SVN Integration
Overview
Git allows you to interact not only with other Git repositories, but also with SVN repositories. This means that you can use SmartGit like an SVN client:
- Cloning from an SVN repository is similar to checking out an SVN working copy.
- Pulling from an SVN repository is similar to updating an SVN working copy.
- Pushing to an SVN repository is similar to committing from an SVN working copy to the SVN server.
In addition to the SVN functionality, you can use all (local) Git features like local commits and branching. SmartGit performs all SVN operations transparently, so you will notice only a few points in the program where you need to understand which server VCS you are using.
Compatibility and Incompatibility Modes
SmartGit’s SVN integration is available in two modes:
- Normal Mode This is the recommended mode of operation. It is used by default when a repository is freshly cloned with SmartGit (not with git-svn). All features are supported in this mode. The created repositories are not compatible with git-svn.
- git-svn Compatibility Mode In the git-svn compatibility mode (or just ‘compatibility mode ‘) SmartGit can work with repositories that were created using the git-svn command. In this mode advanced features like EOLs-, ignores- and externals-translation are turned off. The SVN history is processed in a similar way as by git-svn.
Ignores (Normal Mode Only)
SmartGit maps svn:ignore
properties to .gitignore
files. Unlike the
git svn create-ignore
command SmartGit puts .gitignore
files under
version control. If you modify a .gitignore
file and pushes the
change, the corresponding svn:ignore
property is changed.
The .gitignore
syntax is significantly more powerful than the
svn:ignore
syntax. Hence, svn:ignore
can be mapped losslessly to
.gitignore
, however a .gitignore
file may contain a pattern that
can’t be mapped backed to svn:ignore
. In that case the pattern is not
translated.
Adding or removing a recursive pattern in .gitignore
corresponds to
setting or unsetting that pattern on every existing directory in the SVN
repository. Conversely, when an SVN revision is fetched (back) into the
Git repository, a recursive pattern will be translated to a set of
non-recursive patterns, one pattern for each directory.
Example
Let’s assume we have the following directories in the SVN repository:
A { B {} C {} }
And we add
.gitignore
with only one line:somefile
and push. This will set the
svn:ignore
-property tosomefile
for all directories: A, B, C. After fetching such a revision we have the following.gitignore
contents (ordering of lines is unimportant):A/somefile A/B/somefile A/C/somefile
Git doesn’t support patterns that contain spaces. Hence, SmartGit
replaces all spaces in the svn:ignore
value with [!!-~]
during the
creation of .gitignore
. Conversely, all newly added patterns
containing [!!-~]
are converted to svn:ignore
with spaces at the
corresponding places.
EOLs (Normal Mode Only)
When using git-svn on Windows, different EOLs on different systems may
cause trouble. For instance, if the SVN repository contains a file with
svn:eol-style
set to CRLF
, its content is stored with CRLF line
endings. Moreover, git-svn puts the file contents directly into Git
blobs without modification. Now, if you have the core.autocrlf
Git
option set to true
, it may be impossible to get a clean working
tree, and hence git svn dcommit
won’t work. This happens because while
checking whether the working tree is clean, Git converts working tree
file EOLs to LF and compares with the blob contents (which has
CRLF). On the other hand, setting core.autocrlf
to false
causes
problems with files that contain LF EOLs.
Instead of setting a global option, SmartGit carefully sets the EOL for
every file in the SVN repository using its svn:eol-style
and
svn:mime-type
values. It uses the versioned .gitattributes
file for
this purpose. Its settings have higher priority than the
core.autocrlf-option, so with SmartGit it doesn’t matter what the
core.autocrlf value is.
Warning
The
.git/info/attributes
file has higher priority than the versioned.gitattributes
files, so it is strongly recommended to delete the former or leave it empty. Otherwise, this may confuse Git or SmartGit.
By default, a newly added text file (or more precisely, a file that Git
thinks is a text file) which is pushed has svn:eol-style
set to
native
and no svn:mime-type
property set. A newly added binary file
has no properties at all.
One can control individual file properties using the svneol
Git
attribute. The syntax is
svneol=<svn:eol-style value>#<svn:mime-type value>
, so for example
*.c svneol=LF#unset
means all *.c
files will have svn:eol-style=LF
and no
svn:mime-type
set after pushing. Recursive attributes are translated
like recursive ignores: Their changes result in changes of properties of
all files in the SVN repository.
Externals (Normal Mode Only)
SmartGit maps svn:externals
properties to its own kind of submodules,
that have the same interface as Git submodules.
Note
Only externals pointing to directories are supported, not externals pointing to individual files (‘file externals’).
