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test-convert.t
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$ cat >> $HGRCPATH <<EOF
> [extensions]
> convert=
> [convert]
> hg.saverev=False
> EOF
$ hg help convert
hg convert [OPTION]... SOURCE [DEST [REVMAP]]
convert a foreign SCM repository to a Mercurial one.
Accepted source formats [identifiers]:
- Mercurial [hg]
- CVS [cvs]
- Darcs [darcs]
- git [git]
- Subversion [svn]
- Monotone [mtn]
- GNU Arch [gnuarch]
- Bazaar [bzr]
- Perforce [p4]
Accepted destination formats [identifiers]:
- Mercurial [hg]
- Subversion [svn] (history on branches is not preserved)
If no revision is given, all revisions will be converted. Otherwise,
convert will only import up to the named revision (given in a format
understood by the source).
If no destination directory name is specified, it defaults to the basename
of the source with "-hg" appended. If the destination repository doesn't
exist, it will be created.
By default, all sources except Mercurial will use --branchsort. Mercurial
uses --sourcesort to preserve original revision numbers order. Sort modes
have the following effects:
--branchsort convert from parent to child revision when possible, which
means branches are usually converted one after the other.
It generates more compact repositories.
--datesort sort revisions by date. Converted repositories have good-
looking changelogs but are often an order of magnitude
larger than the same ones generated by --branchsort.
--sourcesort try to preserve source revisions order, only supported by
Mercurial sources.
--closesort try to move closed revisions as close as possible to parent
branches, only supported by Mercurial sources.
If "REVMAP" isn't given, it will be put in a default location
("<dest>/.hg/shamap" by default). The "REVMAP" is a simple text file that
maps each source commit ID to the destination ID for that revision, like
so:
<source ID> <destination ID>
If the file doesn't exist, it's automatically created. It's updated on
each commit copied, so 'hg convert' can be interrupted and can be run
repeatedly to copy new commits.
The authormap is a simple text file that maps each source commit author to
a destination commit author. It is handy for source SCMs that use unix
logins to identify authors (e.g.: CVS). One line per author mapping and
the line format is:
source author = destination author
Empty lines and lines starting with a "#" are ignored.
The filemap is a file that allows filtering and remapping of files and
directories. Each line can contain one of the following directives:
include path/to/file-or-dir
exclude path/to/file-or-dir
rename path/to/source path/to/destination
Comment lines start with "#". A specified path matches if it equals the
full relative name of a file or one of its parent directories. The
"include" or "exclude" directive with the longest matching path applies,
so line order does not matter.
The "include" directive causes a file, or all files under a directory, to
be included in the destination repository. The default if there are no
"include" statements is to include everything. If there are any "include"
statements, nothing else is included. The "exclude" directive causes files
or directories to be omitted. The "rename" directive renames a file or
directory if it is converted. To rename from a subdirectory into the root
of the repository, use "." as the path to rename to.
"--full" will make sure the converted changesets contain exactly the right
files with the right content. It will make a full conversion of all files,
not just the ones that have changed. Files that already are correct will
not be changed. This can be used to apply filemap changes when converting
incrementally. This is currently only supported for Mercurial and
Subversion.
The splicemap is a file that allows insertion of synthetic history,
letting you specify the parents of a revision. This is useful if you want
to e.g. give a Subversion merge two parents, or graft two disconnected
series of history together. Each entry contains a key, followed by a
space, followed by one or two comma-separated values:
key parent1, parent2
The key is the revision ID in the source revision control system whose
parents should be modified (same format as a key in .hg/shamap). The
values are the revision IDs (in either the source or destination revision
control system) that should be used as the new parents for that node. For
example, if you have merged "release-1.0" into "trunk", then you should
specify the revision on "trunk" as the first parent and the one on the
"release-1.0" branch as the second.
The branchmap is a file that allows you to rename a branch when it is
being brought in from whatever external repository. When used in
conjunction with a splicemap, it allows for a powerful combination to help
fix even the most badly mismanaged repositories and turn them into nicely
structured Mercurial repositories. The branchmap contains lines of the
form:
original_branch_name new_branch_name
where "original_branch_name" is the name of the branch in the source
repository, and "new_branch_name" is the name of the branch is the
destination repository. No whitespace is allowed in the branch names. This
can be used to (for instance) move code in one repository from "default"
to a named branch.
