When Microsoft open-sourced Microsoft GW-Basic using a 38 years commit, I thought: how is that possible?
Well, you can use an old computer, set a date in the past, commit. But it can be done with some bash and Git tricks.
A magic touch
touch command allow us to create empty files and mess with the timestamp. So you can do:
$ touch -d '1972-11-28 13:25:00 -0300' README.md
$ ls -l
-rw-rw-r-- 1 rafael rafael 0 nov 28 1972 README.md
The time-machine versioning
GIT has two dates related to a commit: GIT_COMMITTER_DATE
and GIT_AUTHOR_DATE
. According to Git documentation;
- GIT_AUTHOR_DATE: The date used for the author's identity when creating commit or tag objects, or when writing reflogs.
- GIT_COMMITTER_DATE: The date used for the committer identity when creating commit or tag objects, or when writing reflogs.
Basically, the first affects the commit date (seen on git log
or on Github commit listing) and the second affects the file date. You need to change both to get the complete effect.
GIT_AUTHOR_DATE
can be set during the commit or amending a commit. GIT_COMMITTER_DATE
must be in the environment to be considered. It's also possible to change them after (but that's harder, it can take a long time for big repositories).
Jumping into the DeLorean
This small script glues the pieces together. It's supposed to run on a brand new folder, with any set of files you want.
#!/bin/bash
DATE="1955-11-12 22:04 -0500"
touch -d "${DATE}" README.md
touch -d "${DATE}" lightning-on-the-clock.DOC
touch -d "${DATE}" any-other-file-you-want
git init
git add .
export GIT_COMMITTER_DATE=$DATE
git commit --date "${DATE}" -m "Initialize programmer"
unset GIT_COMMITTER_DATE
Programmers' commit date
Just for fun, I create a repository using my birth date. You can clone and create your own born repository!
https://github.com/rafaelgou/born
That's all for today.
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