-rw-r--r-- 38868 ALU-USA-statement.pdf
-rw-r--r-- 12298 Caldera-license.pdf
-rw-r--r-- 15171 LICENSE
-rw-r--r-- 16615 README.md

Unix History Repository

The history and evolution of the Unix operating system is made available as a revision management repository, covering the period from its inception in 1970 as a 2.5 thousand line kernel and 26 commands, to 2017 as a widely-used 27 million line system. The 1.1GB repository contains about half a million commits and more than two thousand merges. The repository employs Git system for its storage and is hosted on GitHub. It has been created by synthesizing with custom software 24 snapshots of systems developed at Bell Labs, the University of California at Berkeley, and the 386BSD team, two legacy repositories, and the modern repository of the open source FreeBSD system. In total, about one thousand individual contributors are identified, the early ones through primary research. The data set can be used for empirical research in software engineering, information systems, and software archaeology.

You can read more details about the contents, creation, and uses of this repository through this link.

Two repositories are associated with the project: * unix-history-repo is a repository representing a reconstructed version of the Unix history, based on the currently available data. This repository will be often automatically regenerated from scratch, so this is not a place to make contributions. To ensure replicability its users are encouraged to fork it or archive it. * unix-history-make is a repository containing code and metadata used to build the above repository. Contributions to this repository are welcomed.

Project status

The project has achieved its major goal with the establishment of a continuous timeline from 1970 until today. The repository contains:

The files appear to be added in the repository in chronological order according to their modification time, and large parts of the source code have been attributed to their actual authors. Commands like git blame and git log produce the expected results.

The repository contains a number of two-way merges.

Blame is apportioned appropriately.

Tags and Branches

The following tags or branch names mark specific releases, listed in rough chronological order. * Epoch * Research-PDP7 * Research-V1 * Research-V2 * Research-V3 * Research-V4 * Research-V5 * Research-V6 * BSD-1 * BSD-2 * Research-V7 * Bell-32V * BSD-3 * BSD-4 * BSD-4_1_snap * BSD-4_1c_2 * BSD-4_2 * BSD-4_3 * BSD-4_3_Reno * BSD-4_3_Net_1 * BSD-4_3_Tahoe * BSD-4_3_Net_2 * BSD-4_4 * BSD-4_4_Lite1 * BSD-4_4_Lite2 * BSD-SCCS-END * 386BSD-0.0 * 386BSD-0.1 * 386BSD-0.1-patchkit * FreeBSD-release/1.0, 1.1, 1.1.5 * FreeBSD-release/2.0 2.0.5, 2.1.0, 2.1.5, 2.1.6, 2.1.6.1, 2.1.7, 2.2.0, 2.2.1, 2.2.2, 2.2.5, 2.2.6, 2.2.7, 2.2.8 * FreeBSD-release/3.0.0, 3.1.0, 3.2.0, 3.3.0, 3.4.0, 3.5.0 * FreeBSD-release/4.0.0 4.1.0, 4.1.1, 4.2.0, 4.3.0, 4.4.0, 4.5.0, 4.6.0, 4.6.1, 4.6.2, 4.7.0, 4.8.0, 4.9.0, 4.10.0, 4.11.0 * FreeBSD-release/5.0.0 5.1.0, 5.2.0, 5.2.1, 5.3.0, 5.4.0, 5.5.0 * FreeBSD-release/6.0.0, 6.1.0, 6.2.0, 6.3.0, 6.4.0 * FreeBSD-release/7.0.0, 7.1.0, 7.2.0, 7.3.0, 7.4.0 * FreeBSD-release/8.0.0, 8.1.0, 8.2.0, 8.3.0, 8.4.0 * FreeBSD-release/9.0.0, 9.1.0, 9.2.0 * FreeBSD-release/10.0.0, 10.1.0, 10.2.0, 10.3.0 * FreeBSD-release/11.0.0, 11.0.1

A detailed description of the major tags is available in the file releases.md.

More tags and branches are available. * The -Snapshot-Development branches denote commits that have been synthesized from a time-ordered sequence of a snapshot’s files. * The -VCS-Development tags denote the point along an imported version control history branch where a particular release occurred.

Cool things you can do

The easiest thing you can do is to watch the repository’s Gource Visualization.

If you have a broadband network connection and about 1.5GB of free disk space, you can download the repository and run Git commands that go back decades. Run sh git clone https://github.com/dspinellis/unix-history-repo git checkout BSD-Release to get a local copy of the Unix history repository.

View log across releases

Running sh git log --reverse --date-order will give you commits such as the following

``` commit 64d7600ea5210a9125bd1a06e5d184ef7547d23d Author: Ken Thompson ken@research.uucp Date: Tue Jun 20 05:00:00 1972 -0500

Research V1 development
Work on file u5.s

Co-Authored-By: Dennis Ritchie <dmr@research.uucp>
Synthesized-from: v1/sys

[…] commit 4030f8318890a026e065bc8926cebefb71e9d353 Author: Ken Thompson ken@research.uucp Date: Thu Aug 30 19:30:25 1973 -0500

Research V3 development
Work on file sys/ken/slp.c

Synthesized-from: v3

[…] commit c4999ec655319a01e84d9460d84df824006f9e2d Author: Dennis Ritchie dmr@research.uucp Date: Thu Aug 30 19:33:01 1973 -0500

Research V3 development
Work on file sys/dmr/kl.c

Synthesized-from: v3

[…] commit 355c543c6840fa5f37d8daf2e2eaa735ea6daa4a Author: Brian W. Kernighan bwk@research.uucp Date: Tue May 13 19:43:47 1975 -0500

Research V6 development
Work on file usr/source/rat/r.g

Synthesized-from: v6

[…] commit 0ce027f7fb2cf19b7e92d74d3f09eb02e8fea50e Author: S. R. Bourne srb@research.uucp Date: Fri Jan 12 02:17:45 1979 -0500

Research V7 development
Work on file usr/src/cmd/sh/blok.c

Synthesized-from: v7

[…] Author: Eric Schmidt schmidt@ucbvax.Berkeley.EDU Date: Sat Jan 5 22:49:18 1980 -0800

BSD 3 development

Work on file usr/src/cmd/net/sub.c

```

View changes to a specific file

Run sh git checkout Research-Release git log --follow --simplify-merges usr/src/cmd/c/c00.c to see dates on which the C compiler was modified.

