Prerequisites
To follow these steps, you must use a macOS or Linux system and have the following tools installed:
- Subversion
- Git, including
git-svn
- Git Large File Storage (Git LFS) (see "Installing Git Large File Storage")
Importing a Subversion repository
-
Create a new repository on your GitHub Enterprise Server instance. To avoid errors, do not initialize the new repository with README, license, or gitignore files. You can add these files after your project has been pushed to GitHub Enterprise Server. For more information, see "Creating a new repository."
-
To confirm that Git is installed on your machine, run
git --version.
The output should be similar to
git version 2.40.0
. -
To confirm that
git svn
is available on your machine, rungit svn --version
.The output should be similar to
git-svn version 2.40.0 (svn 1.14.2)
.If you can run
git
successfully but encounter an error when runninggit svn
, you may need to installgit svn
separately. We recommend using Homebrew or the Ubuntu package registry, which includegit-svn
packages. -
To confirm that Git LFS is installed on your machine, run
git lfs --version
.The output should be similar to
git-lfs/3.1.4 (GitHub; darwin arm64; go 1.18.1)
. -
Check out your Subversion repository.
For example, to check out the Logisim open source project from Sourceforge, run
svn checkout https://svn.code.sf.net/p/circuit/code/trunk
. -
Move into the directory for your Subversion repository.
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To get a list of authors in your Subversion project and store the list in
authors.txt
, run the following script:Shell svn log -q | grep -e '^r' | awk 'BEGIN { FS = "|" } ; { print $2" = "$2 }' | sed 's/^[ \t]*//' | sort | uniq > authors.txt
svn log -q | grep -e '^r' | awk 'BEGIN { FS = "|" } ; { print $2" = "$2 }' | sed 's/^[ \t]*//' | sort | uniq > authors.txt
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Update your
authors.txt
file, mapping the author name used in the Subversion repository to the name you want to use in your Git repository, with the following format:octocat = The Octocat <octocat@github.com>
-
To convert your Subversion repository to a Git repository, use
git svn
.-
If your Subversion repository has a standard format, with “trunk”, “branches”, and “tags” folders, run
git svn clone -s URL PATH/TO/DESTINATION --authors-file PATH/TO/AUTHORS.TXT
, replacingURL
with the URL of the Subversion repository,PATH/TO/DESTINATION
with the path to the directory you want to clone the repository into, andPATH/TO/AUTHORS.TXT
with the path to yourauthors.txt
file.For example, to clone the Logisim project from Sourceforge into a directory called logisim, run
git svn clone -s https://svn.code.sf.net/p/circuit/code logisim --authors-file path/to/authors.txt
. -
If your Subversion repository is non-standard, you can customize
git svn
to handle your repository. For more information, see git-svn in the Git documentation.
-
-
Git will check out each SVN revision and turn the revision into a Git commit. If your repository has many files or a lot of history, this process will take a long time.
For large repositories, the command may freeze. If so, you can begin where you ended by terminating the command with Ctrl+C, moving to your new directory, and then running
git svn fetch
. -
Move into the directory for the newly-created Git repository.
-
To add your GitHub repository as a remote, run
git remote add origin URL
, replacingURL
with the URL for the GitHub repository you created earlier, such ashttps://github.com/octocat/example-repository.git
. -
To push the repository to GitHub, run
git push --mirror origin
.If your repository contains any files that are larger than GitHub Enterprise Server's file size limit, your push may fail. Move the large files to Git LFS by running
git lfs import
, then try again.