1git-svn(1) 2========== 3 4NAME 5---- 6git-svn - Bidirectional operation between a single Subversion branch and git 7 8SYNOPSIS 9-------- 10'git-svn' <command> [options] [arguments] 11 12DESCRIPTION 13----------- 14git-svn is a simple conduit for changesets between Subversion and git. 15It is not to be confused with linkgit:git-svnimport[1], which is 16read-only. 17 18git-svn was originally designed for an individual developer who wants a 19bidirectional flow of changesets between a single branch in Subversion 20and an arbitrary number of branches in git. Since its inception, 21git-svn has gained the ability to track multiple branches in a manner 22similar to git-svnimport. 23 24git-svn is especially useful when it comes to tracking repositories 25not organized in the way Subversion developers recommend (trunk, 26branches, tags directories). 27 28COMMANDS 29-------- 30-- 31 32'init':: 33 Initializes an empty git repository with additional 34 metadata directories for git-svn. The Subversion URL 35 may be specified as a command-line argument, or as full 36 URL arguments to -T/-t/-b. Optionally, the target 37 directory to operate on can be specified as a second 38 argument. Normally this command initializes the current 39 directory. 40 41-T<trunk_subdir>;; 42--trunk=<trunk_subdir>;; 43-t<tags_subdir>;; 44--tags=<tags_subdir>;; 45-b<branches_subdir>;; 46--branches=<branches_subdir>;; 47-s;; 48--stdlayout;; 49 These are optional command-line options for init. Each of 50 these flags can point to a relative repository path 51 (--tags=project/tags') or a full url 52 (--tags=https://foo.org/project/tags). The option --stdlayout is 53 a shorthand way of setting trunk,tags,branches as the relative paths, 54 which is the Subversion default. If any of the other options are given 55 as well, they take precedence. 56--no-metadata;; 57 Set the 'noMetadata' option in the [svn-remote] config. 58--use-svm-props;; 59 Set the 'useSvmProps' option in the [svn-remote] config. 60--use-svnsync-props;; 61 Set the 'useSvnsyncProps' option in the [svn-remote] config. 62--rewrite-root=<URL>;; 63 Set the 'rewriteRoot' option in the [svn-remote] config. 64--use-log-author;; 65 When retrieving svn commits into git (as part of fetch, rebase, or 66 dcommit operations), look for the first From: or Signed-off-by: line 67 in the log message and use that as the author string. 68--add-author-from;; 69 When committing to svn from git (as part of commit or dcommit 70 operations), if the existing log message doesn't already have a 71 From: or Signed-off-by: line, append a From: line based on the 72 git commit's author string. If you use this, then --use-log-author 73 will retrieve a valid author string for all commits. 74--username=<USER>;; 75 For transports that SVN handles authentication for (http, 76 https, and plain svn), specify the username. For other 77 transports (eg svn+ssh://), you must include the username in 78 the URL, eg svn+ssh://foo@svn.bar.com/project 79--prefix=<prefix>;; 80 This allows one to specify a prefix which is prepended 81 to the names of remotes if trunk/branches/tags are 82 specified. The prefix does not automatically include a 83 trailing slash, so be sure you include one in the 84 argument if that is what you want. If --branches/-b is 85 specified, the prefix must include a trailing slash. 86 Setting a prefix is useful if you wish to track multiple 87 projects that share a common repository. 88 89'fetch':: 90 Fetch unfetched revisions from the Subversion remote we are 91 tracking. The name of the [svn-remote "..."] section in the 92 .git/config file may be specified as an optional command-line 93 argument. 94 95'clone':: 96 Runs 'init' and 'fetch'. It will automatically create a 97 directory based on the basename of the URL passed to it; 98 or if a second argument is passed; it will create a directory 99 and work within that. It accepts all arguments that the 100 'init' and 'fetch' commands accept; with the exception of 101 '--fetch-all'. After a repository is cloned, the 'fetch' 102 command will be able to update revisions without affecting 103 the working tree; and the 'rebase' command will be able 104 to update the working tree with the latest changes. 105 106'rebase':: 107 This fetches revisions from the SVN parent of the current HEAD 108 and rebases the current (uncommitted to SVN) work against it. 109 110This works similarly to 'svn update' or 'git-pull' except that 111it preserves linear history with 'git-rebase' instead of 112'git-merge' for ease of dcommiting with git-svn. 113 114This accepts all options that 'git-svn fetch' and 'git-rebase' 115accepts. However '--fetch-all' only fetches from the current 116[svn-remote], and not all [svn-remote] definitions. 