Note the red rectangle-with-rounded-corners under the large yellow
word 'Motel' on the front of the box.
- Aron
On 12/13/24 16:27, Rob Pike wrote:
To answer your actual question, it is of course a
riff on a TV ad for
a cockroach trap in the 1980s. The sentiment of the quote, as I saw
it (it's possible I was the one who added it to the fortunes file
after ken saw the SCCS burble at the top of some file from USG and
laughed), was primarily a reaction to the taint it added to the
previously annotation-free top of the file. It was also a response to
the march of corporate code management stepping into the research
world, or perhaps the hacker world. It's a philosophical thing, a
feeling, not an argument.
It all seems so quaint now.
-rob
On Sat, Dec 14, 2024 at 8:22 AM Rob Pike <robpike(a)gmail.com> wrote:
According to the Unix room fortunes file, the actual quote is
SCCS: the source-code motel -- your code checks in but it never
checks out.
Ken Thompson
On Sat, Dec 14, 2024 at 3:52 AM Marc Rochkind
<mrochkind(a)gmail.com> wrote:
IEEE Transactions on Software Engineering has asked me to
write a retrospective on the influence of SCCS over the last
50 years, as my SCCS paper was published in 1975. They
consider it one of the most influential papers from TSE's
first decade.
There's a funny quote from Ken Thompson that circulates from
time-to-time:
"SCCS, the source motel! Programs check in and never check out!"
But nobody seems to know what it means exactly. As part of my
research, I asked Ken what the quote meant, sunce I wanted to
include it. He explained that it refers to SCCS storing
binary data in its repository file, preventing UNIX text
tools from operating on the file.
Of course, this is only one of SCCS's many weaknesses. If you
have anything funny about any of the others, post it here. I
already have all the boring usual stuff (e.g., long-term
locks, file-oriented, no merging).
Marc Rochkind
mrochkind.com <http://mrochkind.com>