Fortunately for those of us who are still forced to use CVS, git provides pretty good tools to do exactly what you're wanting to do. My suggestions (and what we do here at $work):
Creating the Initial Clone
Use git cvsimport
to clone the CVS revision history into a git repository. I use the following invocation:
% git cvsimport -d $CVSROOT -C dir_to_create -r cvs -k
-A /path/to/authors/file cvs_module_to_checkout
The -A
option is optional but it helps to make your revision history that's imported from CVS look more git-like (see man git-cvsimport
for more info on how this is set up).
Depending on the size and history of the CVS repository, this first import will take a VERY long time. You can add a -v to the above command if you want the peace of mind that something is in fact happening.
Once this process is completed, you will have a master
branch that should reflect CVS's HEAD (with the exception that git cvsimport
by default ignores the last 10 minutes worth of commits to avoid catching a commit that is half-finished). You can then use git log
and friends to examine the entire history of the repository just as if it had been using git from the beginning.
Configuration Tweaks
There are a few configuration tweaks that will make incremental imports from CVS (as well as exports) easier in the future. These are not documented on the git cvsimport
man page so I suppose they could change without notice but, FWIW:
% git config cvsimport.module cvs_module_to_checkout
% git config cvsimport.r cvs
% git config cvsimport.d $CVSROOT
All of these options can be specified on the command line so you could safely skip this step.
Incremental Imports
Subsequent git cvsimport
should be much faster than the first invocation. It does, however, do an cvs rlog
on every directory (even those that have only files in Attic
) so it can still take a few minutes. If you've specified the suggested configs above, all you need to do is execute:
% git cvsimport
If you haven't set up your configs to specify the defaults, you'll need to specify them on the command line:
% git cvsimport -r cvs -d $CVSROOT cvs_module_to_checkout
Either way, two things to keep in mind:
- Make sure you're in the root directory of your git repository. If you're anyplace else, it will try to do a fresh
cvsimport
that will again take forever.
- Make sure you're on your
master
branch so that the changes can be merged (or rebased) into your local/topic branches.
Making Local Changes
In practice, I recommend always making changes on branches and only merging to master
when you're ready to export those changes back to the CVS repository. You can use whatever workflow you like on your branches (merging, rebasing, squashing, etc) but of course the standard rebasing rules apply: don't rebase if anyone else has been basing their changes on your branch.
Exporting Changes to CVS
The git cvsexportcommit
command allows you to export a single commit out to the CVS server. You can specify a single commit ID (or anything that describes a specific commit as defined in man git-rev-parse
). A diff is then generated, applied to a CVS checkout and then (optionally) committed to CVS using the actual cvs
client. You could export each micro commit on your topic branches but generally I like to create a merge commit on an up-to-date master
and export that single merge commit to CVS. When you export a merge commit, you have to tell git which commit parent to use to generate the diff. Also, this won't work if your merge was a fast-forward (see the "HOW MERGE WORKS" section of man git-merge
for a description of a fast-forward merge) so you have to use the --no-ff
option when performing the merge. Here's an example:
# on master
% git merge --no-ff --log -m "Optional commit message here" topic/branch/name
% git cvsexportcommit -w /path/to/cvs/checkout -u -p -c ORIG_HEAD HEAD
You can see what each of those options mean on the man page for git-cvsexportcommit. You do have the option of setting the -w
option in your git config:
% git config cvsexportcommit.cvsdir /path/to/cvs/checkout
If the patch fails for whatever reason, my experience is that you'll (unfortunately) probably be better off copying the changed files over manually and committing using the cvs client. This shouldn't happen, however, if you make sure master
is up-to-date with CVS before merging your topic branch in.
If the commit fails for whatever reason (network/permissions issues, etc), you can take the command printed to your terminal at the end of the error output and execute it in your CVS working directory. It usually looks something like this:
% cvs commit -F .msg file1 file2 file3 etc
The next time you do a git cvsimport
(waiting at least 10 minutes) you should see the patch of your exported commit re-imported into your local repository. They will have different commit IDs since the CVS commit will have a different timestamp and possibly a different committer name (depending on whether you set up an authors file in your initial cvsimport
above).
Cloning your CVS clone
If you have more than one person needing to do the cvsimport
, it would be more efficient to have a single git repository that performs the cvsimport and have all the other repositories created as a clone. This works perfectly and the cloned repository can perform cvsexportcommits just as described above. There is one caveat, however. Due to the way CVS commits come back through with different commit IDs (as described above), you don't want your cloned branch to track the central git repository. By default, this is how git clone
configures your repository but this is easily remedied:
% git clone [CENTRAL_REPO_HERE]
% cd [NEW_GIT_REPO_DIR_HERE]
% git config --unset branch.master.remote
% git config --unset branch.master.merge
After you've removed these configs, you will have to explicitly say where and what to pull from when you want to pull in new commits from the central repository:
% git pull origin master
Overall, I've found this work-flow to be quite manageable and the "next best thing" when migrating completely to git isn't practical.