This example will import Copybara source code to an internal git repository
under $GIT/third_party/copybara
.
Assuming you have an existing git repository. For the example in /tmp/foo
. But it could be
a remote one:
mkdir /tmp/foo
cd /tmp/foo
git init --bare .
Create a copy.bara.sky
config file like:
url = "https://github.com/google/copybara.git"
core.workflow(
name = "default",
origin = git.origin(
url = url,
ref = "master",
),
destination = git.destination(
url = "file:///tmp/foo",
fetch = "master",
push = "master",
),
# Copy everything but don't remove a README_INTERNAL.txt file if it exists.
destination_files = glob(["third_party/copybara/**"], exclude = ["README_INTERNAL.txt"]),
authoring = authoring.pass_thru("Default email <[email protected]>"),
transformations = [
core.move("", "third_party/copybara"),
],
)
Invoke the tool like:
copybara copy.bara.sky --force
--force
should only be needed for empty destination repositories or non-existent
branches in the destination. After the first import, it should be always invoked as:
copybara copy.bara.sky
This example will import private source code to an external GitHub repository, and uses SSH.
PROTIP: You will need to have an ssh key setup without a password to accomplish this, Copybara doesn't currently support ssh with a password.
Create a copy.bara.sky
config file like:
# Update these references to your orginzations repos
sourceUrl = "[email protected]:organization/internal-repo.git"
destinationUrl = "[email protected]:organization/external-repo.git"
core.workflow(
name = "default",
origin = git.origin(
url = sourceUrl,
ref = "master",
),
destination = git.destination(
url = destinationUrl,
fetch = "master",
push = "master",
),
# Change path to the folder you want to publish publicly
origin_files = glob(["path/to/folder/you/want/exported/**"]),
authoring = authoring.pass_thru("Default email <[email protected]>"),
# Change the path here to the folder you want to publish publicly
transformations = [
core.move("path/to/folder/you/want/exported", ""),
],
)
Invoke the tool like:
copybara copy.bara.sky --force
--force
should only be needed for empty destination repositories or non-existent
branches in the destination. After the first import, it should be always invoked as:
copybara copy.bara.sky
After running through this example, you should see all the source from the folder you selected in the external-repo at the root. This can be helpful if you are only trying to move a subdirectory in your git repo out for public use.
Let's set up a simple migration from a Mercurial repository to a git repository. Note that Mercurial support is still experimental.
In this example, we will import source code from the Mercurial source repository to a local git repository. We'll get started by setting up a local bare git repository.
$ mkdir /tmp/gitdest
$ cd /tmp/gitdest
$ git init --bare .
Next up is creating and editing a copy.bara.sky
config file. The config file will contain the
details of our workflow. Using your text editor of choice, create and edit the config file:
$ vim /tmp/copy.bara.sky
We'll define in the config to pull changes from the default branch in the origin repository.
core.workflow(
name = "default",
origin = hg.origin(
url = "https://www.mercurial-scm.org/repo/hg",
ref = "default",
),
destination = git.destination(
url = "file:///tmp/gitdest",
),
# Files that you want to import
origin_files = glob(['**']),
# Files that you want to copy
destination_files = glob(['**']),
# Set up a default author
authoring = authoring.pass_thru("Default email <[email protected]>"),
# Import mode
mode = "SQUASH",
)
Now we can run Copybara with this config to import the changes. However, since the Mercurial
repository has many commits, we can just pull default branch revisions from the most recent 15
revisions in the repository, using the --last-rev
flag.
$ copybara /tmp/copy.bara.sky --force --last-rev -15
If we wanted to pull all revisions from the default branch, we would omit the --last-rev
flag.
Since we are using SQUASH
mode, all commits from the origin repository will be "squashed" into a
single commit.
If we navigate to our git destination repository, we can run git log
and see the commit that
was created.
$ cd /tmp/gitdest
$ git log
Let's say that we realized that we need to do some code transformations to the imported code.
We could use core.replace to do it. Here we look for //third_party/bazel/bashunit
text
and we replace it with the correct destination one just for BUILD files:
url = "https://github.com/google/copybara.git"
core.workflow(
name = "default",
origin = git.origin(
url = url,
ref = "master",
),
destination = git.destination(
url = "file:///tmp/foo",
fetch = "master",
push = "master",
),
# Copy everything but don't remove a README_INTERNAL.txt file if it exists.
destination_files = glob(["third_party/copybara/**"], exclude = ["README_INTERNAL.txt"]),
authoring = authoring.pass_thru("Default email <[email protected]>"),
transformations = [
core.replace(
before = "//third_party/bazel/bashunit",
after = "//another/path:bashunit",
paths = glob(["**/BUILD"]),
),
core.move("", "third_party/copybara"),
],
)
The tool accepts different subcommands, à la Bazel. If no command is specified, migrate is executed by default. These two commands are equivalent:
$ copybara copy.bara.sky
$ copybara migrate copy.bara.sky
You can validate your configuration running:
$ copybara validate copy.bara.sky
Copybara source mover
INFO: Configuration validated.
And you can get information about a migration workflow by running:
$ copybara info copy.bara.sky
Copybara source mover
...
INFO: Workflow 'default': last_migrated_ref 4dd20b2...