Prepare authors mapping file
The migration includs the commit history from svn, so we need an account mapping file between svn and github accounts. Here’s the sample content of mapping file:
ts32145 = James Lu <james.lu@example.com>
cm56426 = Catalin Mike <catalin.mike@example.com>
The svn account should be set on the left and the github account should be set on the right with the email.
Please notice that all the authors of this svn project should be included in this mapping file, or the migration will not proceed successfully.
If some of the authors don’t have any github account created, you should also provide this formatted file. The only difference is if the github account exists, the account name in the commit history dashboard of github is linkable to its own profile page, or it’s plain text.
Here are 2 approaches to get the authors list from svn:
Eclipse SVN Plugin
Open svn repository history -> Right click anywhere in the history tab, then click Quick Filter -> Check Author then you can see the authors list
svn command
The following svn command of svn could also be executed to get the authors list if you get the svn client installed.
svn log -q file:///path/to/subversion/project | grep -e '^r' | awk 'BEGIN { FS = "|" } ; { print $2 }' | sort | uniq
Migrate Trunk & Branch
Create git repository
mkdir ses && cd ses
mkdir trunk && cd trunk
Init git repository
git init
git svn init https://path/to/svn/project
Paste the authors.txt to the repository root path and config account
mapping file:
git config svn.authorsfile authors.txt
Fetch code
git svn fetch
Add remote and push code to git
git remote add origin ssh://path/to/git/repository.git
git push origin master
Migrate Tags
Git uses two main types of tags: lightweight and annotated. A lightweight tag is very much like a branch that doesn’t change – it’s just a pointer to a specific commit.
Annotated tags, however, are stored as full objects in the Git database. They’re checksummed; contain the tagger name, email, and date; have a tagging message; and can be signed and verified with GNU Privacy Guard (GPG). It’s generally recommended that you create annotated tags so you can have all this information; but if you want a temporary tag or for some reason don’t want to keep the other information, lightweight tags are available too.
Annnotated tag
Create tag v1.0
git tag –a v1.0 –m “first tag”
Review tags
git tag
Push tag to remote
push origin v1.0
Lightweight tag
Create tag v1.0-lw
git tag v1.0-lw
Review tags
git tag
Push tag to remote
git push origin v1.0-lw