Article version: Enterprise Server 2.17
Importing data from third-party version control systems
Using the git-import suite of tools, you can import from Subversion, Mercurial and Team Foundation Version Control to Git repositories on GitHub Enterprise Server.
Importing projects from Mercurial
-
SSH into your GitHub Enterprise Server instance.
$ ssh -p 122 admin@HOSTNAME
-
Make a raw clone of the project using the command below, specifying the URL of the source project, and a path to a temporary repository:
$ git-import-hg-raw HG-CLONE-URL /PATH/REPO-NAME.git # Creates a new repository with one or more Git refs in "refs/import/" in the specified path.
-
Review the comma-separated (CSV) file in
/PATH/REPO-NAME.git/git-import/raw-authors.csv
. It should contain these columns:ID
: The author as stored in the original repository, followed by a unique identifierNAME
: The author as stored in the original repository
To map authors from the original repository to an email address and name, create a new CSV file with the columns
ID,(ignored),GIT_EMAIL,GIT_NAME
, which replaces the author information for anything by "ID" with "GIT_EMAIL" and "GIT_NAME".Example:
-
Original author ID:
octocat@111111-2222-3333-4444-55555555555
-
New email address:
octocat@github.com
-
New name:
The Octocat
To map the original author to the new Git user, the CSV file should include the line:
octocat@111111-2222-3333-4444-55555555555, ,octocat@github.com,The Octocat
-
Rewrite the authors and branches using the CSV file:
$ git-import-rewrite --flavor hg --authors /PATH/AUTHORS-MAP-FILE.csv /PATH/REPO-NAME.git
-
If you haven't yet, create a new empty repository on GitHub Enterprise Server.
-
Change the current working directory to your local repository.
-
Push the imported repository to GitHub Enterprise Server:
$ git push --mirror PUSH-URL-ON-GITHUB-ENTERPRISE
Importing projects from Subversion
-
SSH into your GitHub Enterprise Server instance.
$ ssh -p 122 admin@HOSTNAME
-
Make a raw clone of the project using the command below, specifying the URL of the source project, and a path to a temporary repository:
$ git-import-svn-raw SVN-CLONE-URL /PATH/REPO-NAME.git # Creates a new repository with one or more Git refs in "refs/import/" in the specified path.
-
Review the comma-separated (CSV) file in
/PATH/REPO-NAME.git/git-import/raw-authors.csv
. It should contain these columns:ID
: The author as stored in the original repository, followed by a unique identifierNAME
: The author as stored in the original repository
To map authors from the original repository to an email address and name, create a new CSV file with the columns
ID,(ignored),GIT_EMAIL,GIT_NAME
, which replaces the author information for anything by "ID" with "GIT_EMAIL" and "GIT_NAME".Example:
-
Original author ID:
octocat@111111-2222-3333-4444-55555555555
-
New email address:
octocat@github.com
-
New name:
The Octocat
To map the original author to the new Git user, the CSV file should include the line:
octocat@111111-2222-3333-4444-55555555555, ,octocat@github.com,The Octocat
-
Rewrite the authors and branches using the CSV file:
$ git-import-rewrite --flavor svn --authors /PATH/AUTHORS-MAP-FILE.csv /PATH/REPO-NAME.git
-
If you haven't yet, create a new empty repository on GitHub Enterprise Server.
-
Change the current working directory to your local repository.
-
Push the imported repository to GitHub Enterprise Server:
$ git push --mirror PUSH-URL-ON-GITHUB-ENTERPRISE
Importing projects from Team Foundation Version Control
-
SSH into your GitHub Enterprise Server instance.
$ ssh -p 122 admin@HOSTNAME
-
Make a raw clone of the project using the command below, specifying the URL of the source project, and a path to a temporary repository:
$ git-import-tfs-raw TEAM-FOUNDATION-CLONE-URL /PATH/REPO-NAME.git # Creates a new repository with one or more Git refs in "refs/import/" in the specified path.
-
Review the comma-separated (CSV) file in
/PATH/REPO-NAME.git/git-import/raw-authors.csv
. It should contain these columns:ID
: The author as stored in the original repository, followed by a unique identifierNAME
: The author as stored in the original repository
To map authors from the original repository to an email address and name, create a new CSV file with the columns
ID,(ignored),GIT_EMAIL,GIT_NAME
, which replaces the author information for anything by "ID" with "GIT_EMAIL" and "GIT_NAME".Example:
-
Original author ID:
octocat@111111-2222-3333-4444-55555555555
-
New email address:
octocat@github.com
-
New name:
The Octocat
To map the original author to the new Git user, the CSV file should include the line:
octocat@111111-2222-3333-4444-55555555555, ,octocat@github.com,The Octocat
-
Rewrite the authors and branches using the CSV file:
$ git-import-rewrite --flavor tfs --authors /PATH/AUTHORS-MAP-FILE.csv /PATH/REPO-NAME.git
-
If you haven't yet, create a new empty repository on GitHub Enterprise Server.
-
Change the current working directory to your local repository.
-
Push the imported repository to GitHub Enterprise Server:
$ git push --mirror PUSH-URL-ON-GITHUB-ENTERPRISE