A migration is the process of transferring data from a source location (either a GitHub.com organization or a GitHub Enterprise instance) to a target GitHub Enterprise instance. Migrations can be used to transfer your data when changing platforms or upgrading hardware on your instance.
Types of migrations
There are three types of migrations you can perform:
A migration from a GitHub Enterprise instance to another GitHub Enterprise instance. You can migrate any number of repositories owned by any user or organization on the instance. Before performing a migration, you must have site administrator access to both instances.
A migration from a GitHub.com organization to a GitHub Enterprise instance. You can migrate any number of repositories owned by the organization. Before performing a migration, you must have administrative access to the GitHub.com organization as well as site administrator access to the target instance.
- Trial runs are migrations that import data to a staging instance. These can be useful to see what would happen if a migration were applied to your GitHub Enterprise instance. We strongly recommend that you perform a trial run on a staging instance before importing data to your production instance.
Migrated data
In a migration, everything revolves around a repository. Most data associated with a repository can be migrated. For example, a repository within an organization will migrate the repository and the organization, as well as any users, teams, issues, and pull requests associated with the repository.
Note: Fork relationships do not persist after a migration.
Data associated with a migrated repository | Notes |
---|---|
Users | @mentions of users are rewritten to match the target. |
Organizations | An organization's name and details are migrated. |
Repositories | Links to Git trees, blobs, commits, and lines are rewritten to match the target. The migrator follows a maximum of three repository redirects. |
Wikis | All wiki data is migrated. |
Teams | @mentions of teams are rewritten to match the target. |
Milestones | Timestamps are preserved. |
Issues | Issue references and timestamps are preserved. |
Issue comments | Cross-references to comments are rewritten for the target instance. |
Pull requests | Cross-references to pull requests are rewritten to match the target. Timestamps are preserved. |
Commit comments | Cross-references to comments are rewritten for the target instance. Timestamps are preserved. |
Pull request comments | Cross-references to comments are rewritten for the target instance. Timestamps are preserved. |
Releases | All releases data is migrated. |
Actions taken on pull requests or issues | All modifications to pull requests or issues, such as assigning users, renaming titles, and modifying labels are preserved, along with timestamps for each action. |
File attachments | File attachments on issues and pull requests are migrated. You can choose to disable this as part of the migration. |