Apologies if this question is a duplicate, or if I've missed something, but in all my searching of the interwebz, I can't find any information on this.
I want to fork someone else's SVN project, and then turn it into a local git repo (hopefully preserving all of the SVN commits). All the examples I've found have only talked about how to turn your own SVN repo into a git repo via git svn
.
For example, I occasionally write some Adobe AIR apps, and I like to use the open-source AlivePDF library for PDF generation. The SVN repo URL is http://alivepdf.googlecode.com/svn/trunk/
. Since I have made some changes to the source code that I use locally in my PDF generation, I want to then turn my local fork into a git project. I've tried to just do git svn clone http://alivepdf.googlecode.com/svn/trunk/ alivepdf-read-only --no-metadata --stdlayout .
(from the directory where I want to store it). However when I look at the git repo history (gitx
on Mac), it appears to be empty, i.e., no history of the original AlivePDF author's commits.
Am I doing something wrong? Do I need to SVN fork the project first, then change it into a git project? Please advise.
http://alivepdf.googlecode.com/svn/
with --stdlayout orhttp://alivepdf.googlecode.com/svn/trunk
without --stdlayout – Dmitry Pavlenko Dec 20 '12 at 12:00