse engineered BitKeeper protocol in an attempt to make his own client. Torvalds didn't like this practice, and accused Tridgell of "playing dirty tricks with his proprietary source code tool of choice," and as a result, he wrote Git.
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11 Years After Git, BitKeeper Is Open-Sourced

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  • Too late (Score:5, Insightful)

    by bool2 ( 1782642 ) on Tuesday May 10, 2016 @02:36PM (#52085799) Homepage

    If BitKeeper had done that in the first place they'd still be relevant, possibly even the market leader.

    Do they stand a chance now? Not without some killer new features that can't trivially be copied and pasted into Git.

    • Re:Too late (Score:4, Insightful)

      by Bruce Perens ( 3872 ) <bruce@perens.com> on Tuesday May 10, 2016 @02:55PM (#52085967) Homepage Journal

      If BitKeeper had done that in the first place they'd still be relevant, possibly even the market leader.

      Maybe not immediately. The Internet was sort of in its infancy, at least compared to now, when all of this went down. But it's true that if Bitkeeper had been made Open Source then, there would probably be no Git or anything like it. Bitkeeper would be the dominant source-code control system today. Given the way that several companies seem to have made money on Git, Larry might have made that money.

      There are a lot of ifs though. We all have 20-20 hindsight but we can't really say that things would have worked out better for Larry. At the time he had a conventional software company and salaries to pay. It would have been difficult for him to get over the economic hump to where things are today.

      • Re:Too late (Score:5, Informative)

        by DarkOx ( 621550 ) on Tuesday May 10, 2016 @03:06PM (#52086079) Journal

        The Internet was sort of in its infancy

        No web 2.0 was already a thing. We had already seen other VCS stuffs like CVS and SVN rise and fall in favor before. Most of us had been use VSS for years at work by then.

        BK was adopted by a then 15+ year old Linux kernel project because it was better than CVS and SVN that had come before it. People were upset it was not OSS and it got replaced mostly because that was preventing people from contributing to Linux and making the management processes harder. BK would be today's Git, pretty clearly if it had been open sourced at the time. What isn't clear is if it could have been monetized effectively.

        • by mwvdlee ( 775178 )

          They could have done like Github and provide an infrastructure.
          As BK's developers, they would have been ideally suited to provide an infrastructure not easily matched by competitors.

          • by WarJolt ( 990309 )

            Perforce to stay relevant had to create a p4 git fusion and created a Web UI called git swarm. I still think it's a terrible VCS that breaks every tool that you try to integrate with it, but at least they have a solution for those hardcore perforce guys who won't give up the reigns who need to work with real developers.

        • Today it is entirely clear how it could have been monetized as hosted software as a service. I don't think the users would have believed in it as such back then.

          • I don't think the users would have believed in it as such back then.

            Yup indeed. Github is best described as "source repository combined with a *social* hub for coding geeks", and you can plainly see all the elements which would have had raised eyebrows back then :

            - *repository* and *social hub* ? Why would people want a Facebook- / Myspace- clone slapped onto their Sourceforge- / Google Code- clone ?
            - *social anything* for developers ? Geeks are the demographic which most viscerally hates social networks !
            Nope, never gonna work !

            In that alternative history of a Bitmover ope

        • What isn't clear is if it could have been monetized effectively.

          Git has been monetized effectively, and it is open source. I have my doubts that anything involving Larry McVoy can be monetized effectively, judging from his behavior in the whole sad tale (with a happy ending for the good guys).

        • People were upset it was not OSS and it got replaced mostly because that was preventing people from contributing to Linux and making the management processes harder.

          Not even. According to several of Linus' keynote/speeches (to lazy to google them, but it should be trivial to look for them on Youtube), bitkeeper was maybe available for free for Linux kernel development, but the license came with a clause forbidding reverse engineering/rewriting a clone of bitkeeper.
          Nonetheless, several hacker started building their own tools interacting with the various bitkeeper databases.

          Apparently at that point, Linus decided it would be better to drop bitkeeper before it becomes to

        • BK existed definitely not before CVS, and I doubt it existed before SVN.

          BK would be today's Git, pretty clearly if it had been open sourced at the time.
          OSS has nothing to do with it. The Linux folks wanted features BK did not have. The company producing BK did not add them, and then came the OSS question: if it was OSS we could add the features ourselves, but we can't.

