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I have setup an empty svn on a server and I have been working on locally making commits along the way. Now I wish to commit my repo to an svn server. For this I tried:

git-svn checkout http://remote.svn.server.com
git-svn dcommit

Git complains that:

Use of uninitialized value in concatenation (.) or string at /usr/bin/git-svn line 411.
Committing to  ...
Unable to determine upstream SVN information from HEAD history

Since I started on my local computer first, and the repo online is empty, I can't find any info on how to make this work.

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  • Are you trying to commit to the SVN server and preserve the commit logs or just push the data into SVN in one big "Initial Commit?"
    – Steve Losh
    Jan 19, 2009 at 14:24
  • Have you actually cloned the svn repo yet?
    – tcurdt
    Jan 20, 2009 at 0:15
  • @Steve Losh. Preserving the logs was my intention, but at this point being able to just do an Initial Commit will also be great. My commits are less than 20 now, so I would be very happy if I can just get this to work. @tcurdt. I have done so now as you suggested below. But still getting same error Jan 20, 2009 at 5:45

2 Answers 2

30

I needed something like this recently and the process is relatively straightforward.

There's good tutorial by Brandon Dimcheff, "Commit a linear git history to subversion" (replaces old broken link), which these steps are based on.

As of Git version 1.6.3 these are the steps:

$ svnadmin create svn_repository
$ svn mkdir -m "Initial setup" file:///full/path/to/svn_repository/trunk

$ mkdir gitrepo && cd gitrepo
$ git init
$ echo 'Hello from Git' > file.txt
$ git add file.txt
$ git commit -m "Hello from Git"

$ git svn init --trunk=trunk file:///full/path/to/svn_repository/
$ git svn fetch

$ git branch -a # Lists remotes/trunk

$ git rebase --onto remotes/trunk --root master
# => Applying: Hello from Git etc.

$ git svn dcommit
# => Committing to ... Committed r2 ... etc

You can do a svn checkout of svn_repository now and see your Git repo.

1
  • 2
    Add --log-window-size to git svn fetch, otherwise it will take ages on big repositories. =D Aug 4, 2012 at 2:46
6

Here is what I would do:

git-svn clone http://remote.svn.server.com otherdir

Then in other dir pull the changes locally from your previous dir. Then you should have a git repo that is "connected" via git-svn and you should be able to use dcommit on it.

This might also be a useful read.

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  • 1
    I am still getting the same error. It seems even after pulling locally the gir repo was not connected. Jan 20, 2009 at 5:30
  • paste your .git/config file ... a git-log would also be useful ... this really isn't a question for SO ... you should go and ask on IRC
    – tcurdt
    Jan 20, 2009 at 10:51

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