Is there a Master SOURCE CODE Index anywhere?
Is there a Master SOURCE CODE Index anywhere?
Does anyone know if there is a Master Source Code INDEX anywhere on the net?
I don't mean just our puppy ones in /root/.packages/PKGS_HOMEPAGES, that is for the packages that should be available for our running puppy, I mean one covering all source packages on the web and not just ones for a single site.
And no, I don't want to build one, that would be a lifetime job for a team, just to keep it up to date.
EDIT: FYI I meant an INDEX of SOURCE PACKAGES and their SITES, not a copy of the packages or their many versions themselves, that would be too horendous, i'm not sure that even ibiblio could host that.
I don't mean just our puppy ones in /root/.packages/PKGS_HOMEPAGES, that is for the packages that should be available for our running puppy, I mean one covering all source packages on the web and not just ones for a single site.
And no, I don't want to build one, that would be a lifetime job for a team, just to keep it up to date.
EDIT: FYI I meant an INDEX of SOURCE PACKAGES and their SITES, not a copy of the packages or their many versions themselves, that would be too horendous, i'm not sure that even ibiblio could host that.
Last edited by scsijon on Fri 19 Dec 2014, 23:00, edited 1 time in total.
Re: Is there a Master SOURCE CODE Index anywhere?
scsijon wrote:Does anyone know if there is a Master Source Code Index anywhere on the net?
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re: Is there a Master SOURCE CODE Index anywhere?
All of the basic Gentoo distro's source code is in one subdirectory in its repositories. Go to
http://gentoo.osuosl.org/distfiles/
and notice how long that page takes to load. That's something like a master source code index.
Download the Linux from Scratch and Beyond Linux from Scratch books. For each program, its home page is usually listed as the source for its code. That's something like a master source code index, only, not in alphabetical order, rather in the order in which you would build a Linux distro from the sources. LFS and BLFS also of course supply necessary patches and patching instructions (e.g. using sed) for getting source code to actually compile. I don't know whether the gentoo distfiles code is patched or not.
http://gentoo.osuosl.org/distfiles/
and notice how long that page takes to load. That's something like a master source code index.
Download the Linux from Scratch and Beyond Linux from Scratch books. For each program, its home page is usually listed as the source for its code. That's something like a master source code index, only, not in alphabetical order, rather in the order in which you would build a Linux distro from the sources. LFS and BLFS also of course supply necessary patches and patching instructions (e.g. using sed) for getting source code to actually compile. I don't know whether the gentoo distfiles code is patched or not.
Sure, every distro should -must- have a repo of all the sources they use for that distro. But no two distros use the same selection of programs and versions as any other distro. And there are still thousands of sources which are not used by any distro. This is why it is so important to maintain a full repo of sources of everything you use and the scripts to build/rebuild it. It's like Nespresso -what else?
Let's just say, it's the question nobody likes to answer, and as I'm personally a MIT-license kind of guy, I don't care as much about it, but I do understand why it would useful to have
I kinda think this is why Woof was produced perhaps, allows one to work with a larger distro which in itself probably has sources available to use and call upon when needed.
Though I am probably not the judge on such at all, I've learned to leave these questions to the guru's here at the kennels.
I kinda think this is why Woof was produced perhaps, allows one to work with a larger distro which in itself probably has sources available to use and call upon when needed.
Though I am probably not the judge on such at all, I've learned to leave these questions to the guru's here at the kennels.
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google used to have a code search... it was crap anyhow - good riddance
https://searchcode.com/
https://code.openhub.net/
or see:
http://stackoverflow.com/questions/7778 ... ode-search
https://searchcode.com/
https://code.openhub.net/
or see:
http://stackoverflow.com/questions/7778 ... ode-search
Check out my [url=https://github.com/technosaurus]github repositories[/url]. I may eventually get around to updating my [url=http://bashismal.blogspot.com]blogspot[/url].