Your submission was sent successfully! Close

Thank you for signing up for our newsletter!
In these regular emails you will find the latest updates from Canonical and upcoming events where you can meet our team.Close

Thank you for contacting our team. We will be in touch shortly.Close

  1. Blog
  2. Article

Robin Winslow
on 27 January 2015

Converting projects between Git and Bazaar


Here in the design team we use both Bazaar and Git to keep track our projects’ hostory.

We quite often end up coverting our projects from Bazaar to Git or vice-versa. Here are some tips on how to do that.

To convert revision history between Git and Bazaar, we will use their respective fastimport features.

Install bzr-fastimport

In either case, you need the fastimport plugin for Bazaar, which installs both bzr fast-import and bzr fast-export:

Bazaar to Git

To convert a Bazaar branch to Git, open a Bazaar branch of your project and do the following:

Now you should have all the revision history for that Bazaar branch in Git:

(From Astrofloyd’s blog)

 

Git to Bazaar

Converting from Git to Bazaar is slightly different. Because Bazaar stores branches in sub-folders, while Git stores branches all in the same directory, when you convert a Git repository to Bazaar, it will create a directory tree for the branches:

bzr-repo will now contain a folder for each branch that was in your Git repository. You’re probably most interested in trunk, which will be at bzr-repo/trunk, or perhaps bzr-repo/trunk.remote:

(From the Bazaar wiki)

 

Keeping a project in both Git and Bazaar

You may wish to keep a project in both Git and Bazaar.

 

Create ignore files for both systems

As your project may be used in either Git or Bazaar, you should create practically duplicate .gitignore and .bzrignore files, the only difference being that the .bzrignore should ignore the .git directory, and the .gitignore should ignore the .bzr directory. You should also make sure you ignore the bzr-repo directory – e.g.:

And keep both ignore files in all versions of the project.

Only work in one repository

It is not practical to be doing your actual work in both systems, because converting from one to the other will overwrite any history in the destination repository. For this reason you need to choose to do all your work in either Git or Bazaar, and then regularly convert it to the other using the above conversion instructions.

Related posts


Ana Sereijo
19 April 2024

Let’s talk open design

Design Article

Why aren’t there more design contributions in open source? Help us find out! ...


Igor Ljubuncic
24 January 2024

Canonical’s recipe for High Performance Computing

HPC HPC

In essence, High Performance Computing (HPC) is quite simple. Speed and scale. In practice, the concept is quite complex and hard to achieve. It is not dissimilar to what happens when you go from a regular car to a supercar or a hypercar – the challenges and problems you encounter at 100 km/h are vastly ...


Anthony Dillon
25 October 2023

Web team – hack week 2023

Design Article

Today, around 96% of software projects utilize open source in some way. The web team here at Canonical is passionate about Open source. We lead with an open-by-default approach and so almost everything we do and work on can be found publicly on the Canonical Github org. It is not enough to simply open our ...