From: Mark Lundquist <lundquist.mark@gmail.com>
To: git@vger.kernel.org
Subject: Re: [noob] questions about git-svn, svk
Date: Sat, 07 Jun 2008 13:22:33 -0700 [thread overview]
Message-ID: <g2eqm9$haq$1@ger.gmane.org> (raw)
In-Reply-To: <g2d7ld$8dq$1@ger.gmane.org>
ugh, I was tired when I wrote that post, it needs some
corrections/clarifications...:
I wrote:
> Hi,
>
> Okay, I'm an experienced SVN & SVK user, and I'm ready to start the
> process of switching to git. I just have a couple of questions...
>
> I'm a complete noob to the ways of git, so plz bear with me :-)
>
> All our projects are contained in our main svn repository, for the usual
> reasons. I've been mirroring that repository with SVK on my local
> machine for the last year or two and using SVK as my Subversion
> front-end. So, I have all these working copies of various projects, and
> of course these are all checkouts of SVK local branches (which under the
> hood are svn copies of within the mirror, in the depot repository).
>
> That was a lame explanation... if you know SVK then you alread know all
> that, and if you don't then it doesn't matter anyway :-/ but the point
> is that I have something like
(talking about the filesystem on my local development machine here...)
>
> work/
> projects/
> project-A/
> .
> .
> project-B/
> .
> .
> project-C/
> .
> .
that is, project-A etc. are SVK working copies (checkouts)..
>
>
> So, I'd like to start out by using git-svn, just changing how I do my
> own work and developing my git-fu before I roll this learning curve out
> to the server side :-).
>
>
> 1) So I understand that each of project-A, project-B etc. will be a
> local git repository, so.. how do init/clone/whatever these things to
> track the remote svn repository, but so that they each just contain the
> corresponding project, rather than all projects from the remote repo?
>
> 2) Apparently, I can get the ball rolling by importing my SVK mirror
> (using "git svn init --use-svm-props") instead of cloning the remote
> repository directly... I was thinking to do that and save the long
> network suck time. But then since my git repo would be tracking my SVK
> depot, I'd have to use SVK to mediate all my syncs (in SVK jargon) to
> the remote. Anyway, I don't have any desire to keep on using SVK, I
> really just want to take advantage of my local depot mirror to speed up
> the initial clone, then I want to cut the cord. Is there a way to point
> my git-svn repo at the remote Subversion repo after I import, and leave
> the SVK mirror behind?
>
> 3) One possibly (I don't know! :-) complicating factor... most of these
> projects are actually web site implementations, and these all began life
> as Subversion copies of a skeletal, "template" project that contains a
> bunch of stuff to configure our web application framework, etc. There's
> some version history there that has some value and I'd like to preserve
> it. Any special considerations in view of that?
>
> 4) Soon the time will come to switch to Subversion
^^^^^^^^^^
gaah! "git", not Subversion! "Switch to git" is what I meant!
> on the server side.
> Whatever that setup looks like, I'd like it to reflect git best
> practices and not have anything that smells like "well yeah, this is
> weird, but see, it's that way because these projects used to be
> maintained under Subversion." So, what will be the best way to "get
> from here to there?" And when I have that, will that then break my
> git-svn project repositories that I am about to make on my local
> machine? Will I have to start over with all new project repos tracking
> the git repos on the server?
>
> Any help / ideas / random thoughts appreciated... :-)
>
> cheers,
> —ml—
>
prev parent reply other threads:[~2008-06-07 20:23 UTC|newest]
Thread overview: 2+ messages / expand[flat|nested] mbox.gz Atom feed top
2008-06-07 5:51 [noob] questions about git-svn, svk Mark Lundquist
2008-06-07 20:22 ` Mark Lundquist [this message]
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