Hi all, Some of you may have heard about the darcs distributed revision control system (http://abridgegame.org/darcs/), which is written in Haskell.
Recently Linus Torvalds, the creator of Linux, had decided to abandon the BitKeeper revision control system in favor of using an open-source system to manage his kernel source tree. Among the contenders are monotone, GNU Arch, svk, and darcs. >From reading the postings in the Linux kernel mailing list [1], I think darcs is pretty well regarded for its capabilities. After all, complex symbolic manipulations is one of Haskell's strong points. Some people complained that darcs is relatively difficult to build, but that is not a big problem either. The real show-stopper turns out to be performance: the Linux kernel tree is huge, and the intense development activities put a lot of stress on the revision control system, so the (slow) execution speed and (large) memory footprint of darcs makes it unsuitable for such purposes. Needless to say, having darcs host Linus' kernel tree would be an excellent exposure for our favorite language. BitKeeper went from obscure to well-known in a few years solely because of its use in the Linux kernel development effort. Maybe someone in the list would be interested in helping David Roundy out in tuning darcs? Regards, -- Chuan-kai Lin http://www.cs.pdx.edu/~cklin/ _______________________________________________ Haskell mailing list [email protected] http://www.haskell.org/mailman/listinfo/haskell