Mercurial Source
################
The Mercurial source recognizes the following configuration options, which
you can set on the command line with "--config":
convert.hg.ignoreerrors
ignore integrity errors when reading. Use it to fix
Mercurial repositories with missing revlogs, by converting
from and to Mercurial. Default is False.
convert.hg.saverev
store original revision ID in changeset (forces target IDs
to change). It takes a boolean argument and defaults to
False.
convert.hg.startrev
specify the initial Mercurial revision. The default is 0.
convert.hg.revs
revset specifying the source revisions to convert.
CVS Source
##########
CVS source will use a sandbox (i.e. a checked-out copy) from CVS to
indicate the starting point of what will be converted. Direct access to
the repository files is not needed, unless of course the repository is
":local:". The conversion uses the top level directory in the sandbox to
find the CVS repository, and then uses CVS rlog commands to find files to
convert. This means that unless a filemap is given, all files under the
starting directory will be converted, and that any directory
reorganization in the CVS sandbox is ignored.
The following options can be used with "--config":
convert.cvsps.cache
Set to False to disable remote log caching, for testing and
debugging purposes. Default is True.
convert.cvsps.fuzz
Specify the maximum time (in seconds) that is allowed
between commits with identical user and log message in a
single changeset. When very large files were checked in as
part of a changeset then the default may not be long enough.
The default is 60.
convert.cvsps.mergeto
Specify a regular expression to which commit log messages
are matched. If a match occurs, then the conversion process
will insert a dummy revision merging the branch on which
this log message occurs to the branch indicated in the
regex. Default is "{{mergetobranch ([-\w]+)}}"
convert.cvsps.mergefrom
Specify a regular expression to which commit log messages
are matched. If a match occurs, then the conversion process
will add the most recent revision on the branch indicated in
the regex as the second parent of the changeset. Default is
"{{mergefrombranch ([-\w]+)}}"
convert.localtimezone
use local time (as determined by the TZ environment
variable) for changeset date/times. The default is False
(use UTC).
hooks.cvslog Specify a Python function to be called at the end of
gathering the CVS log. The function is passed a list with
the log entries, and can modify the entries in-place, or add
or delete them.
hooks.cvschangesets
Specify a Python function to be called after the changesets
are calculated from the CVS log. The function is passed a
list with the changeset entries, and can modify the
changesets in-place, or add or delete them.
An additional "debugcvsps" Mercurial command allows the builtin changeset
merging code to be run without doing a conversion. Its parameters and
output are similar to that of cvsps 2.1. Please see the command help for
more details.
Subversion Source
#################
Subversion source detects classical trunk/branches/tags layouts. By
default, the supplied "svn://repo/path/" source URL is converted as a
single branch. If "svn://repo/path/trunk" exists it replaces the default
branch. If "svn://repo/path/branches" exists, its subdirectories are
listed as possible branches. If "svn://repo/path/tags" exists, it is
looked for tags referencing converted branches. Default "trunk",
"branches" and "tags" values can be overridden with following options. Set
them to paths relative to the source URL, or leave them blank to disable
auto detection.
The following options can be set with "--config":
convert.svn.branches
specify the directory containing branches. The default is
"branches".
convert.svn.tags
specify the directory containing tags. The default is
"tags".
convert.svn.trunk
specify the name of the trunk branch. The default is
"trunk".
convert.localtimezone
use local time (as determined by the TZ environment
variable) for changeset date/times. The default is False
(use UTC).
Source history can be retrieved starting at a specific revision, instead
of being integrally converted. Only single branch conversions are
supported.
convert.svn.startrev
specify start Subversion revision number. The default is 0.
Git Source
##########
The Git importer converts commits from all reachable branches (refs in
refs/heads) and remotes (refs in refs/remotes) to Mercurial. Branches are
converted to bookmarks with the same name, with the leading 'refs/heads'
stripped. Git submodules are converted to Git subrepos in Mercurial.
