On Monday 19 January 2009, Christian von Kietzell wrote: > Hi, > > I have a project I started in git. After a while I exported that to > CVS via git cvsexportcommit which worked quite nicely. Now, a > colleague made changes to the project - in CVS. What's the best way > to get those back into my git repository so that I'll be able to sync > back and forth between git and CVS? I had a quick look at the wiki > but couldn't find anything appropriate. > > I know of git cvsimport, of course, but that doesn't work on my > original repository. Or does it? I didn't find anything on how to > limit what to import. After all, some of the commits are already in > my repository (the ones I exported). > > Hope any of you can help. Thanks in advance. Unfortunately bidirectional syncing between CVS and Git is pretty much impossible in the general case, because CVS's structure is so different from Git's. For one, it is very easy to (re)move tags and branches in CVS, with no record of where it was moved from. (Also, as anybody involved in proper CVS-to-Git converters ("git cvsimport" does _not_ fall into this category) will tell you, recreating history from CVS is a highly non-trivial task in itself.) This means that even if you have imported some CVS state into Git, you cannot guarantee that the CVS state has not changed the next time you try to import. Therefore, it is very hard to determine whether you're importing a whole new branch from CVS, or whether you are just incrementally importing patches on top of a previously imported branch. I have a similar situation at $dayjob, where we have a central CVS server with the official version, and I use Git for working locally. In this case, I use "git cvsexportcommit" to propagate my local changes to the CVS server. I only use this approach on branches where nobody else is allowed to commit (of course CVS does not enforce this rule, so I have to manually make sure that does not happen). If someone else were to commit to my branch in CVS, I would have to redo a full CVS-to-Git conversion, in order to get a new Git repo that is in sync with CVS. I can then resume "git cvsexportcommit" to propagate my changes from Git to CVS. Have fun! :) ...Johan -- Johan Herland, <johan@xxxxxxxxxxx> www.herland.net -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe git" in the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html