#pragma section-numbers 2 = Working with Subversion (SVN) = Interoperating with SVN is possible with third-party tools or existing extensions. This page will detail the options and discuss their pros and cons. <> == With hgsubversion == ''HgSubversion'' is a third-party tool dedicated to convenient SVN interoperability, using standard `hg` commands. See the HgSubversion extension page for installation instructions and example usage. === Pros === * Simple and fast to setup. * Can pull new revisions, using svn replay protocol if available which is the fastest way to grab svn revisions. * Can directly push back changes, so it's a full subversion bridge. * Uses standard hg commands, so learning curve is relatively short. === Cons === * For huge svn repositories the first clone is slow. * Depends on svn python bindings. There are plans to use ctypes instead, nothing done yet. * May fail to import repositories with strange history elements * If you encounter this on a public OSS repository, please file a bug so the developers can look into the problem == With MQ only == If we don't really care about existing history, and only want to hack an existing Subversion codebase with Mercurial and push changes back, we can start with an svn checkout and track it into Mercurial. For this example, assume we have a repository at ''svn://repo.org/subversion'' with a wanted module ''trunk''. {{{ $ svn co svn://repo.org/subversion/trunk trunk A trunk/a Checked out revision 1. $ cd trunk $ hg init $ cat > .hgignore < \.svn/ > \.hgignore$ > EOF $ hg st ? a $ hg ci -Am "Initializing from subversion checkout" adding a }}} Now we hack the sources. The trick is not to commit in Mercurial but to store all the changes as MQ patches. {{{ $ echo b >> a $ hg st M a $ hg qnew -f changea }}} If you want to have versioning on your patches, do: {{{ $ hg qinit -c }}} Use MQ in the normal way, doing qrefresh (and qcommit if using versioning). Once we are ready to push the patches, first resync with svn: {{{ $ hg qpop -a $ svn up U a A b Updated to revision 3. $ hg st M a ? b $ hg addre -s 75 adding b $ hg ci -m upstream }}} Then apply the patch queue again. {{{ $ hg qpush -a applying changea patching file a Hunk #1 FAILED at 0 1 out of 1 hunk FAILED -- saving rejects to file a.rej patch failed, unable to continue (try -v) patch failed, rejects left in working dir Errors during apply, please fix and refresh changea }}} Oups, our changes do not apply any longer, we have to rebase: {{{ $ hg up -C .^ 1 files updated, 0 files merged, 0 files removed, 0 files unresolved $ hg qpush -a applying changea Now at: changea $ hg qsave -c -e copy .hg/patches to .hg/patches.1 $ hg heads changeset: 4:ace2da3ad857 tag: tip user: Patrick Mezard date: Sun Feb 17 15:39:11 2008 +0100 summary: hg patches saved state changeset: 2:6e35211ce252 user: Patrick Mezard date: Sun Feb 17 15:38:11 2008 +0100 summary: upstream $ hg up -C 2 1 files updated, 0 files merged, 0 files removed, 0 files unresolved $ hg qpush -am merging with queue at: .hg/patches.1 applying changea patching file a Hunk #1 FAILED at 0 1 out of 1 hunk FAILED -- saving rejects to file a.rej patch failed, unable to continue (try -v) patch failed, rejects left in working dir patch didn't work out, merging changea 1 files updated, 0 files merged, 0 files removed, 0 files unresolved merging a 0 files updated, 1 files merged, 0 files removed, 0 files unresolved (branch merge, don't forget to commit) Now at: changea }}} In most case, you won't have to do that, the patch queue will apply cleanly. Now, we can apply one patch after another and push them into Subversion. {{{ $ hg qpop -a Patch queue now empty $ hg qpush applying changea Now at: changea $ svn st ? .hgignore ? .hg M a $ svn ci -m "change a" Sending a Transmitting file data . Committed revision 5. $ hg qdel -r qbase:qtip }}} At this point, our changes are in Subversion and in our local Mercurial mirror as real revisions. Large chunks of this process can be automated. === Pros === * Simple, fast and cheap to setup * No heavy dependencies, only requires an SVN client and MQ extension. === Cons === * Renames cannot be handled that way because they cannot be recorded in Subversion after they happened. You have to perform them directly in SVN, outside of this workflow. * No SVN history. It means no "hg grep", "hg annotate", "hg bisect" and dumb merges. * May be tedious == With Convert extension == First use [[ConvertExtension|convert extension]] to create a local reference mirror. For this example, assume the SVN repository is at ''svn://repo.org/subversion'' with a wanted module ''trunk''. {{{ $ hg --config convert.hg.tagsbranch=0 convert svn://repo.org/subversion/trunk trunk-mirror initializing destination trunk-mirror repository scanning source... sorting... converting... 