1git-p4 - Perforce <-> Git converter using git-fast-import 2 3Usage 4===== 5 6git-p4 can be used in two different ways: 7 81) To import changes from Perforce to a Git repository, using "git-p4 sync". 9 102) To submit changes from Git back to Perforce, using "git-p4 submit". 11 12Importing 13========= 14 15Simply start with 16 17 git-p4 clone //depot/path/project 18 19or 20 21 git-p4 clone //depot/path/project myproject 22 23This will: 24 251) Create an empty git repository in a subdirectory called "project" (or 26"myproject" with the second command) 27 282) Import the head revision from the given Perforce path into a git branch 29called "p4" (remotes/p4 actually) 30 313) Create a master branch based on it and check it out. 32 33If you want the entire history (not just the head revision) then you can simply 34append a "@all" to the depot path: 35 36 git-p4 clone //depot/project/main@all myproject 37 38 39 40If you want more control you can also use the git-p4 sync command directly: 41 42 mkdir repo-git 43 cd repo-git 44 git init 45 git-p4 sync //path/in/your/perforce/depot 46 47This will import the current head revision of the specified depot path into a 48"remotes/p4/master" branch of your git repository. You can use the 49--branch=mybranch option to import into a different branch. 50 51If you want to import the entire history of a given depot path simply use: 52 53 git-p4 sync //path/in/depot@all 54 55 56Note: 57 58To achieve optimal compression you may want to run 'git repack -a -d -f' after 59a big import. This may take a while. 60 61Incremental Imports 62=================== 63 64After an initial import you can continue to synchronize your git repository 65with newer changes from the Perforce depot by just calling 66 67 git-p4 sync 68 69in your git repository. By default the "remotes/p4/master" branch is updated. 70 71Advanced Setup 72============== 73 74Suppose you have a periodically updated git repository somewhere, containing a 75complete import of a Perforce project. This repository can be cloned and used 76with git-p4. When updating the cloned repository with the "sync" command, 77git-p4 will try to fetch changes from the original repository first. The git 78protocol used with this is usually faster than importing from Perforce 79directly. 80 81This behaviour can be disabled by setting the "git-p4.syncFromOrigin" git 82configuration variable to "false". 83 84Updating 85======== 86 87A common working pattern is to fetch the latest changes from the Perforce depot 88and merge them with local uncommitted changes. The recommended way is to use 89git's rebase mechanism to preserve linear history. git-p4 provides a convenient 90 91 git-p4 rebase 92 93command that calls git-p4 sync followed by git rebase to rebase the current 94working branch. 95 96Submitting 97========== 98 99git-p4 has support for submitting changes from a git repository back to the 100Perforce depot. This requires a Perforce checkout separate from your git 101repository. To submit all changes that are in the current git branch but not in 102the "p4" branch (or "origin" if "p4" doesn't exist) simply call 103 104 git-p4 submit 105 106in your git repository. If you want to submit changes in a specific branch that 107is not your current git branch you can also pass that as an argument: 108 109 git-p4 submit mytopicbranch 110 111You can override the reference branch with the --origin=mysourcebranch option. 112 113If a submit fails you may have to "p4 resolve" and submit manually. You can 114continue importing the remaining changes with 115 116 git-p4 submit --continue 117 118Example 119======= 120 121# Clone a repository 122 git-p4 clone //depot/path/project 123# Enter the newly cloned directory 124 cd project 125# Do some work... 126 vi foo.h 127# ... and commit locally to gi 128 git commit foo.h 129# In the meantime somebody submitted changes to the Perforce depot. Rebase your latest 130# changes against the latest changes in Perforce: 131 git-p4 rebase 132# Submit your locally committed changes back to Perforce 133 git-p4 submit 134# ... and synchronize with Perforce 135 git-p4 rebase 136 137 138Configuration parameters 139======================== 140 141git-p4.user ($P4USER) 142 143Allows you to specify the username to use to connect to the Perforce repository. 144 145 git config [--global] git-p4.user public 146 147git-p4.password ($P4PASS) 148 149Allows you to specify the password to use to connect to the Perforce repository. 150Warning this password will be visible on the command-line invocation of the p4 binary. 151 152 git config [--global] git-p4.password public1234 153 154git-p4.port ($P4PORT) 155 156Specify the port to be used to contact the Perforce server. As this will be passed 157directly to the p4 binary, it may be in the format host:port as well. 158 159 git config [--global] git-p4.port codes.zimbra.com:2666 160 161git-p4.host ($P4HOST) 162 163Specify the host to contact for a Perforce repository. 164 165 git config [--global] git-p4.host perforce.example.com 166 167git-p4.client ($P4CLIENT) 168 169Specify the client name to use 170 171 git config [--global] git-p4.client public-view 172 173git-p4.allowSubmit 174 175 git config [--global] git-p4.allowSubmit false 176 177git-p4.syncFromOrigin 178 179A useful setup may be that you have a periodically updated git repository 180somewhere that contains a complete import of a Perforce project. That git 181repository can be used to clone the working repository from and one would 182import from Perforce directly after cloning using git-p4. If the connection to 183the Perforce server is slow and the working repository hasn't been synced for a 184while it may be desirable to fetch changes from the origin git repository using 185the efficient git protocol. git-p4 supports this setup by calling "git fetch origin" 186by default if there is an origin branch. You can disable this using: 187 188 git config [--global] git-p4.syncFromOrigin false 189 190git-p4.useclientspec 191 192 git config [--global] git-p4.useclientspec false 193 194Implementation Details... 195========================= 196 197* Changesets from Perforce are imported using git fast-import. 198* The import does not require anything from the Perforce client view as it just uses 199 "p4 print //depot/path/file#revision" to get the actual file contents. 200* Every imported changeset has a special [git-p4...] line at the 201 end of the log message that gives information about the corresponding 202 Perforce change number and is also used by git-p4 itself to find out 203 where to continue importing when doing incremental imports. 204 Basically when syncing it extracts the perforce change number of the 205 latest commit in the "p4" branch and uses "p4 changes //depot/path/...@changenum,#head" 206 to find out which changes need to be imported. 207* git-p4 submit uses "git rev-list" to pick the commits between the "p4" branch 208 and the current branch. 209 The commits themselves are applied using git diff/format-patch ... | git apply 210