117 118Like 'git-rebase'; this requires that the working tree be clean 119and have no uncommitted changes. 120 121-l;; 122--local;; 123 Do not fetch remotely; only run 'git-rebase' against the 124 last fetched commit from the upstream SVN. 125 126'dcommit':: 127 Commit each diff from a specified head directly to the SVN 128 repository, and then rebase or reset (depending on whether or 129 not there is a diff between SVN and head). This will create 130 a revision in SVN for each commit in git. 131 It is recommended that you run git-svn fetch and rebase (not 132 pull or merge) your commits against the latest changes in the 133 SVN repository. 134 An optional command-line argument may be specified as an 135 alternative to HEAD. 136 This is advantageous over 'set-tree' (below) because it produces 137 cleaner, more linear history. 138+ 139--no-rebase;; 140 After committing, do not rebase or reset. 141-- 142 143'log':: 144 This should make it easy to look up svn log messages when svn 145 users refer to -r/--revision numbers. 146+ 147The following features from `svn log' are supported: 148+ 149-- 150--revision=<n>[:<n>];; 151 is supported, non-numeric args are not: 152 HEAD, NEXT, BASE, PREV, etc ... 153-v/--verbose;; 154 it's not completely compatible with the --verbose 155 output in svn log, but reasonably close. 156--limit=<n>;; 157 is NOT the same as --max-count, doesn't count 158 merged/excluded commits 159--incremental;; 160 supported 161-- 162+ 163New features: 164+ 165-- 166--show-commit;; 167 shows the git commit sha1, as well 168--oneline;; 169 our version of --pretty=oneline 170-- 171+ 172NOTE: SVN itself only stores times in UTC and nothing else. The regular svn 173client converts the UTC time to the local time (or based on the TZ= 174environment). This command has the same behaviour. 175+ 176Any other arguments are passed directly to `git log' 177 178'blame':: 179 Show what revision and author last modified each line of a file. The 180 output of this mode is format-compatible with the output of 181 `svn blame' by default. Like the SVN blame command, 182 local uncommitted changes in the working copy are ignored; 183 the version of the file in the HEAD revision is annotated. Unknown 184 arguments are passed directly to git-blame. 185+ 186--git-format;; 187 Produce output in the same format as `git blame', but with 188 SVN revision numbers instead of git commit hashes. In this mode, 189 changes that haven't been committed to SVN (including local 190 working-copy edits) are shown as revision 0. 191 192-- 193'find-rev':: 194 When given an SVN revision number of the form 'rN', returns the 195 corresponding git commit hash (this can optionally be followed by a 196 tree-ish to specify which branch should be searched). When given a 197 tree-ish, returns the corresponding SVN revision number. 198 199'set-tree':: 200 You should consider using 'dcommit' instead of this command. 201 Commit specified commit or tree objects to SVN. This relies on 202 your imported fetch data being up-to-date. This makes 203 absolutely no attempts to do patching when committing to SVN, it 204 simply overwrites files with those specified in the tree or 205 commit. All merging is assumed to have taken place 206 independently of git-svn functions. 207 208'create-ignore':: 209 Recursively finds the svn:ignore property on directories and 210 creates matching .gitignore files. The resulting files are staged to 211 be committed, but are not committed. Use -r/--revision to refer to a 212 specfic revision. 213 214'show-ignore':: 215 Recursively finds and lists the svn:ignore property on 216 directories. The output is suitable for appending to 217 the $GIT_DIR/info/exclude file. 218 219'commit-diff':: 220 Commits the diff of two tree-ish arguments from the 221 command-line. This command is intended for interoperability with 222 git-svnimport and does not rely on being inside an git-svn 223 init-ed repository. This command takes three arguments, (a) the 224 original tree to diff against, (b) the new tree result, (c) the 225 URL of the target Subversion repository. The final argument 226 (URL) may be omitted if you are working from a git-svn-aware 227 repository (that has been init-ed with git-svn). 228 The -r<revision> option is required for this. 229 230'info':: 231 Shows information about a file or directory similar to what 232 `svn info' provides. Does not currently support a -r/--revision 233 argument. Use the --url option to output only the value of the 234 'URL:' field. 235 236'proplist':: 237 Lists the properties stored in the Subversion repository about a 238 given file or directory. Use -r/--revision to refer to a specific 239 Subversion revision. 240 241'propget':: 242 Gets the Subversion property given as the first argument, for a 243 file. A specific revision can be specified with -r/--revision. 