          So Linus decided to craft git. Bottom line git and BK are now completely different beasts with a different workflow.

      • by Desler ( 1608317 )

        The Internet was its infancy in 2005? lolwut? That's one of the dumbest things I've read on Slashdot in years.

  • by Bruce Perens ( 3872 ) <bruce@perens.com> on Tuesday May 10, 2016 @02:45PM (#52085879) Homepage Journal

    Andrew did not reverse-engineer the Bitkeeper transfer protocol. What Andrew did was to telnet to the Bitkeeper's server port, and type "HELP". Bitkeeper then obligingly told Andrew what its commands were, in the exact style used by all early TCP daemons like FTP, SMTP, etc.

    The problem was that Larry and Linus were good friends, and Larry had convinced Linus to use Bitkeeper even though Bitkeeper was under something less than an Open Source license. Larry had this odd license requirement that if you wanted to use Bitkeeper for free, you had to tolerate it making its logs public, and at some time added a requirement that you not use it to develop competing software. Larry promoted these requirements as a means to make money with Open Source, but his license wasn't really compliant with the Open Source Definition.

    Larry also got really nonlinear and pissed off a lot of the kernel developers. Which was probably the fatal step. Linus got tired of trying to hold two things together that did not want to stay together, and wrote git. This eventually destroyed Larry's company.

    It remains a lesson regarding how not to work with the community.

    • The problem was that Larry and Linus were good friends...

      ...and wrote git. This eventually destroyed Larry's company.

      This, I find, is the oddest part of all this. I support my friend, so much that I'd rather write a competing product than allow his servers to keep running and a thousand clients bloom. I forgot all about bitkeeper.

    • by jmv ( 93421 )

      Andrew did not reverse-engineer the Bitkeeper transfer protocol. What Andrew did was to telnet to the Bitkeeper's server port, and type "HELP". Bitkeeper then obligingly told Andrew what its commands were, in the exact style used by all early TCP daemons like FTP, SMTP, etc.

      I believe trying commands to see what they do is still called "reverse engineering", despite being ethical, legal and not involving any decompiling.

    • Larry also got really nonlinear

      Which, ironically, was one of BitKeeper's primary strengths.

  • a bold move... (Score:4, Insightful)

    by Gravis Zero ( 934156 ) on Tuesday May 10, 2016 @02:48PM (#52085909)

    11 years too late.

  • Too little, too late (Score:4, Interesting)

    by etinin ( 1144011 ) <alexandrebfarias.gmail@com> on Tuesday May 10, 2016 @02:49PM (#52085915)
    Torvalds claims, somewhat exaggeratedly, that he did write the core of git in two weeks, and, for any software developer, it's easy to see that git is a far more valuable tool to developers than any of its predecessors. After initial issues with bad command-line tools and crappy mswin compatibility, I think there are few reasons to complain about git nowadays.
    It's a perfect *NIX source control system, doing one thing and doing it well.
    To those who don't mind Linus's typical arrogance and want to see his side of the whole story, I recommend the following talk he gave at Google: https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=... [youtube.com]
    • by Bruce Perens ( 3872 ) <bruce@perens.com> on Tuesday May 10, 2016 @02:58PM (#52086013) Homepage Journal

      I remember him taking around 5 weeks off from kernel development. So, 2 weeks for the core is plausable. It proved that he's no one-hit wonder.

      • No it isn't. Everyone Knows that any major software system can be designed and written complete from scratch in no more than 48 hours by a 10-year old kid.*

        After all, "All You Have To Do Is..."

        ====
        * Or, failing that, the cheapest outsourced labor you can find. They even have certs in it!

      • Shame he didn't think about the user interface before he started coding.

    • by tlhIngan ( 30335 ) <slashdot&worf,net> on Tuesday May 10, 2016 @03:37PM (#52086375)

      Torvalds claims, somewhat exaggeratedly, that he did write the core of git in two weeks, and, for any software developer, it's easy to see that git is a far more valuable tool to developers than any of its predecessors. After initial issues with bad command-line tools and crappy mswin compatibility, I think there are few reasons to complain about git nowadays.

      That's thinking as a developer. And git is great... if you're a developer.

