Git
From Jon's Wiki
Handy git configuration
Put this in your ~/.gitconfig
[alias] lol = log --graph --decorate --oneline [color] diff = auto branch = auto log = auto status = auto [push] default = current [user] name = Harry Potter email = harry@hogwarts.school.uk [core] autocrlf = input pager = less -F -X
Bung these in your ~/.bashrc
export GIT_AUTHOR_NAME='Harry Potter' export GIT_AUTHOR_EMAIL='harry@hogwarts.school.uk' export GIT_COMMITTER_NAME=$GIT_AUTHOR_NAME export GIT_COMMITTER_EMAIL=$GIT_AUTHOR_EMAIL export GIT_PS1_SHOWDIRTYSTATE=1 export GIT_PS1_SHOWUNTRACKEDFILES=1 export GIT_PS1_SHOWUPSTREAM=auto # very handy to have your git branch and checkout status in your prompt: export PS1='\[\e[1m\]\u@\h:\w\[\e[32;1m\]$(__git_ps1 "(%s)")\[\e[m\e[1m\]\$\[\e[m\] '
Importing a CVS project from SourceForge into git
First, grab a clone of the remote CVS repository. The easiest way to do this with a SourceForge project, without having to actually use CVS and its pserver logins and whatnot, is to use rsync:
rsync -avz rsync://meta-extractor.cvs.sourceforge.net/cvsroot/meta-extractor cvs-clone
Now we're going to import the history of the relevant CVS module (in this case, "metadata-extractor") into a new git repository.
sudo apt-get install git-cvsimport git cvsimport -C meta-extractor.git -p x -v -d $(pwd)/cvs-clone metadata-extractor
Now you can push your new git project to Github or somewhere:
cd meta-extractor.git git remote add origin <your-new-git-repo> git push --tags master
You're good to go!