See the instructions below to convert an SVN repository to a git repository
Note: To ONLY see the list of users run line item 1.
CONVERT SVN REPO to GIT REPO
1. Retrieve a list of all Subversion committers
$ svn log -q https://svn.example.com/repository_name | awk -F '|' '/^r/ {sub("^ ", "", $2); sub(" $", "", $2); print $2" = "$2" <"$2">"}' | sort -u > authors-transform.txt
That will grab all the log messages, pluck out the usernames, eliminate any duplicate usernames, sort the usernames and place them into a "authors-transform.txt” file. Now edit each line in the file. For example, convert:
username = username <username>
into this:
username = Firstname Lastname <username@example.com>
2. Clone the Subversion repository using git-svn
git svn clone [SVN repo URL] --no-metadata -A authors-transform.txt --stdlayout ~/temp
3. Convert svn:ignore properties to .gitignore
If your svn repo was using svn:ignore properties, you can easily convert this to a .gitignore file using:
cd ~/temp
git svn show-ignore > .gitignore
git add .gitignore
git commit -m 'Convert svn:ignore properties to .gitignore.'
4. Push repository to a bare git repository
First, create a bare repository and make its default branch match svn’s "trunk” branch name.
git init --bare ~/new-bare.git
cd ~/new-bare.git
git symbolic-ref HEAD refs/heads/trunk
cd ~/temp
git remote add bare ~/new-bare.git
git config remote.bare.push 'refs/remotes/*:refs/heads/*'
git push bare
You can now safely delete the ~/temp repository.
5. Rename "trunk" branch to "master"
Your main development branch will be named "trunk” which matches the name it was in Subversion. You’ll want to rename it to Git’s standard "master” branch using:
cd ~/new-bare.git
git branch -m trunk master
6. Clean up branches and tags
git-svn makes all of Subversions tags into very-short branches in Git of the form "tags/name”. You’ll want to convert all those branches into actual Git tags using:
cd ~/new-bare.git
git for-each-ref --format='%(refname)' refs/heads/tags |
cut -d / -f 4 |
while read ref
do
git tag "$ref" "refs/heads/tags/$ref";
git branch -D "tags/$ref";
done
7. Move bare repository to central remote repository
Example of how to move your local bare repository to a gitolite repository:
mv new-bare.git repository_name.git
tar czvf repository_name.git.tar.gz repository_name.git/
scp repository_name.git.tar.gz remote_host:
ssh remote_host
tar xzvf repository_name.git.tar.gz
sudo chown -R git:staff repository_name.git/
cd repository_name.git/
find . -type f -exec chmod go= {} \; # remove group and world permissions
find . -type d -exec chmod go= {} \; # remove group and world permissions
cd ../
mv repository_name.git /Users/git/repositories/
8. Clone new local copy
mv old-svn-copy old-svn-copy.backup
git clone git@remote_host:repository_name.git
List all unversioned files from your old local svn repository and copy them to the new local git repository:
cd old-svn-copy.backup
git clean -dXn # Using this command because the old copy was a git-svn clone
cp example-file.txt ../repository_name/ # copy all files and directories from the list that you need in the new local git repository
You can now move the local svn copy backup to your trash. It might be a good idea not to empty your trash until your sure everything is working correctly.
9. Done.
Source here