SVN submodules are defined in the file .gitsvnextmodules
, which has
the following format:
[submodule "path/to/submodule"]
path = path/to/submodule
owner = /
url = https://server/path
revision = 1234
branch = trunk
fetch = trunk:refs/remotes/svn/trunk
branches = branches/*:refs/remotes/svn/*
tags = tags/*:refs/remote-tags/svn/*
remote = svn
type = dir
- path specifies the submodule location relative to the working tree root.
- owner specifies the SVN directory that has a corresponding svn:externals property. The owner directory should be a parent of the submodule location. If the owner is the root of the parent repository itself, the option should be set to “/”.
- url specifies the SVN URL to be cloned there (svn:externals syntax can be used here) without a certain branch.
- revision specifies the revision to be cloned. Absence of this option or using HEAD means the latest available revision.
- fetch, branches, tags they all specify the SVN repository layout
and have the same meaning as the corresponding git-svn options of
.git/config
. - branch specifies the branch to checkout. It should be a path
relative to the URL of the url option, and it must be consistent
with the SVN repository layout. The empty branch (if
fetch=:refs/remotes/git-svn
) should be specified using slash/
. - remote specifies the name of the svn-git-remote section of the submodule.
- type specifies the type of the submodule (default:
dir
). In practice, this is usually a directory. If svn:externals points to a file, this option should have the valuefile
.
Changes in .gitsvnextmodules
are translated to the SVN repository as
changes in svn:externals
and vice versa.
There are two types of SVN submodules between which you can choose during submodule initialization:
- snapshot submodules contain exactly one revision of the SVN repository. They are useful in those cases where the external points to a third party library that is not changed as part of the project (parent repository).
- normal submodules are completely cloned repositories of the corresponding externals. It’s recommended to use them when working in both the parent repository and the submodule repository.
SmartGit shows the repository status in the Directories pane. If the
submodule’s current state does not exactly correspond to the state
defined by .gitsvnextmodules
(same URL, revisions, …), it will show
ups as modified. In this case, can use Local|Stage to update the
.gitsvnextmodules
configuration to the current SVN submodule state or
you can use Remote|Submodule|Reset to put the submodule back into
the state as it is registered in .gitsvnextmodules
.
Symlinks and Executable Files
Symlink processing and executable-bit processing work in the same
way as in git-svn. SVN uses the svn:special
property to mark a file
as being a symlink. Then its content should look like this:
link path/to/target
Such files are converted to Git symlinks. In a similar way, files with
svn:executable
are converted to Git executable files and vice versa.
Other SVN properties (Normal Mode Only)
SmartGit maps all other properties which do not have a special meaning in the Git world to Git attributes.
Depending on the size of the property value, SmartGit may store the
entire property definition (name and value) just as an attribute in
.gitattributes
or it may decide to store the property value in a
separate file. In the latter case, .gitattributes
will contain an
attribute attr
which is just set, i.e. has no value, denoting the
presence of the property for the corresponding file. The value will be
stored in .gitsvnattributes/path/to/entry/attr
instead, where
path/to/entry
is the same path as in .gitattributes
, i.e. the
working tree path of the file or directory to which the property
belongs. The mapping between SVN property name and Git attribute name
depends on the property name:
- A property which belong to the svn:-namespace and does not yet
have a special mapping (as explained in the previous sections) will
be mapped to a Git attribute starting with the
svn_
-prefix. This means, that propertysvn:keywords
will be mapped to attributesvn_keywords
andsvn:needs-lock
will be mapped tosvn_needs-lock
. - For all other properties (custom properties), an SVN property with
name
foo
will be mapped to a Git attribute with namesvnc_foo
.
Adding a property
If the property value is a small, one-line text property, you may add it
directly to .gitattributes
.
Example
To add custom property foo with value bar to file
file.txt
, insert following line into.gitattributes
(or add the attribute to an already existing line for/file.txt
):/file.txt svnc_foo=bar
If the property value is large, consists of multiple lines or is even of
binary content, you have to add the control entry to .gitattributes
and create the file .gitsvnattributes/path/to/entry/attr
containing
the property’s value.
Example
To add a binary property foo with some binary value to file
file.txt
, insert following line into.gitattributes
(or add the attribute to an already existing line for/file.txt
):/file.txt svnc_foo
and add file
.gitattributes/file.txt/svnc_foo
with the desired binary property content.
Modifying a property
Depending on the size of the property value, the value will either be
stored directly in .gitattributes
, or in .gitsvnattributes
, as
explained before. To modify the value, locate either of the two places
where it is stored and modify the value there. After having committed
this change and pushed to SVN, the modified property value will show up
in the SVN repository.
