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Treating my repository as a SVN repo, I get:

svn co http://myrepo/foo/trunk foo
...
foo/
  bar/
  baz/ -> http://myrepo/baz/trunk

Treating it as a Git repo, I get:

git svn clone http://myrepo/foo --trunk=trunk --branches=branches --tags=tags
...
foo/
  bar/

I can clone baz to my local machine elsewhere and add a symlink, but that's just a hack. Is there a way to have git svn rebase automatically pull in those changes when it updates everything else, just like svn up does?

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75% accept rate
I know I've read somewhere about how to set this up with git submodules, but I can't find the link. – JesperE Jan 23 '09 at 18:56
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5 Answers

The best means of integrating svn externals with git-svn that I've seen is this script, which clones your externals into a .git_externals/ directory and creates the symlinks and exclude files you need. I find this a simple and direct solution. YMMV.

Here is an older overview of other options for dealing with svn externals with git-svn. To me they look a little over-complicated and liable to break under subsequent Git use.

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This seems not to work for me (here the externals are relative links to the same repository). – PaĆ­lo Ebermann Dec 5 '11 at 13:47
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up vote 8 down vote accepted

The solution I ended up using was just to symlink to other git-svn clones on my local box. This worked pretty well: it allows me to commit changes back, and it allows me to make local changes on project A just to get them into project B.

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I also made a script (both Perl and Ruby variants available) that does this for me, it's at http://github.com/liyanage/git-tools/.

  • Recursively checks out all svn:externals
  • Can be run repeatedly in case the clone of a large repository aborts halfway through. Happened to me a lot. It picks up where it left off.
  • Adds all svn:externals entries it finds and processes to .git/info/exclude
  • Adds all svn:ignore entries it encounters to .git/info/exclude
  • Can be run regularly after the first run to do the svn:rebase in all cloned sub-sandboxes, discover new externals and new svn:ignores
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I sadly couldn't get your tools to work. – J. Polfer Aug 3 '10 at 22:37
1  
I'd like to learn what didn't work for you so I can improve the script. Can you contact me? – Marc Liyanage Aug 16 '10 at 16:19
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I decided to write a "simple" perl script to handle all this stuff for me. I've put it recently to github, try it out, maybe it would help: http://github.com/sushdm/git_svn_externals/.

It essentially does git-svn clone for all externals found, and it looks for them recursively, clones, symlinks them in proper places and excludes all .git_externals dirs and symlinks so that you can still use 'git svn dcommit'.

Good luck.

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I just wrote a short script which checkouts all svn:externals of the current HEAD to the root directory and excludes them from the git repository.

Place it to .git/hooks/post-checkout and it will keep those external checkouts up to date whenever the working tree changes, for example due to git svn rebase or git-checkout.

#!/bin/bash
set -eu

revision=$(git svn info | sed -n 's/^Revision: \([1-9][0-9]*\)$/\1/p')
git svn -r${revision} propget svn:externals | head -n-1 | {
    while read checkout_args
    do
        checkout_dirname=$(echo ${checkout_args} | cut -d' ' -f3)
        svn checkout ${checkout_args}
        if [ -z $(grep ${checkout_dirname} .git/info/exclude) ]
        then
            echo ${checkout_dirname} >> .git/info/exclude
        fi
    done
}
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