I have now found this page (suggested by google):

https://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/torvalds/linux.git/commit/?id=ac7b34218a0021bafd1d4c11c54217b930f516b0

index : kernel/git/torvalds/linux.git
        Linux kernel source tree

I used 'commit' from this menu, because that came up from google.

    about summary refs log tree commit diff stats

I don't know whether 'commit' is the best option for poplog developers.

On the right you can specify how far back diffs should go, and other options:

    ....  diff options
            context       [how many versions back??]
            space
            mode

    (I used the default: 3 versions back)

Later (much later...), I'll try to find a place to put this information on the
poplog V16 web site in the main AREADME file, or one linked from it.

I guess it should also go into a revised version of the sysdoc directory:

    http://www.cs.bham.ac.uk/research/projects/poplog/sysdoc/

  ....


[++]

Does anyone know a friendly billionaire who might be interested in funding a
fully packaged and ready-to-use version (or collection of versions for different
users) of Waldek's 'ARM poplog' ?

Is that the best way to produce a future for poplog?

  Especially if we can also get David Youngs vision, matlab, etc. code ported:
   https://www.cs.bham.ac.uk/research/projects/poplog/freepoplog.html#popvision 
??

 From a conversation I once had with senior ARM person at a conference on
Computing at School, I suspect that ARM might be willing to fund such a project,
including helping with hardware and technical advice. But that was a few years
before the pandemic.

[I don't intend to do anything about this: I have too much unfinished non-poplog
stuff about evolution of information processing to get on with, and ARM would
require too much learning for me at my age.]

Best wishes to all.

Aaron
[Now happily using the latest poplog on the latest linux kernel available on 
Fedora 32!]

http://www.cs.bham.ac.uk/~axs

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