Example
To change a small, one-line property value foo for
file.txt
which is stored in.gitattributes
to a larger, multi-line or binary property value, replace the Git attribute value by the Git attribute name itself (i.e. mark it as set):/file.txt svnc_foo
and add file
.gitattributes/file.txt/svnc_foo
with the desired property content.
Removing a property
Depending on the size of the property value, the value will either be
stored directly in .gitattributes
, or in .gitsvnattributes
, as
explained before. To remove the property, remove the corresponding
attribute from .gitattributes
and remove the corresponding file from
.gitsvnattributes
, if it’s present there. After having committed this
change and pushed to SVN, the property deletion will show up in the SVN
repository.
Tags
Unlike git-svn, SmartGit creates Git tags for SVN tags. If an SVN tag
was created by a simple directory copying, SmartGit creates a tag that
points to the copy-source; otherwise SmartGit creates a tag that points
to the corresponding commit of refs/remote-tags/svn/<tagname>
. Git
tags can be sent back to the SVN repository (as SVN tags) by
right-clicking the tag in the Branches view and invoking Push.
Note
Git tags that are actually objects on their own (not just simple refs) are not supported.
History Processing
Branch Replacements
In compatibility mode, SmartGit processes the SVN history like
git-svn does, with the difference that SmartGit doesn’t support the
svk:merge
property. In the case where one SVN branch was replaced,
SmartGit and git-svn create a merge-commit.
In normal mode, SmartGit uses its own way of history processing: In
case of branch replacements no merge commit is created; instead a Git
reference
refs/svn-attic/svn/<branch name>/<the latest revision where the branch existed>
is created.
Tip
Though that functionality should be used with care, it is easy to create a branch replacement commit from SmartGit:
- Use Local|Reset to reset to some other commit
- Invoke Remote|Push. SmartGit will ask whether the current branch should be replaced.
Merges
Translating Merges from SVN to Git
Completely merged SVN branches correspond to merged Git branches. In
particular, for SVN revisions that change svn:mergeinfo
in such a way
that some branch becomes completely merged, SmartGit creates a Git
merge-commit. For branches which have not been completely merged, no
merge-commit is created.
Translating Merges from Git to SVN
Pushing Git merge-commits results in a corresponding svn:mergeinfo
modification, denoting that the branch has been completely merged.
Cherry-picks
SmartGit supports translation of two kinds of cherry-pick merges between SVN and Git:
- either done using SmartGit,
- or done using another Git client, without the
--no-commit
option, to make sure that the commit message meta info (git-svn: ...
) is preserved.
Only cherry-picks of Git commits that correspond to (already pushed) SVN
revisions (but not local commits) are supported. Pushing of a
cherry-pick commit results in a corresponding svn:mergeinfo
change.
Branch Creation
SmartGit allows to create SVN branches simply by pushing locally created Git branches. In this case, SmartGit will ask you to configure the branch for pushing.
Note
SmartGit always creates a separate SVN revision when creating a branch, which contains purely the branch creation. This helps to avoid troubles when merging from that branch later.
Anonymous Branches
Anonymous branches show up very often in Git repositories where the default Pull behavior is merge instead of rebase. Such branches are not mapped back to SVN, as anonymous SVN branches are not supported. For instance, the following history:
E-F
/ \
A-B-C-D-G-H (branch)
will be pushed as a linear list of commits: A,B,C,D,G,H. E and F won’t be pushed at all.
The Push Process
Pushing a commit consists of 3 phases:
- sending the commit to SVN
- fetching it back
- replacing the existing local commit with the commit being fetched back
Note that not only the local commit is replaced but also all commits and tags that depend on it. For example, if there is a local commit with a Git tag attached to it, after pushing the Git tag will be moved to the commit that has been fetched back from the SVN repository.
The pushing process requires the working tree to be clean to start, and it uses the working tree very actively during the whole process. Hence, it is STRONGLY RECOMMENDED not to make any changes in the working tree during the pushing process, otherwise these changes may become discarded.
Sometimes it is impossible to replace the existing local commit with the commit being fetched back, because other commits (from other users) might have been fetched back as well, containing changes that conflict with the remaining local commits. In this case, SmartGit leaves the working tree clean and asks you whether to resolve the problem. The easiest way to do so is to press Pull with the Rebase option turned on, which will start the rebase process.
Example
The last repository revision is r10. There are 2 local commits A and B that will be pushed. First, A is sent, resulting in revision r12, because in the meantime someone else had committed r11. Now, r11 and r12 (corresponding to local commit A) are fetched back. Let’s assume that r11 and local commit B contain changes for the same file in the same line. Hence, replacing A by the fetched-back commits r11 and r12 won’t work, because the changes of B are conflicting now and can’t be applied on top of r12.