      But it's confusing if you're not - and it's even worse if you don't understand the underlying data model (i.e., how stuff is stored in git) because without understanding the internal data model, a lot of things become very strange.

      Stuff like staging files for commits, for example - most other VCS stage files, and if you change the file later while it's stage, the updated version is automatically included. But with git, you have to re-add it to the staging index again. And it's possible to orphan changes if you're not careful.

      Git's not perfect, the only real reason everyone's comfortable with it is well, you sorta grew with it and you forget about its idiosyncrasies. And the fact the developers have really fixed up the more confusing aspects of git to be simpler and less tricky to do. I still have issues with format-patch and am because if you fail to rebase your tree when merging branches, you can end up with duplicate patches - one from the branch, one from the merge into mainline.

      The only thing BitKeeper has these days is its underlying data model is based on SCCS

      We used BitKeeper at one point in time with our open-source products, but when they yanked all the free licenses away, we migrated to perforce We've since moved onto Git since that's what Android uses internally

      But it's good that what's effectively a dead product is being open-sourced - BitKeeper was quite nice back in the day and they could've just died and abandoned it, but instead just letting it go open-source and hopefully someone will continue development. If not, someone will learn from it.

      • by Xtifr ( 1323 )

        That's thinking as a developer. And git is great... if you're a developer.

        That seems like a fairly positive thing...for a developer tool!

        (If you want to argue that git could be more useful in more fields than software development if it were...something else, well, that might be true, but it was developed by developers for developers, and seems to be doing quite well in its intended role.)

      • most other VCS stage files, and if you change the file later while it's stage, the updated version is automatically included. But with git, you have to re-add it to the staging index again.

        This actually sounds better to me. Filesystem mods are side effects rather than commands. The orphan issue I shall not defend.

      • > But it's confusing if you're not - and it's even worse if you don't understand the underlying data model

        The basics of git aren't that difficult as this post [ycombinator.com] points out. Even this git tutorial [github.io] walks one though the basics.

        Searching images for git model [google.com] shows everyone loves to over-complicate git. Here is one example [googleusercontent.com] or the popular A successful git branching model [nvie.com]. How many freaking arrows do you need?? K.I.S.S. and add *layers* to explain the more complicated git stuff.

        Do you need to understand git's

      • "Git's not perfect, the only real reason everyone's comfortable with it is well, you sorta grew with it and you forget about its idiosyncrasies. And the fact the developers have really fixed up the more confusing aspects of git to be simpler and less tricky to do. I still have issues with format-patch and am because if you fail to rebase your tree when merging branches, you can end up with duplicate patches - one from the branch, one from the merge into mainline."

        It seems to me that Git demonstrated a li
    • by mlts ( 1038732 )

      It winds up being pretty useful for more than just UNIX. I've found it a useful tool for checking out day to day work documents (spreadsheets, etc), because it gives version control, as well as a decent hedge against ransomware (well, until there a variant starts purging Git repos.) It also is useful for syncing with a master server, so regardless if one is on their desktop or laptop, they would have a recent working copy of their files... all they need to do is commit and push the repo when done with an

    • Git still has terrible command-line tools, where the meaning or all the arguments is very obscure and non-intuitive. The only thing that makes git tolerable is a good GUI. And there isn't one included.

      Someone bad mouthed Perforce earlier. For sure it's a previous generation of SCM, which requires a central server, so people have moved on. But what it did have were command-line tools that were easy to use, with arguments that made sense, and a good IDE included - though with far less reason to use it than wi

      • A good GUI is required for ease of visualization (branching, merging, pretty diffs), but for actually getting work done, git rocks on the command line.

        Typical workflow:

        git pull
        git add .
        git commit -am "name: some message"
        git push

        Lather, rinse, repeat.

        Anything more obscure, just look it up in the book: https://git-scm.com/book/en/v2 [git-scm.com]

        Favorite git GUI? sourcetreeapp.com

      • I'd mod you up if I could. I understand and use git, but its command interface is a usability nightmare for just about everything beyond the most trivial operations, and its documentation isn't much better. If not for github, I'd be happily using mercurial instead.

    • Torvalds claims, somewhat exaggeratedly, that he did write the core of git in two weeks, and, for any software developer, it's easy to see that git is a far more valuable tool to developers than any of its predecessors. After initial issues with bad command-line tools and crappy mswin compatibility, I think there are few reasons to complain about git nowadays.

