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I am evaluating git-svn and trying to determine how well it will play with a particular svn repository. I am mostly concerned with getting git-svn to perform merges in such a way that the svn:mergeinfo property is correctly set in the subversion repo. Is this possible?

Here is what I have done so far:

# Checkout the SVN repo.
$ git svn clone svn://server/project1 -T trunk -b branches -t tags

# Make sure we are working on trunk.
$ git reset --hard remotes/trunk

# Modify the working copy.
$ vim file.txt

# Commit locally to the git repo.
$ git commit -a

# Push the commits back to the SVN server.
$ git svn dcommit
Committing to svn://server/project1/trunk ...
    M   file.txt
Committed r178
    M   file.txt
r178 = b6e4a3a0c28e7b9aa71d8058d96dcfe7c8a2b349 (trunk)

Now how would I go about merging that particular commit into one of the subversion branches? Again, it is very important to me that git properly set the svn:mergeinfo property when committing the change.

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1 Answer

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Short answer: No, git-svn does not care about svn:mergeinfo properties since git-svn is not doing merges back to svn (it is doing commits).

Long answer: Most people use git-svn to get out of the brain-damaged merging of svn. The problem with svn is that it does not differentiate between copying files or folders (often caused by refactoring) and creating a branch since creating a branch or tag is done by using the "svn copy" command. The svn:mergeinfo property is a band-aid on this problem but there are still cases where modifications are ambiguous. Git has much more robust support for branching and merging.

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