The following options can be set with "--config":
convert.git.similarity
specify how similar files modified in a commit must be to be
imported as renames or copies, as a percentage between "0"
(disabled) and "100" (files must be identical). For example,
"90" means that a delete/add pair will be imported as a
rename if more than 90% of the file hasn't changed. The
default is "50".
convert.git.findcopiesharder
while detecting copies, look at all files in the working
copy instead of just changed ones. This is very expensive
for large projects, and is only effective when
"convert.git.similarity" is greater than 0. The default is
False.
convert.git.renamelimit
perform rename and copy detection up to this many changed
files in a commit. Increasing this will make rename and copy
detection more accurate but will significantly slow down
computation on large projects. The option is only relevant
if "convert.git.similarity" is greater than 0. The default
is "400".
convert.git.committeractions
list of actions to take when processing author and committer
values.
Git commits have separate author (who wrote the commit) and committer
(who applied the commit) fields. Not all destinations support separate
author and committer fields (including Mercurial). This config option
controls what to do with these author and committer fields during
conversion.
A value of "messagedifferent" will append a "committer: ..." line to
the commit message if the Git committer is different from the author.
The prefix of that line can be specified using the syntax
"messagedifferent=<prefix>". e.g. "messagedifferent=git-committer:".
When a prefix is specified, a space will always be inserted between
the prefix and the value.
"messagealways" behaves like "messagedifferent" except it will always
result in a "committer: ..." line being appended to the commit
message. This value is mutually exclusive with "messagedifferent".
"dropcommitter" will remove references to the committer. Only
references to the author will remain. Actions that add references to
the committer will have no effect when this is set.
"replaceauthor" will replace the value of the author field with the
committer. Other actions that add references to the committer will
still take effect when this is set.
The default is "messagedifferent".
convert.git.extrakeys
list of extra keys from commit metadata to copy to the
destination. Some Git repositories store extra metadata in
commits. By default, this non-default metadata will be lost
during conversion. Setting this config option can retain
that metadata. Some built-in keys such as "parent" and
"branch" are not allowed to be copied.
convert.git.remoteprefix
remote refs are converted as bookmarks with
"convert.git.remoteprefix" as a prefix followed by a /. The
default is 'remote'.
convert.git.saverev
whether to store the original Git commit ID in the metadata
of the destination commit. The default is True.
convert.git.skipsubmodules
does not convert root level .gitmodules files or files with
160000 mode indicating a submodule. Default is False.
Perforce Source
###############
The Perforce (P4) importer can be given a p4 depot path or a client
specification as source. It will convert all files in the source to a flat
Mercurial repository, ignoring labels, branches and integrations. Note
that when a depot path is given you then usually should specify a target
directory, because otherwise the target may be named "...-hg".
The following options can be set with "--config":
convert.p4.encoding
specify the encoding to use when decoding standard output of
the Perforce command line tool. The default is default
system encoding.
convert.p4.startrev
specify initial Perforce revision (a Perforce changelist
number).
Mercurial Destination
#####################
The Mercurial destination will recognize Mercurial subrepositories in the
destination directory, and update the .hgsubstate file automatically if
the destination subrepositories contain the <dest>/<sub>/.hg/shamap file.
Converting a repository with subrepositories requires converting a single
repository at a time, from the bottom up.
The following options are supported:
convert.hg.clonebranches
dispatch source branches in separate clones. The default is
False.
convert.hg.tagsbranch
branch name for tag revisions, defaults to "default".
convert.hg.usebranchnames
preserve branch names. The default is True.
convert.hg.sourcename
records the given string as a 'convert_source' extra value
on each commit made in the target repository. The default is
None.
All Destinations
################
All destination types accept the following options:
convert.skiptags
does not convert tags from the source repo to the target
repo. The default is False.
options ([+] can be repeated):
-s --source-type TYPE source repository type
-d --dest-type TYPE destination repository type
-r --rev REV [+] import up to source revision REV
-A --authormap FILE remap usernames using this file
--filemap FILE remap file names using contents of file
--full apply filemap changes by converting all files again
--splicemap FILE splice synthesized history into place
--branchmap FILE change branch names while converting
--branchsort try to sort changesets by branches
--datesort try to sort changesets by date
--sourcesort preserve source changesets order
--closesort try to reorder closed revisions
(some details hidden, use --verbose to show complete help)
$ hg init a
$ cd a
$ echo a > a
$ hg ci -d'0 0' -Ama
adding a
$ hg cp a b
$ hg ci -d'1 0' -mb
$ hg rm a
$ hg ci -d'2 0' -mc
$ hg mv b a
$ hg ci -d'3 0' -md
$ echo a >> a
$ hg ci -d'4 0' -me
$ cd ..
