i am sure you can read: ***please keep CVS*** (if you can't come up with
anything better designed than git.)

> Nobody is interested in your opinions
> about version control.
> -Andy Wallis

and everyone is interrested in Andy staying polite.

On Sun 8. Mar 2026 at 17:15, Andy Wallis <[email protected]> wrote:

> On 2026-03-08 01:47, 山卡洛 wrote:
> > why do you, after decades of running a non-mainstream solution (cvs),
> > default to git? why dont you even consider the cleaner alternatives
> > hg, jj, fossil?
> >
> > please keep CVS if you can't come up with anything better designed
> > than git.
> >
> > On Fri 6. Mar 2026 at 19:16, Peter G. <[email protected]> wrote:
> >> On 03/03/2026 23:55, Nick Holland wrote>
> >>> So...give it a try at
> >>> http://cvsweb.openbsd.org
> >>> or
> >>> https://cvsweb.openbsd.org
> >>
> >> work much faster than before
> >>
> >> why not just ditch cvs for git and go cgit?
> It works well for OpenBSD and has it has been for 29 years. There is no
> point in evangelizing on git, hg, or any other version control system.
> CVS works well for the use case here and if it's not broken, don't fix
> it. If they had gotten on all the VCS bandwagons over the years, the
> repo would have gone from CVS to SVN to Mercurial to Git by now. FreeBSD
> went from CVS to SVN to Git over that same time and have had many
> headaches over the years during those transitions and keeping version
> control history sane.
>
> Whenever people scream about wanting to change version control systems,
> they forget all the tooling and process that is built around it.
> Changing that isn't cheap or quick.
>
> I've worked on projects that have kept very old version control systems
> running because all of the tooling was built around it. I've seen
> programs run for 20+ years on CMVC (just when it had been EOLed, they
> eventually moved to git) and PVCS/Dimensions. The Dimensions people are
> staying on that because it would cost too much money to port all of
> their productivity aids and other utilities to git. That money would be
> spent elsewhere on delivering actual code rather than rearranging the
> furniture because someone wanted to put their mark on the project.
> Simply put, if it works, it works. No need to change it.
>
> Nobody is interested in your opinions about version control.
> -Andy Wallis
>

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