CVSCONVERT(1) | CVSCONVERT(1) |
cvsconvert - perform a Git conversion and test against the CVS original
cvsconvert [-v] [-n] [-p] [-A authormap] [repo | repo/module]
cvsconvert performs a conversion of a CVS repository to Git and checks the tree contents at all branch tips and tags to verify that the histories are the same.
Barring the known limitations in in the underlying cvs-fast-export(1) engine, the conversion will be correct but not optimal. You will probably want to edit the resulting Git repository with reposurgeon(1) to remove junk tags, lift references, Gitify change comments, and perform various other cleanup tasks as described in Repository Editing and Conversion With Reposurgeon.
(An exception: synthetic gitspace branches named *-UNNAMED-BRANCH created to collect homeless CVS commits are not checked. You will see a warning when one of these is skipped.)
The single argument must be a path to a directory containing a a CVS repository or module. If it is a CVS top-level directory and there is only one module beneath the module need not be specified.
The Git conversion is left in a directory named after the repo argument, with a suffix of "-git".
Normal behavior is for the program to report on each branch and tag, saying "trees match as expected". There are two kinds of problem report:
"file manifests don’t match": Indicates that the CVS and Git versions of this revision in the history contain some filenames that don’t pair up with each other. (Git and CVS ignore-pattern files are ignored and will not trigger this message.) When this message occurs, files in common are still checked for equality.
"%s and %s are different": Two corresponding CVS and Git files do not compare equal. A diff listing will follow.
There are two kinds of non-serious conversion glitches: file content mismatches due to keyword fields in masters, and files deleted in CVS that occur only in the gitspace manifests associated with tags.
You can spot content mismatches due to keyword expansion easily. They will produce single-line diffs of lines containing dollar signs surrounding keyword text. Because binary files can be corrupted by keyword expansion, cvs-fast-export behaves like cvs -kb mode and does no keyword expansion of its own.
Manifest mismatches on tags are most likely to occur on files which were deleted in CVS but persist under later tags in the Git conversion. You can bet this is what’s going on if, when you search for the pathname in the CVS repository, you find it in an Attic directory.
These spurious reports happens because CVS does not always retain enough information to track deletions reliably and is somewhat flaky in its handling of "dead"-state revisions. To make your CVS and git repos match perfectly, you may need to add delete fileops to the conversion - or, more likely, move existing ones back along their branches to commits that predate the gitspace tag - using reposurgeon(1).
Manifest mismatches in the other direction (present in CVS, absent in gitspace) should never occur. If one does, submit a bug report.
Any other kind of content or manifest match - but especially any on the master branch - is bad news and indicates either a severe repository malformation or a bug in cvs-fast-export (or possibly both). Any such situation should be reported as a bug.
Conversion bugs are disproportionately likely to occur on older, branches or tags from before CVS had reliable commitids. Often the most efficient remedy is simply to delete junk branches and tags; reposurgeon(1) makes this easy to do.
If you need to file a bug, please visit the project website to http://www.catb.org/~esr/cvs-fast-export/reporting-bugs.html]learn about the bug-reporting procedure]. There are specific things you can do when preparing the report to make a rapid resolution of the problem more likely.
-p
-k
-n
-v
-q
-A authormap
Warning: As of September 2016, stock CVS is known buggy in ways which may affect checking the correctness of conversions. For best results, use a CVS version with the MirOS patches. These are carried by Debian Linux and derivatives; you can check by Looking for "MirDebian" in the output of cvs --version.
This program does not cope gracefully if CVS tagnames that are not legal for Git had to be sanitized during conversion.
Because of the way this program works around CVS’s requirement for a CVSROOT directory, it will require directory write permission on the repository directory in that case - otherwise it will abort after a CVS message "failed to obtain dir lock in repository". The repository contents are not modified.
The program needs the cvs -R option to access the repository read-only. It will therefore fail with versions of GNU CVS older than 1.12.1 (2005) that do not have this option.
Report bugs to Eric S. Raymond <esr@thyrsus.com>. The project page is at http://catb.org/~esr/cvs-fast-export
2020-05-24 |