Hello, I've recently begun contributing to a FOSS project that has a problem -- although it has extensive git logs (some being CVS/SVN imports) dating back over many years, there has not been maintenance of contribution records on a file-by-file basis. I'm trying to rectify this and track down who contributed what. Unfortunately while I'm used to basic operations with git, I don't know it well enough to be confident in how to go about tracing contributions in this way. 'git annotate' of course is a nice starting point but of limited use because every time someone tweaks a line (and there have been many such tweaks in the history of the project) the responsibility of the original contributor is replaced by that of the tweaker. An alternative is to use gitk to trace the history of individual files (or paths, as gitk has it). The problem here is that files have been renamed, content has been moved about between different files and so on. Finally, there's the option to use gitk to trace contributors (someone has prepared a .mailman file with a complete list of contributors by name and email) and manually or otherwise tally their significant contributions. Again, I'm not sure to what extent this is made difficult by copy/pasting and tweaking of file content. I'm just hoping that the git community can offer some good advice on this, to what extent the process of tracing contributions can be automated, and so on. I'm not expecting anyone to provide a solution for me, but suggestions and pointers in the possible right directions would be much appreciated. Thanks & best wishes, -- Joe -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe git" in the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html