      I don't agree, I think there are valid reasons to complain about Git. The issue I have with Git is that it forces you into Torvalds' work flow model. You have to do things generally his way or Git is a pain in the...Where I see that the work flow he designed into Git is well suited for the work flow used by the Linux kernel project (and many similar projects) it is not usually the right work flow for other kinds of things.

      Also, what Git is actually *doing* under the covers may not be obvious when you cons

    • by Kjella ( 173770 )

      Torvalds claims, somewhat exaggeratedly, that he did write the core of git in two weeks

      Well, only April 6th 2005 he wrote [lwn.net]:

      NOTE! BitKeeper isn't going away per se. Right now, the only real thing that has happened is that I've decided to not use BK mainly because I need to figure out the alternatives, and rather than continuing "things as normal", I decided to bite the bullet and just see what life without BK looks like. So far it's a gray and bleak world ;) (...) PS. Don't bother telling me about subversion. If you must, start reading up on "monotone". That seems to be the most viable alternative

      On April 21st he announced [slashdot.org] git.

      Seems to me like the "I #Â%#&Â give up, none of these alternatives work I'll just write my own SCM system" phase was 15 days, that's close enough to two weeks for me. Of course I'm sure a lot of the mental churning on what such a system should be like was already done but in terms of coding it seems like he knocked out an initial version in that timeframe.

  • Too late (Score:2, Insightful)

    The world has already moved on to Git which is essentially perfect nowadays.
    • by LWATCDR ( 28044 )

      "The world has already moved on to Git which is essentially perfect nowadays."
      What????
      https://xkcd.com/1597/ [xkcd.com]

    • Yes, it's hard to imagine how anything could be better - until someone invents it.

      Here's my wish list: wouldn't it be nice if Git had some mechanism for ad-hoc sharing of individual files? Where I work, we replaced an older commercial version control system that was excellent at that with Git a couple of years ago. Git is an improvement overall, but we still lost something significant along the way. Git's submodules are a great design for sharing large blobs of code but they don't serve quite the same need

    • Re:Too late (Score:4, Funny)

      by serviscope_minor ( 664417 ) on Tuesday May 10, 2016 @03:50PM (#52086481) Journal

      The world has already moved on to Git which is essentially perfect nowadays.

      Want to know how I know you've never used submodules or subtrees?

    • Re:Too late (Score:4, Informative)

      by hibiki_r ( 649814 ) on Tuesday May 10, 2016 @04:02PM (#52086569)

      Many large companies have a lot of trouble with git. It's not a coincidence that Facebook and Google have been working on Mercurial backends: For their needs, Git is absolutely insufficient. You also won't catch a videogame company using git either. And that's discounting all of git's problems with documentation, or the cli becoming nonsense very quick after you leave the most basic commands.

      So yes, the world has moved on, but git is very far from perfect.

    • The world has already moved on to Git which is essentially perfect nowadays.

      Wait a min... You are trying to be funny right? I think the author of git puts it this way, "it does exactly the opposite of CVS whenever possible..." We all know everybody hated CVS.

  • When discussing what source control system to use for any new project, how often does BitKeeper even come up as a suggestion?

    In my experience, most conversations of that nature start out with git versus Subversion. Mercurial might get thrown in if git is "too hard." Microsoft's solution might get suggested if it's a Microsoft-centered project. CVS might get brought up by the C-level who read about it in a magazine in the 90's and/or is a year or two from retirement. But BitKeeper? Never even seems to come c

    • The wars between git and perforce are eternal. But I haven't seen SVN come up in a while.

      • The wars between git and perforce are eternal. But I haven't seen SVN come up in a while.

        I migrated the company I work for to SVN just a few years back now. Some of the programmers expressed worry that we were jumping on "the latest bandwagon", but I reassured them that if Subversion was a bandwagon, it was a bandwagon abandoned in a ghost town. Change-adverse as engineers are, they found that reassuring. And I mean hey, at least it isn't CVS anymore!

        When I first came in as the sysadmin I found out the company was using CVS (specifically cvsnt running on an old CentOS box), which the lead pro

    • by mlts ( 1038732 )

      I came across an article where even MS recommends moving to git from TFS, and IIRC, TFS also functions as a git server.