244 245'show-externals':: 246 Shows the Subversion externals. Use -r/--revision to specify a 247 specific revision. 248 249-- 250 251OPTIONS 252------- 253-- 254 255--shared[={false|true|umask|group|all|world|everybody}]:: 256--template=<template_directory>:: 257 Only used with the 'init' command. 258 These are passed directly to linkgit:git-init[1]. 259 260-r <ARG>:: 261--revision <ARG>:: 262 263Used with the 'fetch' command. 264 265This allows revision ranges for partial/cauterized history 266to be supported. $NUMBER, $NUMBER1:$NUMBER2 (numeric ranges), 267$NUMBER:HEAD, and BASE:$NUMBER are all supported. 268 269This can allow you to make partial mirrors when running fetch; 270but is generally not recommended because history will be skipped 271and lost. 272 273-:: 274--stdin:: 275 276Only used with the 'set-tree' command. 277 278Read a list of commits from stdin and commit them in reverse 279order. Only the leading sha1 is read from each line, so 280git-rev-list --pretty=oneline output can be used. 281 282--rmdir:: 283 284Only used with the 'dcommit', 'set-tree' and 'commit-diff' commands. 285 286Remove directories from the SVN tree if there are no files left 287behind. SVN can version empty directories, and they are not 288removed by default if there are no files left in them. git 289cannot version empty directories. Enabling this flag will make 290the commit to SVN act like git. 291 292config key: svn.rmdir 293 294-e:: 295--edit:: 296 297Only used with the 'dcommit', 'set-tree' and 'commit-diff' commands. 298 299Edit the commit message before committing to SVN. This is off by 300default for objects that are commits, and forced on when committing 301tree objects. 302 303config key: svn.edit 304 305-l<num>:: 306--find-copies-harder:: 307 308Only used with the 'dcommit', 'set-tree' and 'commit-diff' commands. 309 310They are both passed directly to git-diff-tree see 311linkgit:git-diff-tree[1] for more information. 312 313[verse] 314config key: svn.l 315config key: svn.findcopiesharder 316 317-A<filename>:: 318--authors-file=<filename>:: 319 320Syntax is compatible with the files used by git-svnimport and 321git-cvsimport: 322 323------------------------------------------------------------------------ 324 loginname = Joe User <user@example.com> 325------------------------------------------------------------------------ 326 327If this option is specified and git-svn encounters an SVN 328committer name that does not exist in the authors-file, git-svn 329will abort operation. The user will then have to add the 330appropriate entry. Re-running the previous git-svn command 331after the authors-file is modified should continue operation. 332 333config key: svn.authorsfile 334 335-q:: 336--quiet:: 337 Make git-svn less verbose. 338 339--repack[=<n>]:: 340--repack-flags=<flags>:: 341 342These should help keep disk usage sane for large fetches 343with many revisions. 344 345--repack takes an optional argument for the number of revisions 346to fetch before repacking. This defaults to repacking every 3471000 commits fetched if no argument is specified. 348 349--repack-flags are passed directly to linkgit:git-repack[1]. 350 351[verse] 352config key: svn.repack 353config key: svn.repackflags 354 355-m:: 356--merge:: 357-s<strategy>:: 358--strategy=<strategy>:: 359 360These are only used with the 'dcommit' and 'rebase' commands. 361 362Passed directly to git-rebase when using 'dcommit' if a 363'git-reset' cannot be used (see dcommit). 364 365-n:: 366--dry-run:: 367 368This is only used with the 'dcommit' command. 369 370Print out the series of git arguments that would show 371which diffs would be committed to SVN. 372 373-- 374 375ADVANCED OPTIONS 376---------------- 377-- 378 379-i<GIT_SVN_ID>:: 380--id <GIT_SVN_ID>:: 381 382This sets GIT_SVN_ID (instead of using the environment). This 383allows the user to override the default refname to fetch from 384when tracking a single URL. The 'log' and 'dcommit' commands 385no longer require this switch as an argument. 386 387-R<remote name>:: 388--svn-remote <remote name>:: 389 Specify the [svn-remote "<remote name>"] section to use, 390 this allows SVN multiple repositories to be tracked. 391 Default: "svn" 392 393--follow-parent:: 394 This is especially helpful when we're tracking a directory 395 that has been moved around within the repository, or if we 396 started tracking a branch and never tracked the trunk it was 397 descended from. This feature is enabled by default, use 398 --no-follow-parent to disable it. 399 400config key: svn.followparent 401 402-- 403CONFIG FILE-ONLY OPTIONS 404------------------------ 405-- 406 407svn.noMetadata:: 408svn-remote.<name>.noMetadata:: 409 410This gets rid of the git-svn-id: lines at the end of every commit. 