Page MenuHomenazrin ltd
Diviner Flavor Text Phorge Project History

Phorge Project History
Phorge Flavor Text (Phorge Lore)

A riveting tale of adventure.

In The Beginning

Evan Priestley wrote the original version of Differential in one night at a Facebook Hackathon in April or May 2007, along with Luke Shepard. He joined the company in April and code review was already an established and mostly-mandatory part of the culture, but it happened over email and was inefficient and hard to keep track of. Evan remembers feeling like he was spending a lot of time waiting for code review to happen, which was a major motivator for building the tool.

The original name of the tool was "Diffcamp". Some time earlier there had been an attempt to create a project management tool that was a sort of hybrid between Trac and Basecamp called "Traccamp". Since they were writing the code review tool at the height of the brief popularity Traccamp enjoyed, Evan and Luke integrated and called the new tool Diffcamp even though it had no relation to Basecamp. Traccamp fell by the wayside shortly thereafter and was eventually removed.

However, Diffcamp didn't share its fate. Evan and Luke spent some more time working on it and got good enough to win hearts and minds over emailing diffs around and was soon the de facto method of code review at Facebook.

The Long Bloat

For the next two and a half years, Diffcamp grew mostly organically and gained a number of features like inline commenting, CLI support and git support (Facebook was 100% SVN in early 2007 but 90%+ of Engineers worked primarily in git with SVN bridging by 2010). As these patches were contributed pretty much randomly, it also gained a lot of performance problems, usability issues, and bugs.

Through 2007 and 2008 Evan worked mostly on frontend and support infrastructure; among other things, he wrote a static resource management system called Haste. In 2009 Evan worked on the Facebook Lite site, where he built the Javelin JavaScript library and an MVC-flavored framework called Alite.

But by early 2010, Diffcamp was in pretty bad shape. Two years of having random features grafted onto it without real direction had left it slow and difficult to use. Internal feedback on the tool was pretty negative, with a lot of complaints about performance and stability. The internal XTools team had made inroads at fixing these problems in late 2009, but they were stretched thin and the tool had become a sprawling landscape of architectural and implementation problems.

Differential

Evan joined the new Dev Tools team around February 2010 and took over Diffcamp. He renamed it to Differential, moved it to a new Alite-based infrastructure with Javelin, and started making it somewhat less terrible. He eventually wrote Diffusion and built Herald to replace a very difficult-to-use predecessor. These tools were less negatively received than the older versions. By December 2010, Evan started open sourcing them; Haste became Celerity and Alite became Aphront. He wrote Maniphest to track open issues with the project in January or February, left Facebook in April, and shortly after, open sourced Phabricator.

Phork

In 2021, Evan announced that Phabricator was no longer maintained. A group of open-source contributors came together and forked it. This new group called renamed the project "Phorge" and continues to maintain this beloved and well-used project.