![]() Interesting to note here is also that the author listed second here is Yang Tse, who hasn’t authored anything since August 2013. Of course we didn’t have proper separation between authors and committers before git (March 2010). Look at how large share of all commits that the top-4 commiters have authored. This could also talk about how seriously we suffer from “ the bus factor” in this project. There’s one notable dip and one climb and I think they both are related to how we have rearranged documentation and documentation formatting. Plain and simply: lines added to files that we have in git, and how the number have increased over time. Since we also have documentation and related things this isn’t only lines of code. Since our switch to HTTPS we have a 301 redirect from the HTTP site, and we still suffer from a large number of user-agents hitting us over and over without seemingly following said redirect… Number of lines in git A large share of those download the cacert.pem file we host. In total we serve almost twice the amount of data to “bots” than to human. My log analyze software also tries to identify “human” traffic so this graph should not include the very large amount of bots and automation that hits our site. The main explanation to the decrease in spent bandwidth in 2016 is us removing the HTML and PDF versions of all documentation from the release tarballs (October 2016). The switch to a HTTPS-only site happened in February 2016. ![]() Web trafficįirst out, web site traffic to over the seven last full years that I have stats for. The git repository has data from December 1999 and we have detailed release information since version 6.0 (September 13, 1999). Unless otherwise mentioned, this is based on the availability of data that we have. Some stats and numbers from the curl project early 2017. ![]() There will hopefully be a recording of this presentation made available soon, but I wanted to entertain you all by also presenting some of the graphs from that presentation in a blog format for easy access and to share the information. At curlup 2017 in Nuremberg, I did a keynote and talked a little about the road to what we are and where we are right now in the curl project. ![]()
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