$ hg convert a 2>&1 | grep -v 'subversion python bindings could not be loaded'
assuming destination a-hg
initializing destination a-hg repository
scanning source...
sorting...
converting...
4 a
3 b
2 c
1 d
0 e
$ hg --cwd a-hg pull ../a
pulling from ../a
searching for changes
no changes found
conversion to existing file should fail
$ touch bogusfile
$ hg convert a bogusfile
initializing destination bogusfile repository
abort: cannot create new bundle repository
[255]
#if unix-permissions no-root
conversion to dir without permissions should fail
$ mkdir bogusdir
$ chmod 000 bogusdir
$ hg convert a bogusdir
abort: Permission denied: 'bogusdir'
[255]
user permissions should succeed
$ chmod 700 bogusdir
$ hg convert a bogusdir
initializing destination bogusdir repository
scanning source...
sorting...
converting...
4 a
3 b
2 c
1 d
0 e
#endif
test pre and post conversion actions
$ echo 'include b' > filemap
$ hg convert --debug --filemap filemap a partialb | \
> grep 'run hg'
run hg source pre-conversion action
run hg sink pre-conversion action
run hg sink post-conversion action
run hg source post-conversion action
converting empty dir should fail "nicely
$ mkdir emptydir
override $PATH to ensure p4 not visible; use $PYTHON in case we're
running from a devel copy, not a temp installation
$ PATH="$BINDIR" $PYTHON "$BINDIR"/hg convert emptydir
assuming destination emptydir-hg
initializing destination emptydir-hg repository
emptydir does not look like a CVS checkout
$TESTTMP/emptydir does not look like a Git repository (glob)
emptydir does not look like a Subversion repository
emptydir is not a local Mercurial repository
emptydir does not look like a darcs repository
emptydir does not look like a monotone repository
emptydir does not look like a GNU Arch repository
emptydir does not look like a Bazaar repository
cannot find required "p4" tool
abort: emptydir: missing or unsupported repository
[255]
convert with imaginary source type
$ hg convert --source-type foo a a-foo
initializing destination a-foo repository
abort: foo: invalid source repository type
[255]
convert with imaginary sink type
$ hg convert --dest-type foo a a-foo
abort: foo: invalid destination repository type
[255]
testing: convert must not produce duplicate entries in fncache
$ hg convert a b
initializing destination b repository
scanning source...
sorting...
converting...
4 a
3 b
2 c
1 d
0 e
contents of fncache file:
$ cat b/.hg/store/fncache | sort
data/a.i
data/b.i
test bogus URL
$ hg convert -q bzr+ssh://foobar@selenic.com/baz baz
abort: bzr+ssh://foobar@selenic.com/baz: missing or unsupported repository
[255]
test revset converted() lookup
$ hg --config convert.hg.saverev=True convert a c
initializing destination c repository
scanning source...
sorting...
converting...
4 a
3 b
2 c
1 d
0 e
$ echo f > c/f
$ hg -R c ci -d'0 0' -Amf
adding f
created new head
$ hg -R c log -r "converted(09d945a62ce6)"
changeset: 1:98c3dd46a874
user: test
date: Thu Jan 01 00:00:01 1970 +0000
summary: b
$ hg -R c log -r "converted()"
changeset: 0:31ed57b2037c
user: test
date: Thu Jan 01 00:00:00 1970 +0000
summary: a
changeset: 1:98c3dd46a874
user: test
date: Thu Jan 01 00:00:01 1970 +0000
summary: b
changeset: 2:3b9ca06ef716
user: test
date: Thu Jan 01 00:00:02 1970 +0000
summary: c
changeset: 3:4e0debd37cf2
user: test
date: Thu Jan 01 00:00:03 1970 +0000
summary: d
changeset: 4:9de3bc9349c5
user: test
date: Thu Jan 01 00:00:04 1970 +0000
summary: e
test specifying a sourcename
$ echo g > a/g
$ hg -R a ci -d'0 0' -Amg
adding g
$ hg --config convert.hg.sourcename=mysource --config convert.hg.saverev=True convert a c
scanning source...
sorting...
converting...
0 g
$ hg -R c log -r tip --template '{extras % "{extra}\n"}'
branch=default
convert_revision=a3bc6100aa8ec03e00aaf271f1f50046fb432072
convert_source=mysource