      If MS double-downs on an OSS technology, that definitely means something.

  • by ndykman ( 659315 ) on Tuesday May 10, 2016 @03:00PM (#52086029)

    The infrastructure around Git is just too large and has too many large adopters. And it's not like there aren't open source alternatives (Mercurial) that people would shift in the unlikely case that Git imploded. Also, I doubt any remember, but SourceGear tried to make it's own open source DVCS (darcs) that is still going on too.

    But, you never can tell who will be at the top of the hill. I remember when ClearCase was considered to be the top notch VCS, and it did have some very nice features in the day. But, things change.

    The only game changer I can see is tools that know what it is tracking has structure beyond files. For example, it'd be nice to track changes to the level of a block in a function in a class in a project, not just file changes. And tools that allow for queries on that structure (show me every class method you can find with more than six parameters on it, for example). But, code repositories are hard to do in the general case.

    • I assume you have heard of git blame?

    • I remember when ClearCase was considered to be the top notch VCS, and it did have some very nice features in the day.

      It was a top-notch VCS. It would still be a top-notch VCS (in an environment where you have continuous access to the repository).

      In particular, the ability to construct "views" of the code base with a simple language, specifying, in a few lines, what versions of things you wanted, was invaluable for diverge-converge development in an environment that had to maintain several production thread

  • The space for source code version controls is covered fine with SVN and Git, there is zero need to use of or move to a commercial tool, regardless of it being Open Source or free for some uses. Sure, some companies are still using them, but even very large customers I have been working for are using SVN or even Git these days, and often not even via a commercial front-end.

    That ship has sailed, for almost all uses this problem is now FOSS solved and likely will stay that way. This, incidentally, is what FOSS

  • by Ed Tice ( 3732157 ) on Tuesday May 10, 2016 @04:08PM (#52086613)
    I remember this saga pretty well. McVoy was pissed that Tridgell wrote an interoperability tool, so he pulled the license for all open source use including the Linux Kernel. This is the type of thing that RMS often warns us about. Don't use closed-source software to build open-source software. And don't use closed-source software in mission-critical applications. I don't think you can get a better example than this.
  • Give me a perfect FOSS GUI Tool for Bitkeeper that runs everywhere plus maybe a FOSS web-based BK GUI/Frontend and I'll move from Git to Bitkeeper faster than you can say "kinda-so-so Git tooling". However, if that doesn't happen and handling bitkeeper is just as much a hassle as Git was 7 years ago, I'll pass, thank you.

    SourceTree isn't FOSS, although it's free-as-in-beer and GitKraken doesn't really seem to support my workflows, but I'm doing fine and it's still better than SVN, although SVN has near perf

    • by KGIII ( 973947 )

      I usually stay well clear of this type of conversation - though I read them. I am, after all, long since retired/retarded/out of touch.

      But, if you're doing non-commercial work - have you looked into SmartGit? It is, I should say, a bit resource hungry but it is otherwise not intolerable.

      I can't actually say I've found a GUI client that I like. But SmartGit doesn't make me want to smash things with a rock and murder people. So, there's that.

  • "Does BitKeeper now stand a chance against free software systems like Git and SVN?"

    Not a chance. GIT is simply better. A lot better.

    It took me a long time to "get" GIT after coming from SVN, it's just *different*. But once I got it, I'd never go back.

  • This is a very interesting study about what Larry McVoy intended and how the absolutely complete opposite happened.

    And this is different from the Streisand effect because really only few acting people were involved(git as the linux kernel scm tool at first), so to categorize it under a new term is appropriate. (McVoy isn't the first but this case is well documented)

    The interesting thing is McVoy's actions set the path for the development of git, because git just needed to be created because McVoy could not

  • Comment removed based on user account deletion
  • How does BitKeeper compare to Git technically?
  • Getting used to an SCS and getting better at using it efficiently is a hassle. So at one point in time, I decided to "learn" bitkeeper and use it. After I had invested some time and effort in the suite, suddenly the licence is changed and it becomes incompatible with my use of the software. Do you think I'm going to switch back after 11 years? Nah! Not me. And actually git is a lot better. Linus wrote git to be good at a few things that are important to him and "his" little project (that isn't very littl

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