411 412If you lose your .git/svn/git-svn/.rev_db file, git-svn will not 413be able to rebuild it and you won't be able to fetch again, 414either. This is fine for one-shot imports. 415 416The 'git-svn log' command will not work on repositories using 417this, either. Using this conflicts with the 'useSvmProps' 418option for (hopefully) obvious reasons. 419 420svn.useSvmProps:: 421svn-remote.<name>.useSvmProps:: 422 423This allows git-svn to re-map repository URLs and UUIDs from 424mirrors created using SVN::Mirror (or svk) for metadata. 425 426If an SVN revision has a property, "svm:headrev", it is likely 427that the revision was created by SVN::Mirror (also used by SVK). 428The property contains a repository UUID and a revision. We want 429to make it look like we are mirroring the original URL, so 430introduce a helper function that returns the original identity 431URL and UUID, and use it when generating metadata in commit 432messages. 433 434svn.useSvnsyncProps:: 435svn-remote.<name>.useSvnsyncprops:: 436 Similar to the useSvmProps option; this is for users 437 of the svnsync(1) command distributed with SVN 1.4.x and 438 later. 439 440svn-remote.<name>.rewriteRoot:: 441 This allows users to create repositories from alternate 442 URLs. For example, an administrator could run git-svn on the 443 server locally (accessing via file://) but wish to distribute 444 the repository with a public http:// or svn:// URL in the 445 metadata so users of it will see the public URL. 446 447Since the noMetadata, rewriteRoot, useSvnsyncProps and useSvmProps 448options all affect the metadata generated and used by git-svn; they 449*must* be set in the configuration file before any history is imported 450and these settings should never be changed once they are set. 451 452Additionally, only one of these four options can be used per-svn-remote 453section because they affect the 'git-svn-id:' metadata line. 454 455-- 456 457BASIC EXAMPLES 458-------------- 459 460Tracking and contributing to the trunk of a Subversion-managed project: 461 462------------------------------------------------------------------------ 463# Clone a repo (like git clone): 464 git-svn clone http://svn.foo.org/project/trunk 465# Enter the newly cloned directory: 466 cd trunk 467# You should be on master branch, double-check with git-branch 468 git branch 469# Do some work and commit locally to git: 470 git commit ... 471# Something is committed to SVN, rebase your local changes against the 472# latest changes in SVN: 473 git-svn rebase 474# Now commit your changes (that were committed previously using git) to SVN, 475# as well as automatically updating your working HEAD: 476 git-svn dcommit 477# Append svn:ignore settings to the default git exclude file: 478 git-svn show-ignore >> .git/info/exclude 479------------------------------------------------------------------------ 480 481Tracking and contributing to an entire Subversion-managed project 482(complete with a trunk, tags and branches): 483 484------------------------------------------------------------------------ 485# Clone a repo (like git clone): 486 git-svn clone http://svn.foo.org/project -T trunk -b branches -t tags 487# View all branches and tags you have cloned: 488 git branch -r 489# Reset your master to trunk (or any other branch, replacing 'trunk' 490# with the appropriate name): 491 git reset --hard remotes/trunk 492# You may only dcommit to one branch/tag/trunk at a time. The usage 493# of dcommit/rebase/show-ignore should be the same as above. 494------------------------------------------------------------------------ 495 496The initial 'git-svn clone' can be quite time-consuming 497(especially for large Subversion repositories). If multiple 498people (or one person with multiple machines) want to use 499git-svn to interact with the same Subversion repository, you can 500do the initial 'git-svn clone' to a repository on a server and 501have each person clone that repository with 'git clone': 502 503------------------------------------------------------------------------ 504# Do the initial import on a server 505 ssh server "cd /pub && git-svn clone http://svn.foo.org/project 506# Clone locally - make sure the refs/remotes/ space matches the server 507 mkdir project 508 cd project 509 git-init 510 git remote add origin server:/pub/project 511 git config --add remote.origin.fetch=+refs/remotes/*:refs/remotes/* 512 git fetch 513# Initialize git-svn locally (be sure to use the same URL and -T/-b/-t options as were used on server) 514 git-svn init http://svn.foo.org/project 515# Pull the latest changes from Subversion 516 git-svn rebase 517------------------------------------------------------------------------ 518 519REBASE VS. PULL/MERGE 520--------------------- 521 522Originally, git-svn recommended that the remotes/git-svn branch be 523pulled or merged from. This is because the author favored 524'git-svn set-tree B' to commit a single head rather than the 525'git-svn set-tree A..B' notation to commit multiple commits. 