Most hg-* scripts are licensed under the [MIT license] (http://www.opensource.org/licenses/mit-license.php) and were written by Rocco Rutte [email protected] with hints and help from the git list and #mercurial on freenode. hg-reset.py is licensed under GPLv2 since it copies some code from the mercurial sources.
The current maintainer is Frej Drejhammar [email protected].
If you have problems with hg-fast-export or have found a bug, please create an issue at the [github issue tracker] (https://github.com/frej/fast-export/issues). Before creating a new issue, check that your problem has not already been addressed in an already closed issue. Do not contact the maintainer directly unless you want to report a security bug. That way the next person having the same problem can benefit from the time spent solving the problem the first time.
Using hg-fast-export is quite simple for a mercurial repository :
mkdir repo-git # or whatever
cd repo-git
git init
hg-fast-export.sh -r <repo>
Please note that hg-fast-export does not automatically check out the
newly imported repository. You probably want to follow up the import
with a git checkout
-command.
Incremental imports to track hg repos is supported, too.
Using hg-reset it is quite simple within a git repository that is hg-fast-export'ed from mercurial:
hg-reset.sh -R <revision>
will give hints on which branches need adjustment for starting over again.
When a mercurial repository does not use utf-8 for encoding author
strings and commit messages the -e <encoding>
command line option
can be used to force fast-export to convert incoming meta data from
to utf-8. This encoding option is also applied to file names.
In some locales Mercurial uses different encodings for commit messages
and file names. In that case, you can use --fe <encoding>
command line
option which overrides the -e option for file names.
As mercurial appears to be much less picky about the syntax of the
author information than git, an author mapping file can be given to
hg-fast-export to fix up malformed author strings. The file is
specified using the -A option. The file should contain lines of the
form FromAuthor=ToAuthor
. The example authors.map below will
translate User <garbage<[email protected]>
to User <[email protected]>
.
-- Start of authors.map --
User <garbage<[email protected]>=User <[email protected]>
-- End of authors.map --
As Git and Mercurial have differ in what is a valid branch and tag name the -B and -T options allow a mapping file to be specified to rename branches and tags (respectively). The syntax of the mapping file is the same as for the author mapping.
hg-fast-export supports multiple branches but only named branches with exactly one head each. Otherwise commits to the tip of these heads within the branch will get flattened into merge commits.
As each git-fast-import run creates a new pack file, it may be required to repack the repository quite often for incremental imports (especially when importing a small number of changesets per incremental import).
The way the hg API and remote access protocol is designed it is not possible to use hg-fast-export on remote repositories (http/ssh). First clone the repository, then convert it.
hg-fast-export.py was designed in a way that doesn't require a 2-pass mechanism or any prior repository analysis: if just feeds what it finds into git-fast-import. This also implies that it heavily relies on strictly linear ordering of changesets from hg, i.e. its append-only storage model so that changesets hg-fast-export already saw never get modified.
Please use the issue-tracker at github https://github.com/frej/fast-export to report bugs and submit patches.