4 Repository initialization 3 append c to a 2 add b 1 change a 0 change a }}} Mercurial versions from 1.0 support shallow conversions like: {{{ $ hg --config convert.svn.startrev=3 --config convert.hg.tagsbranch=0 convert svn://repo.org/subversion/trunk trunk-mirror initializing destination trunk-mirror repository scanning source... sorting... converting... 2 add b 1 change a 0 change a }}} Prepare the working copy. Instead of cloning the mirror, we checkout a working copy, make it a Mercurial repository, pull from the mirror and synchronize both. This way we end with an hybrid Subversion and Mercurial working copy. {{{ $ svn co svn://repo.org/subversion/trunk trunk A trunk/a A trunk/b Checked out revision 5. $ cd trunk $ hg init $ cat > .hgignore < \.svn/ > \.hgignore$ > EOF $ hg pull ../trunk-mirror pulling from ../trunk-mirror requesting all changes adding changesets adding manifests adding file changes added 5 changesets with 5 changes to 2 files (run 'hg update' to get a working copy) $ hg up -C 2 files updated, 0 files merged, 0 files removed, 0 files unresolved $ hg st $ svn st ? .hgignore ? .hg }}} We hack it and end with an collection of patches in MQ. The situation is very similar to the one in "With MQ only" section. The difference is '''we do not change the patches into Mercurial revisions''', we push them and get rid of them when done. Synchronize with Subversion first: {{{ $ hg qpop -a $ cd .. $ hg --config convert.hg.tagsbranch=0 convert svn://repo.org/subversion/trunk trunk-mirror scanning source... sorting... converting... 0 add c $ cd trunk $ svn up A c Updated to revision 6. $ hg pull -u ../trunk-mirror pulling from ../trunk-mirror searching for changes adding changesets adding manifests adding file changes added 1 changesets with 1 changes to 1 files 1 files updated, 0 files merged, 0 files removed, 0 files unresolved }}} Then apply the patches: {{{ $ hg qpush applying changea Now at: changea $ svn st ? .hgignore ? .hg M a $ svn ci -m "change a" Sending a Transmitting file data . Committed revision 7. $ hg qpop Patch queue now empty $ hg qdel changea }}} Synchronize with Subversion again: {{{ $ cd .. $ hg --config convert.hg.tagsbranch=0 convert svn://repo.org/subversion/trunk trunk-mirror scanning source... sorting... converting... 0 change a $ cd trunk $ svn up At revision 7. $ hg pull -u ../trunk-mirror pulling from ../trunk-mirror searching for changes adding changesets adding manifests adding file changes added 1 changesets with 1 changes to 1 files 1 files updated, 0 files merged, 0 files removed, 0 files unresolved [16:14:55][pmezard:~/dev/mercurial/svn/trunk]$ hg tip changeset: 6:2fba38614917 tag: tip user: pmezard date: Sun Feb 17 15:13:55 2008 +0000 summary: change a }}} Again, large parts of this process can be scripted. === Pros === * Full SVN history. It means "hg grep", "hg annotate", "hg bisect" and good merges. === Cons === * Renames cannot be handled that way because they cannot be recorded in Subversion after they happened. You have to perform them directly in SVN, outside of this workflow. * Pushing changes may still be tedious. * Requires a recent Mercurial version, Subversion python bindings may be tricky to setup. Hint for Windows users: TortoiseHg includes them. = Improvement Discussion = Mercurial interoperability with Subversion is clearly not as good as Git or Bazaar-NG one, and this is a real showstopper for massive adoption. The question is what can be improved and in which order so we move from "existing but tedious" to "usable". * (./) Shallow conversions. Convert extension inability to convert partially makes it unusable with most of remote repositories. Imperfect suggestions were made in this direction, see "convert: add --startrev option" development mailing thread for more details (http://selenic.com/pipermail/mercurial-devel/2008-January/004004.html). * Pushing back to Subversion. A functional svn sink is implemented in Convert extension but it is very basic and lack documentation. There is a ''test-convert-hg-svn'' test using it though. * (./) This is a native feature of hgsubversion. * Rebasing. There is not simple native branch rebasing support in Mercurial. This feature is very useful to update the branch being worked on on top of the latest Subversion revision. In the meantime, it can be done with MQ. What about RebaseExtension? * (./) This is provided in hgsubversion as ''hg rebase --svn''. ---- CategoryHowTo