About locked repositories
When you migrate repositories to or from GitHub products, your origin and destination repositories may be “locked” for migration. While a repository is locked, you cannot make any changes to the repository, such as pushing commits, creating issues, or commenting on pull requests.
Whether your repositories will be locked during migration depends on the tooling you use and the options you choose when you run the migration. When a repository is locked, a banner with the following text is displayed on the repository's page on GitHub:
This repository is currently being migrated. It's locked while the migration is in progress.
Site administrators may also lock repositories for other reasons besides migrations.
Often, repositories are unlocked automatically when the migration is complete. In other cases, unlocking a repository is a manual step, and the process required to unlock a repository depends on the migration tool you used.
Repositories locked by GitHub Enterprise Importer
While a migration is in progress, access to the destination repository is locked by GitHub Enterprise Importer. If the migration completes successfully, the repository will unlock automatically. However, if there's a problem with the migration, including a migration failure, the repository may remain locked.
GitHub Enterprise Importer does not lock source repositories by default. Source repositories will only be locked if you specify the --lock-source-repo
option in the GitHub CLI, or the lockSource
attribute in the startRepositoryMigration
GraphQL mutation.
Note
We do not recommend locking source repositories unless you are certain you will not want to unlock them later. Consider archiving the repositories instead. For more information, see "Archiving repositories."
For information about how to unlock repositories that were locked by GitHub Enterprise Importer, see "Troubleshooting your migration with GitHub Enterprise Importer."
Repositories locked by the "Organization migrations" REST API
When you call the "Start an organization migration" endpoint to generate a migration archive for a source repository, the repository is not locked by default. The repository is only locked if you set the lock_repositories
parameter to true
.
If you lock a repository via this endpoint, you can unlock the repository using the "Unlock an organization repository" endpoint.
If the repository is stored on GitHub Enterprise Server, a site administrator can also unlock the repository using the site admin dashboard. For more information, see "Locking a repository."
Repositories locked by ghe-migrator
When you use ghe-migrator
, the destination repository on GitHub Enterprise Server is locked by default and is not automatically unlocked.
If the import succeeded, you can unlock the repository with the ghe-migrator unlock
command. For more information, see "Migrating data to GitHub Enterprise Server."
If the import failed, not all of your data has been migrated, and we recommend deleting the repository and retrying the migration, to prevent data loss.
If you're sure you want to use the repository, a site administrator can unlock the repository using the site admin dashboard. For more information, see "Locking a repository."
The source repository is not locked by default, only if the --lock
argument is specified when preparing the repository for export with the ghe-migrator add
command. To unlock the repository, use the ghe-migrator unlock
command. For more information, see "Migrating data to GitHub Enterprise Server."
Repositories locked by Enterprise Cloud Importer
When you use Enterprise Cloud Importer, the destination repository is locked by default and is not automatically unlocked.
If the import succeeded, you can unlock the repository by clicking the Unlock button in Enterprise Cloud Importer.
If the import failed, you cannot unlock the repository yourself. Because a failed migration means that not all of your data has been migrated, we recommend deleting the repository and retrying the migration, to prevent data loss.
If you’re sure you want to unlock the repository, contact your site administrator.
Repositories locked by the startImport
GraphQL mutation
When you use the startImport
GraphQL mutation, the destination repository is locked by default and is not automatically unlocked.
If the import succeeded, you can unlock the repository with the unlockImportedRepositories
GraphQL mutation. For documentation, contact your Expert Services or GitHub Partner representative.
If the import failed, you cannot unlock the repository yourself. Because a failed migration means that not all of your data has been migrated, we recommend deleting the repository and retrying the migration, to prevent data loss.
If you’re sure you want to unlock the repository, contact your site administrator.