Thanks all, Christophe gave the explanation.

-- 
Laurent

2009/6/26 Bruce Williams <br...@codefluency.com>

>
> Near the name of the repository it should say what repo it was forked
> from, if any. You can just follow the chain up.
>
> The "Network" diagram is also useful when trying to discover the
> canonical repo -- or the most up-to-date one.
>
> Cheers,
> Bruce
>
> On Jun 26, 2009, at 12:48 AM, Laurent PETIT <laurent.pe...@gmail.com>
> wrote:
>
> > Hi, this is an OT question, but since Rich encouraged git gurus here
> > on the ml to on help non gurus, then I ask :-)
> >
> > By just surfing on github website, I find a cloned repository of
> > clojure-contrib, e.g. clone done by user XXX.
> >
> > From the main page of this repo, I can see who else cloned XXX's
> > repo, who else watches XXX's repo.
> >
> > But what I would like to do is see whether XXX's repo is a clone of
> > another repo, and go up the chain to the real "master" repo.
> >
> > Is this possible from the UI of github, or do I have to clone XXX's
> > repo, invoke some git command on my clone, ... and repeat the
> > operation at each node of the cloning graph ?
> >
> >
> > Thanks in advance,
> >
> > (Of course, for clojure-contrib I guess that Rich's repo is the
> > master, but still it's rather a guess than an evidence provided by
> > the tools to me).
> >
> > --
> > Laurent
> >
> > >
>
>
> >
>

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