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In the past I've have used GitHub's import functionality to import a SVN repository. The repository is now the same as a bare git without any connection to SVN history. The commits don't include svn-id information.

Some time has passed and commits were added to the SVN repository but as expected the git repository remained the same.

So now I would like to 'update' the git repository with the commits that were added to the original SVN. I've tried git-svn but I couldn't make git recognize the common history between the cloned svn and the cloned git.

I've considered using format-patch and I believe this action should solve the problem however I was looking for a more automated way of doing it.

The only restriction is that the git history should be maintained (no rebase'ing) and that commits are as faithful to the SVN repository as possible (no svn-id added to the commit message).

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As you guessed, getting the commits to "merge" properly isn't really going to work here. You will have to use format-patch. Here is how I would do it:

$ git svn clone --no-metadata svn://.../ new-svn-repo
$ cd new-svn-repo
$ git log

(You may wish to add the -A option to git svn clone to rewrite the SVN authorship information from a user@uuid format into proper Joe User <[email protected]> authorship information. See man git-svn for information.)

Look through the log and find the commit that corresponds to the latest commit in the github repository. If that is commit abcdef then:

$ git format-patch -k abcdef

You will now have a whole slew of *.patch files that correspond to the new commits you want to port over. So...

$ cp *.patch /github/repository/location
$ cd /github/repository/location
$ git am -k --keep-cr *.patch

Tada! Now just push master to Github.

(If your Git is not new enough it may complain about the --keep-cr argument to git am. If your source files do not contain CRs then just remove --keep-cr. But if they do, you may need to upgrade your Git since git mailsplit, called by git am, will strip all of the CRs in the patch files out when processing them. This may cause patches to fail to apply.)

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  • The only problem I found with this is that git-am adds my user as "commiter". Do you have any idea how to prevent this? I've checked git-am documentation but couldn't find anything explicit.
    – unode
    Nov 16, 2010 at 19:28
  • Well, it should, shouldn't it? You were the one to commit to the Git repository. If you don't like that, you can use git-filter-branch to rewrite the history that you imported.
    – cdhowie
    Nov 16, 2010 at 20:31

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