Annotate lines in a specific file by their version

Run git blame -C -C usr/sys/sys/pipe.c to see how the Unix pipe functionality evolved over the years. 3cc1108b usr/sys/ken/pipe.c (Ken Thompson 1974-11-26 18:13:21 -0500 53) rf->f_flag = FREAD|FPIPE; 3cc1108b usr/sys/ken/pipe.c (Ken Thompson 1974-11-26 18:13:21 -0500 54) rf->f_inode = ip; 3cc1108b usr/sys/ken/pipe.c (Ken Thompson 1974-11-26 18:13:21 -0500 55) ip->i_count = 2; [...] 1f183be2 usr/sys/sys/pipe.c (Ken Thompson 1979-01-10 15:19:35 -0500 122) register struct inode *ip; 1f183be2 usr/sys/sys/pipe.c (Ken Thompson 1979-01-10 15:19:35 -0500 123) 1f183be2 usr/sys/sys/pipe.c (Ken Thompson 1979-01-10 15:19:35 -0500 124) ip = fp->f_inode; 1f183be2 usr/sys/sys/pipe.c (Ken Thompson 1979-01-10 15:19:35 -0500 125) c = u.u_count; 1f183be2 usr/sys/sys/pipe.c (Ken Thompson 1979-01-10 15:19:35 -0500 126) 1f183be2 usr/sys/sys/pipe.c (Ken Thompson 1979-01-10 15:19:35 -0500 127) loop: 1f183be2 usr/sys/sys/pipe.c (Ken Thompson 1979-01-10 15:19:35 -0500 128) 1f183be2 usr/sys/sys/pipe.c (Ken Thompson 1979-01-10 15:19:35 -0500 129) /* 9a9f6b22 usr/src/sys/sys/pipe.c (Bill Joy 1980-01-05 05:51:18 -0800 130) * If error or all done, return. 9a9f6b22 usr/src/sys/sys/pipe.c (Bill Joy 1980-01-05 05:51:18 -0800 131) */ 9a9f6b22 usr/src/sys/sys/pipe.c (Bill Joy 1980-01-05 05:51:18 -0800 132) 9a9f6b22 usr/src/sys/sys/pipe.c (Bill Joy 1980-01-05 05:51:18 -0800 133) if (u.u_error) 9a9f6b22 usr/src/sys/sys/pipe.c (Bill Joy 1980-01-05 05:51:18 -0800 134) return; 6d632e85 usr/sys/ken/pipe.c (Ken Thompson 1975-07-17 10:33:37 -0500 135) plock(ip); 6d632e85 usr/sys/ken/pipe.c (Ken Thompson 1975-07-17 10:33:37 -0500 136) if(c == 0) { 6d632e85 usr/sys/ken/pipe.c (Ken Thompson 1975-07-17 10:33:37 -0500 137) prele(ip); 6d632e85 usr/sys/ken/pipe.c (Ken Thompson 1975-07-17 10:33:37 -0500 138) u.u_count = 0; 6d632e85 usr/sys/ken/pipe.c (Ken Thompson 1975-07-17 10:33:37 -0500 139) return; 6d632e85 usr/sys/ken/pipe.c (Ken Thompson 1975-07-17 10:33:37 -0500 140) }

How you can help

You can help if you were there at the time, or if you can locate a source that contains information that is currently missing. * If your current GitHub account is not linked to your past contributions, (you can search them through this page), associate your past email with your current account through your GitHub account settings. (Contact me for instructions on how to add email addresses to which you no longer have access.) * Look for errors and omissions in the files that map file paths to authors. * Look for parts of the system that have not yet been attributed in these files and propose suitable attributions. Keep in mind that attributions for parts that were developed in one place and modified elsewhere (e.g. developed at Bell Labs and modified at Berkeley) should be for the person who did the modification, not the original author. * Look for authors whose identifier starts with x- in the author id to name map files for Bell Labs, and Berkeley, and provide or confirm their actual login identifier. (The one used is a guess.) * Contribute a path regular expression to contributor map file (see v7.map) for 4.2BSD, 4.3BSD, 4.3BSD-Reno, 4.3BSD-Tahoe, 4.3BSD-Alpha, and Net2. * Import further branches, such as 2BSD, NetBSD, OpenBSD, and Plan 9 from Bell Labs.

Re-creating the historical repository from scratch

The -make repository is provided to share and document the creation process, rather than as a bullet-proof way to get consistent and repeatable results. For instance, importing the snapshots on a system that is case-insensitive (NTFS, HFS Plus with default settings) will result in a few files getting lost.

Prerequisites

Repository creation

The -repo repository can be created with the following commands. sh make ./import.sh

Adding a single source

If you want to add a new source without running the full import process, you can do the following.

perl ../import-dir.pl [-v] -m Research-V7 -c ../author-path/Bell-32V \ -n ../bell.au -r Research-V7 -i ../ignore/Bell-32V \ $ARCHIVE/32v Bell 32V -0500 | gfi

Further reading

Acknowledgements

Build identification