526 527If you use 'git-svn set-tree A..B' to commit several diffs and you do 528not have the latest remotes/git-svn merged into my-branch, you should 529use 'git-svn rebase' to update your work branch instead of 'git pull' or 530'git merge'. 'pull/merge' can cause non-linear history to be flattened 531when committing into SVN, which can lead to merge commits reversing 532previous commits in SVN. 533 534DESIGN PHILOSOPHY 535----------------- 536Merge tracking in Subversion is lacking and doing branched development 537with Subversion can be cumbersome as a result. While git-svn can track 538copy history (including branches and tags) for repositories adopting a 539standard layout, it cannot yet represent merge history that happened 540inside git back upstream to SVN users. Therefore it is advised that 541users keep history as linear as possible inside git to ease 542compatibility with SVN (see the CAVEATS section below). 543 544CAVEATS 545------- 546 547For the sake of simplicity and interoperating with a less-capable system 548(SVN), it is recommended that all git-svn users clone, fetch and dcommit 549directly from the SVN server, and avoid all git-clone/pull/merge/push 550operations between git repositories and branches. The recommended 551method of exchanging code between git branches and users is 552git-format-patch and git-am, or just dcommiting to the SVN repository. 553 554Running 'git-merge' or 'git-pull' is NOT recommended on a branch you 555plan to dcommit from. Subversion does not represent merges in any 556reasonable or useful fashion; so users using Subversion cannot see any 557merges you've made. Furthermore, if you merge or pull from a git branch 558that is a mirror of an SVN branch, dcommit may commit to the wrong 559branch. 560 561'git-clone' does not clone branches under the refs/remotes/ hierarchy or 562any git-svn metadata, or config. So repositories created and managed with 563using git-svn should use rsync(1) for cloning, if cloning is to be done 564at all. 565 566Since 'dcommit' uses rebase internally, any git branches you git-push to 567before dcommit on will require forcing an overwrite of the existing ref 568on the remote repository. This is generally considered bad practice, 569see the git-push(1) documentation for details. 570 571Do not use the --amend option of git-commit(1) on a change you've 572already dcommitted. It is considered bad practice to --amend commits 573you've already pushed to a remote repository for other users, and 574dcommit with SVN is analogous to that. 575 576BUGS 577---- 578 579We ignore all SVN properties except svn:executable. Any unhandled 580properties are logged to $GIT_DIR/svn/<refname>/unhandled.log 581 582Renamed and copied directories are not detected by git and hence not 583tracked when committing to SVN. I do not plan on adding support for 584this as it's quite difficult and time-consuming to get working for all 585the possible corner cases (git doesn't do it, either). Committing 586renamed and copied files are fully supported if they're similar enough 587for git to detect them. 588 589CONFIGURATION 590------------- 591 592git-svn stores [svn-remote] configuration information in the 593repository .git/config file. It is similar the core git 594[remote] sections except 'fetch' keys do not accept glob 595arguments; but they are instead handled by the 'branches' 596and 'tags' keys. Since some SVN repositories are oddly 597configured with multiple projects glob expansions such those 598listed below are allowed: 599 600------------------------------------------------------------------------ 601[svn-remote "project-a"] 602 url = http://server.org/svn 603 branches = branches/*/project-a:refs/remotes/project-a/branches/* 604 tags = tags/*/project-a:refs/remotes/project-a/tags/* 605 trunk = trunk/project-a:refs/remotes/project-a/trunk 606------------------------------------------------------------------------ 607 608Keep in mind that the '*' (asterisk) wildcard of the local ref 609(right of the ':') *must* be the farthest right path component; 610however the remote wildcard may be anywhere as long as it's own 611independent path component (surrounded by '/' or EOL). This 612type of configuration is not automatically created by 'init' and 613should be manually entered with a text-editor or using 614linkgit:git-config[1] 615 616SEE ALSO 617-------- 618linkgit:git-rebase[1] 619 620Author 621------ 622Written by Eric Wong <normalperson@yhbt.net>. 623 624Documentation 625------------- 626Written by Eric Wong <normalperson@yhbt.net>.