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I have been using a private GitLab instance to hold all my code. But since most of the staff that work with me now have a GitHub account, i would really like to get moving and mirror my Gitlab repo to Github.

My situation:

  • a server running Gitlab (Omnibus)
  • a Github account for which I'll create an organization for where me and my staff can be organized together.

I know that there is the --mirror switch in git, but I am not really sure how this is ment to work. Documentation I found online was very wonky... So it would be nice if someone could help me out. :)

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6 Answers 6

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GitLab has now an option to do this from the UI, go to the Settings->Repository of your repo:

https://gitlab.com/yourUserNameInGitLab/yourRepoName/settings/repository

Then find the option "Mirror a repository" and click on expand. What you want to do is choose the "Push" mirror direction and fill this URL:

https://yourU[email protected]/yourUserNameInGitHub/yourRepoName.git

In the password field, you have to use a Personal Access Token (as GitHub has deprecated password access now), which you can generate here: https://github.com/settings/tokens (don't forget to enable the "repo" and "workflow" permissions when generating it)

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  • 4
    Just tried it with private repo on both sides and it worked for me. 👍
    – GollyJer
    Jan 23, 2020 at 7:33
  • 6
    GitLab has more detailed instructions including using a token instead of a password in their docs Apr 16, 2020 at 6:04
  • is it possible to mirror the issues/wiki in addition to the code?
    – emre
    Jun 12, 2020 at 8:39
  • 3
    It works with access-tokens. You must set the access-token as password.
    – niels
    Jul 1, 2021 at 14:45
  • 3
    @alfC - my user account has 2FA configured and access tokens work. I'm pushing to a repo for my organization. PS. GitLab ought to link to this answer on their mirror configuration page! This explanation is so much better than the documentation. Thanks knocte. Mar 23, 2022 at 1:55
22

Another options is to add an additional URL to the origin:

git remote set-url --add origin [email protected]:<USERNAME>/<PROJECTNAME>.git

When you push to origin it will push to both the original origin (gitlab) and the one added above (github).

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  • will this show the previous git contributions on GitHub too? Jan 26 at 9:26
  • I'd imagine so as it will push all commits, but I'd give it a try and find out to be sure.
    – Kris
    Jan 27 at 11:25
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This previous StackOverflow question addresses how to move your repository from another service over to GitHub, the first answer there addresses how to do it via command line, and the second and third are more user friendly ways, which unfortunately will not work for you if your GitLab instance is on your local server (which seems to be your case).

You can however 'import' your repository from the command line to GitHub as explained by GitHub docs, this is the suggested way as GitHub offers this as an alternative to using their GitHub Importer tool (which is highlighted in that previous SO question)

A run down of steps as taken from the documentation:

  1. Create a new repository you want to push to in GitHub.
  2. Make a local bare clone from your GitLab server:

    git clone --bare https://githost.org/extuser/repo.git

A bare clone is an exact duplicate, without a working directory for editing files, so it's a clean export.

  1. Change into that directory and then push it with the --mirror flag. The mirror flag ensures that references (branches/tags) are copied to GitHub.

    cd *repo.git*

    git push --mirror https://github.com/ghuser/repo.git

  2. Finally remove the local repository you made.

    cd ..

    rm -rf repo.git

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    My Gitlab server is actually sort-of public. I wanted to mirror git.ingwie.me/ingwie/bird3 into a github organization. But since feature request notices and such are there, i only wanted to mirror it to github. So I dont want to move, but to mirror. There used to be even a special icon for a mirrored repo too. May 16, 2015 at 2:42
  • @IngwiePhoenix ah sorry, the way your question was phrased made lots of people think you want to transfer over. Perhaps edit to specifically say you want a mirror and keep the original? In any case refer to this: stackoverflow.com/questions/14288288/… where it mentions of the same setup, you can automate it with gitlab watching the github repo, or webhooks/ post receive hook, I think this is what you want. stackoverflow.com/questions/21962872/… May 16, 2015 at 8:15
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If you prefer SSH connection over HTTPS connection for GitLab to GitHub mirroring:

  • Copy SSH clone URL from your GitHub repository. (e.g. [email protected]:yourusername/yourrepositoryname.git)
  • In GitLab, go to Settings > Repository > Mirroring repositories. in your repository page.
  • Input repository URL. Don't directly paste copied link! Modify it like ssh://[email protected]/yourusername/yourrepositoryname.git
  • Select Authentication method as SSH public key.
  • Click Mirror repository.
  • After adding, click "Copy SSH public key" button next to your repository link. enter image description here
  • In GitHub, go to your target repository page and navigate Settings > Deploy keys, click to Add deploy key button and paste your public SSH key which was generated by GitLab.
  • Don't forget to check Allow write access checkbox as GitLab will require write access to mirror.

Reference

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    After hours of trying I thought this feature was broken. No one else mentions that SSH key needs to be added as a deploy key (per-project level), not as a regular SSH-key (per user-level). Jan 13 at 13:51
  • Thanks so much, finally a guide that makes sense to me!
    – jnt
    Feb 14 at 12:07
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Post Aug 13, 2021 Use of just username/password for mirroring repo from GitLab to GitHub will fail because we need to use a personal access token (PAT) to do this.

Step 1: Create a PAT from GitHub:

  • Click on your GitHub profile icon on the top right corner
  • Click Settings
  • From the menu shown on the left, click Developer Settings
  • Click Personal access tokens
  • Click Generate new token
  • Add a note that will help you identify the scope of the access token to be generated
  • Choose the Expiration period from the drop down menu (Ideally you should avoid choosing the No Expiration option)
  • Finally, select the scopes you want to grant the corresponding access to the generated access token. Make sure to select the minimum required scopes otherwise you will still have troubles performing certain Git Operations.
  • Finally click Generate Token.

You should also be able to see your personal access token. Make sure to copy it as we will need it in the following step(s).

Step 2: From GitLab, Go to repo you wish to mirror:

  • Click on Settings.
  • Click on Repository.
  • Click on Mirror Repo option --> Expand it.
  • Use below url for Git repository URL: https://<<githubtoken>>@github.com/<<username>>/<<repositoryname>>.git
  • Use the token created in Step 1 to use in the part in URL above.
  • Click on Mirror Repository button without filling the password field.
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  • What is the minimum required scope for the GitHub Personal Access Token? Jun 17, 2022 at 7:59
  • How do I do this with organization repo? I tried all answers here and was wondering if you knew
    – Royce
    Jan 12 at 18:47
  • @Royce I believe you should have a role as "Maintainer" of the repo in gitlab to do this.
    – AmeeraJ
    Mar 7 at 5:28
0

If there are too many repos on your gitlab, it's too difficult to migrate or mirror those repos.

I was in the same situation before, to solve this, I wrote an easy tool to mirror all you visible repos between gitlab and github. For example, it will mirror-clone all you visible repos on gitlab, create repos on your github account, and mirror-push them.

Gitee is not supported now, you could see tests.go to reliaze how to use it.

https://github.com/kom0055/git-mirror

I'm writing a more specific readme.

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