Near the name of the repository it should say what repo it was forked  
from, if any. You can just follow the chain up.

The "Network" diagram is also useful when trying to discover the  
canonical repo -- or the most up-to-date one.

Cheers,
Bruce

On Jun 26, 2009, at 12:48 AM, Laurent PETIT <laurent.pe...@gmail.com>  
wrote:

> Hi, this is an OT question, but since Rich encouraged git gurus here  
> on the ml to on help non gurus, then I ask :-)
>
> By just surfing on github website, I find a cloned repository of  
> clojure-contrib, e.g. clone done by user XXX.
>
> From the main page of this repo, I can see who else cloned XXX's  
> repo, who else watches XXX's repo.
>
> But what I would like to do is see whether XXX's repo is a clone of  
> another repo, and go up the chain to the real "master" repo.
>
> Is this possible from the UI of github, or do I have to clone XXX's  
> repo, invoke some git command on my clone, ... and repeat the  
> operation at each node of the cloning graph ?
>
>
> Thanks in advance,
>
> (Of course, for clojure-contrib I guess that Rich's repo is the  
> master, but still it's rather a guess than an evidence provided by  
> the tools to me).
>
> -- 
> Laurent
>
> >


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