I am about to complete a tedious process of converting "dumb snapshots" to git. This process has been going very well (thanks to this rename process), but now I realized that some of the branches that I created, do not merit a branch but rather a tag.

Since everything is still local (never pushed to a repository), I found this question (and associated answer) somewhat more cumbersome than I prefer, so I was wondering whether I can take a shortcut via some simple "convert-from-branch-to-tag" command?

Is there such a simple command to convert a branch to a tag?

(I know I can just leave it as is, but I really like the way gitk highlights tags, helping me easily identify them).

UPDATE: Thanks to @Andy's answer below, I managed to come up with a shell script that does it all conveniently and painlessly. I am sharing this script for the benefit of all and as special thanks to this great community who made moving for CVS to git possible for me:

#!/bin/sh

BRANCHNAME=$1
TAGNAME=$2

echo "Request to convert the branch ${BRANCHNAME} to a tag with the same name accepted."
echo "Processing..."
echo " "

git show-ref --verify --quiet refs/heads/${BRANCHNAME}
# $? == 0 means local branch with <branch-name> exists. 

if [ $? == 0 ]; then
   git checkout ${BRANCHNAME}
   git tag ${BRANCHNAME}
   git checkout master
   git branch ${BRANCHNAME} -d
   echo " "
   echo "Updated list branches, sorted chronologically: "
   echo "---------------------------------------------- "
   git log --no-walk --date-order --oneline --decorate $(git rev-list --branches --no-walk) | cut -d "(" -f 2 | cut -d ")" -f 1
else
   echo "Sorry. The branch ${BRANCHNAME} does NOT seem to exist. Exiting."
fi
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1 Answer

up vote 3 down vote accepted

Was there separate development on these branches? (the post you linked to, doesn't appear to have development on those branches) If there was no development, you could:

  1. Checkout the branch git checkout branchName.
  2. Tag it with git tag tagName.
  3. Switch back to master git checkout master.
  4. Finally, delete original branch with git branch branchName -d.

This can also be done if there was development on the branch, but you will need to use -D instead of -d. I'm not a git pro though, so not sure if that is an "acceptable" way to leave a branch.

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Thank you. No, there was no development on those branches whatsoever. The git checkout <branchName> and the -d at the last step are what scared me, but I now understand that there is no other way. So I will have to experiment with this on a safe copy of the entire git (local) repository. – WinWin Jul 12 '11 at 16:16
1  
If there was no development on that branch a tag is every bit as good as a branch (in the end they are both just pointing to a commit). Using the little d will ensure that you can safely delete the branch and not lose work. – Andy Jul 12 '11 at 16:27
I just finished verifying that your 4-steps process works for me. See the shell script I wrote that reflects that. Thanks again and answer accepted now. – WinWin Jul 12 '11 at 20:16
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