Command-line tools to make git-svn simple
Project description
git-svn-helpers is a collection of command line tools that greatly simplify using git for svn repositories.
Its main goal is to make setting up a local git repository following an existing svn checkout a ‘no-brainer’.
It also addresses using a single git-svn repository for working on multiple checkouts of (usually) different branches and switching between them.
Basic usage
Executive summary:
> cd path/to/svn/repo > gitify init
Perform local changes and commit them to git. When ready to push your changes:
> gitify push
To update your working directory with upstream changes:
> gitify update
gitify will take care to keep your git and svn repository in sync and do its best to avoid conflicts when updating.
Sample session
Here’s a sample session:
> cd /tmp > svn co https://svn.plone.org/svn/plone/plone.app.form/branches/1.1 plone.app.form A 1.1/setup.py ... Checked out revision 27228. > cd plone.app.form > gitify init No git repository found in /Users/tomster/.gitcache/. Initiating cloning into cache. Analyzing svn log... Cloning https://svn.plone.org/svn/plone/plone.app.form/ from r10593:34543 into /Users/tomster/.gitcache/ Initialized empty Git repository in /Users/tomster/Development/gitcache/plone.app.form/.git/ ... Git branch 'local/1.1' is now following svn branch '1.1': # On branch local/1.1 nothing to commit (working directory clean) > git branch * local/1.1 master
Points to note:
gitify limited the cloning to the revisions found in the svn log of the package root (here https://svn.plone.org/svn/plone/plone.app.form/). A big time saver, especially on large repositories (such as plone.collective)
gitify created a local branch local/1.1 that follows the (remote) svn branch 1.1 and switched to it
gitify assumed that the name of the package is the name of the directory it was called from (in this case plone.app.form) as it refuses to guess
Multiple check-outs
In practice you will often work with different local copies of a given repository, i.e. on trunk and on a feature branch. That’s when the .gitcache directory created above comes in handy. Let’s move our previous checkout out of the way and create a maintenance checkout that follows trunk:
> cd .. > mkdir feature-branch > mv plone.app.form feature-branch/ > mkdir maintenance > cd maintenance/ > svn co https://svn.plone.org/svn/plone/plone.app.form/trunk plone.app.form A plone.app.form/setup.py ... U plone.app.form Checked out revision 27228.
What happens if we run gitify here?:
> cd plone.app.form/ > gitify init Updating existing cache: fetching /Users/tomster/.gitcache/plone.app.form Done. 1 packages updated. Git branch 'local/trunk' is now following svn branch 'trunk': # On branch local/trunk nothing to commit (working directory clean)
Notice, that this operation went much faster, as we now have used the existing git repository in the cache directory. This can be further evidenced by looking at the available local branches now:
> git branch local/1.1 * local/trunk master
Keeping the cache up-to-date
Of course, once you introduce a cache you need to keep it up-to-date. git-svn provides the fetch command for this purpose. In practice it is cumbersome to update each package manually, though. Therefore we provide our own fetch command which can update multiple packages at once using wildcards, like so:
> gitify fetch plone* fetching /Users/tomster/.gitcache/plone.app.form fetching /Users/tomster/.gitcache/plone.pony fetching /Users/tomster/.gitcache/plonenext Done. 3 packages updated.
You can pass the -v option to see the output of the git-svn fetch commands. If you don’t provide a package all packages will be updated.
Note, that the our fetch command never touches any working copy, only the cache. Is primarily intended to be run as a maintenance command, i.e. via crontab to keep the local cache ‘fresh’.
Keeping git and svn in sync
Since the local filesystem is both a git repository, as well as a svn check- out at the same time (IOW we have both .git and .svn floating around) they should be kept in sync as closely as possible. By design, this can only happen, when we have online access to the svn repository. Therefore it is best performed when committing back to svn. The way this is achieved manually is to first dcommit and then perform a svn up --force command (the --force is necessary so that svn won’t be bothered by any new files that have been committed). gitify push provides a convenience command that performs this for you:
> gitify push -v Committing to https://svn.plone.org/svn/plone/plone.app.form/branches/1.1 ... At revision 27229. INFO: Pushed local changes to svn. > svn st <BLANKLINE>
Installation
Simply use easy_install, optionally with virtualenv:
> easy_install git-svn-helpers
Requirements
git-svn-helpers requires that git (with subversion support a.k.a git-svn) is already installed.
TODO
add support for custom svn layout
Change history
0.7 - 2010-03-07
Use full copies instead of symlinks to create working copies. This avoids the issue of having the git and svn repository out of sync when working with multiple copies of the same repository and greatly reduces the risk of conflicts.
This also means, that the fetch command now only operates on the cache without modifying the working copy (making it safe to run via crontab, for example)
Running gitify against an old-style working copy will produce an error. Simply deleting the symlink and re-running gitify remedies that, however.
Another effect, is that the init command is now only needed once for each working copy (it is no longer necessary to re-run the command after switching between different working copies of the same repository).
gitify therefore no longer defaults to the init command (just as neither git nor svn do anything w/o supplying an explicit action). Also, it has been renamed from gitify (back) to init. [tomster]
Allow the help, --version and fetch commands to run outside .svn directories [tomster]
0.6 - 2010-03-07
add a file manifest so that all necessary files will get included for sdist [proyvind]
sample update hook for enforcing dcommits to help keeping the svn and git repositories in sync [chaoflow]
updated tests to work with git 1.6.x [tomster]
removed deprecated entry points for clone, fetch and commit [tomster]
0.5 - 2009-08-15 (a.k.a. HAR2009 release)
Added gitify update command, which performs a git-svn rebase operation for the current svn checkout but also handles uncommitted local changes gracefully (unlike git svn but like svn does)
No longer use the logging module for user feedback. That idea was rather misguided :)
0.4 - 2009-08-11
Refactored the entry points to just use gitify. All other commands are now sub-commands of gitify:
gs-commit has been replaced with gitify push
gs-fetch has been replaced with gitify fetch
Added usage and help output for each command.
Removed the gs-clone entry point as it was only ever used together with the main gitify command anyway.
Use proper logging instead of just printing to stdout
Added comprehensive tests, including functional tests that cover the entire update/commit cycle of cloning an svn repository and commiting back to it.
0.3.1 - 2009-07-09
BUGFIX: Don’t use custom aliases, as they might not be installed. This resolves http://github.com/tomster/git-svn-helpers/issues#issue/2
BUGFIX: Explicitly list elementtree as dependency This resolves http://github.com/tomster/git-svn-helpers/issues#issue/1)
0.3 - 2009-06-09
Added the gs-commit command which helps committing back to svn and keeping git and svn in sync
0.2b - 2009-06-05
Added the gs-fetch command which helps keeping the cache up-to-date
0.1b2 - 2009-05-30
BUGFIX: get the svn log from the package root (i.e. /path/to/foo) instead of the locally checked out path (i.e. path/to/foo/branches/bar) which is usually much younger than the entire package and thus we would miss revisions in the cloning process!
0.1b1 - 2009-05-30
Initial release a.k.a. “Works for me”
Download
Project details
Release history Release notifications | RSS feed
Download files
Download the file for your platform. If you're not sure which to choose, learn more about installing packages.