SVN Support Configuration
SVN URL and SVN Layout Specification
In compatibility mode, .git/config
is used for the specification of
the SVN URL and the SVN repository layout. In normal mode, SmartGit
uses the file .git/svn/.svngit/svngitkit.config
for this purpose.
In compatibility mode, the SVN URL and SVN layout are specified in the
svn-remote
section. In normal mode, the corresponding section is
called svn-git-remote
.
The section generally looks like this:
[svn-git-remote "svn"]
url = https://server/path
rewriteRoot = https://anotherserver/path
fetch = trunk:refs/remotes/svn/trunk
branches = branches/*:refs/remotes/svn/*
additional-branches = path/*:refs/remotes/*;another/path:refs/remotes/another/branch
tags = tags/*:refs/remote-tags/svn/*
- url specifies the physical SVN URL with which to connect to the SVN repository.
- rewriteRoot specifies the URL to be used in the Git commit messages of fetched commits. If this option is omitted, it is assumed to be the same as the value of the url option. The rewriteRoot option is useful for continuing working with the repository after the original SVN URL has been changed (in this case rewriteRoot should be changed to the old SVN URL value).
- fetch, branches, additional-branches, tags specify pairs
consisting of an SVN path and a Git reference for various
interesting paths in the SVN repository. All paths beyond these
won’t be considered by SmartGit. There’s practically no difference
between these options. Options fetch, branches, tags are
supported by
git-svn
and allow only 1 pair. Option additional-branches is only supported by SmartGit and allows an arbitrary number of;
-separated pairs. Option fetch for compatibility mode defines the branch to be checked out and configured as tracked after fetch. SmartGit doesn’t supportgit-svn
patterns in the config and only allows the usage of asterisks (*
). The number of asterisks in the SVN path and Git reference pattern must be equal. No patterns except the fetch pattern must intersect.
Translation Options
SmartGit keeps all translation options in the core
section of the file
.git/svn/.svngit/svngitkit.config
.
The section looks like this:
[core]
processExternals = true
processIgnores = true
processEols = true
processTags = true
processOtherProperties = true
gitSvnAttributesThreshold = 32
These boolean options specify whether SmartGit should enable special
handling of svn:externals
, svn:eol-style/svn:mime-type
,
svn:ignore
, SVN tags and all other SVN properties, as explained above.
The gitSvnAttributesThreshold
specifies the maximum length of a Git
attribute value, which may be stored in .gitattributes
. If the length
of the attribute value is larger, it will be stored in the
.gitsvnattributes
directory structure, as explained in Other SVN properties (Normal Mode Only).
Warning
These options are set once before the first fetch and shouldn’t be changed afterwards.
In nomal mode, all these options are set to true
by default except
when SmartGit detects that the .gitattributes
file has become too
large (in that case processEols and processOtherProperties is set to
false
).
In compatibility mode, all these options are set to false
.
Tracking Configuration
SmartGit’s SVN support has a tracking configuration similar to Git’s. If
some local branch (say, refs/heads/branch
) tracks some remote branch
(refs/remotes/svn/branch
), then:
- it is possible to push the local branch, and doing so will result in the corresponding SVN branch modification according to the repository layout. If the local branch is not configured as tracking branch of some remote branch, it won’t be pushed;
- while fetching, SmartGit proposes to rebase the local tracking branch onto the tracked branch after a Pull if the corresponding option is selected.
Warning
If some branch contains a merge-commit that has a merge-parent that doesn’t belong to any tracking branch,
svn:mergeinfo
won’t be modified when pushing such a branch.
SmartGit uses the branch
sections of the
.git/svn/.svngit/svngitkit.config
file for tracking configuration.
The section looks like this:
[branch "master"]
tracks = refs/remotes/svn/trunk
remote = svn
The name of the section is the local branch name.
- tracks specifies the remote tracked branch
- remote specifies the remote section name with the SVN URL and SVN repository layout
NTLM authentication
If your server supports NTLM authentication and SmartGit fails to
connect to your server with authentication-related errors
like 401 Authorization Required
, you should try to force SmartGit to
use Basic authentication first by setting following system property:
svnkit.http.methods=Basic,NTLM
Known Limitations
There are following notable limitations of SmartGit’s SVN integration,
File externals not supported
File externals are currently not supported. There are following possible workarounds:
- create an unversioned symlink locally without adding it to the repository
- replace the file with a symlink in the repository (won’t work on Windows)
- use directory externals (they are supported by SmartGit)
Further Limitations
- Empty directories can’t be managed by Git and won’t be available
- File locks are not supported
- Sparse check-outs are not supported
- Explicit copy and move operations are not possible; Git recognizes them automatically
- The svk:merge property is not supported