Larry McVoy

Larry McVoy (born 1962 in Concord, Massachusetts, United States) is the CEO of BitMover, the company that makes BitKeeper, a version control system that was used from February 2002 to early 2005 to manage the source code of the Linux kernel.

Larry McVoy

He earned BS and MS degrees in computer science in 1985 and 1987, respectively, from the University of Wisconsin–Madison and has been employed by Sun Microsystems and Silicon Graphics. His work generally included performance enhancements to the various Unix operating systems developed by his employers. While McVoy worked at Sun, he worked on a peer-to-peer SCM system named TeamWare that would form the basis of his later BitKeeper product.

Linux

McVoy started working with the Linux kernel around its 0.9.7 version and developed the LMbench kernel benchmark.[1][2] LMbench was maintained until 2009 by Carl Staelin.[3]

The BitKeeper source control system was also developed and integrated into the Linux development process in 2002, but after McVoy decided to charge for the use of BitKeeper, the Linux development community prompted the development of the git tool that began serving as the source control system for the Linux kernel in 2005.[4]

Sourceware Operating System

While working at Sun in the early 1990s, McVoy and a number of other high-profile Unix community members urged the company to open-source their flagship Unix product, SunOS, to compete with Microsoft's new Windows NT operating system.[5] The proposal would have created a copyleft version of SunOS at a time before Linux had reached its 1.0 version.

Bibliography

  • McVoy, L.; Kleiman, S. (1991). Extent-like Performance from a UNIX File System. Proceedings of the 1991 Winter USENIX Conference. pp. 33–44. CiteSeerX 10.1.1.160.2196.
gollark: Like what?
gollark: Like what, exactly?
gollark: Sounds uninteresting as a mechanic.
gollark: Yes, I'm aware you can do it, but no.
gollark: No.

References

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