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:More Milestones in Linux Kernel Development History
More Milestones in Linux Kernel Development History
Nov 21, 2008, 20 :03 UTC (0 Talkback[s]) (2433 reads)

(Other stories by Brian Proffitt)

"The actual pattern of that growth is interesting to see. As shown in Figure 1, the growth curve of the Linux source code has essentially been linear in nature, with the noted exception of the development versions of Linux. These are represented by the large drops in SLOC values, which occurred whenever a new development series of the Linux kernel (2.1, 2.3, 2.5...) was started.... "To get a better sense of the linear growth, Figure 2 illustrates the amount of code in just the production versions of Linux, which are the even version numbers in the kernel history (1.0, 1.2, 2.0, etc.)..."

Complete Story

Related Stories:
204.5-Million Lines of Code Equals One Great Linux Distribution(Oct 22, 2008)
Kernel Log: More than 10 million lines of Linux source files(Oct 21, 2008)
5 Things You Didn’t Know About Linux Kernel Code Metrics(Jul 29, 2008)



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