# git_lfs_importer Plugin This plugin automatically converts matching files to use Git LFS (Large File Storage) during the Mercurial to Git conversion process. ## Overview The git_lfs_importer plugin intercepts file data during the hg-fast-export process and converts files matching specified patterns into Git LFS pointers. This allows you to seamlessly migrate a Mercurial repository to Git while simultaneously adopting LFS for large files. Why use git_lfs_importer? For large repositories, traditional migration requires two sequential, long-running steps: 1. Full history conversion from Mercurial to Git. 2. Full history rewrite using git lfs import. This two-step process can take hours or even days for massive monorepos (e.g., 100GiB+). This plugin eliminates the second, time-consuming history rewrite. It performs the LFS conversion incrementally (Just-In-Time). During the initial export, the plugin identifies large files and immediately writes LFS pointers into the Git history. This results in significantly faster conversions and allows for efficient incremental imports of new changesets. ## Prerequisites ### Dependencies This plugin requires the `pathspec` package: ```bash pip install pathspec ``` ### Git Repository Setup The destination Git repository must be pre-initialized with: 1. A `.gitattributes` file configured for LFS tracking 2. Git LFS properly installed and initialized Example `.gitattributes`: ``` *.bin filter=lfs diff=lfs merge=lfs -text *.iso filter=lfs diff=lfs merge=lfs -text large_files/** filter=lfs diff=lfs merge=lfs -text ``` ## Usage ### Step 1: Create the Destination Git Repository ```bash # Create a new git repository git init my-repo cd my-repo # Initialize Git LFS git lfs install # Create and commit a .gitattributes file cat > .gitattributes << EOF *.bin binary diff=lfs merge=lfs -text *.iso binary diff=lfs merge=lfs -text EOF git add .gitattributes git commit -m "Initialize Git LFS configuration" # Get the commit hash (needed for --first-commit-hash) git rev-parse HEAD ``` ### Step 2: Create an LFS Specification File Create a file (e.g., `lfs-spec.txt`) listing the patterns of files to convert to LFS. This uses gitignore-style glob patterns: ``` *.bin *.iso *.tar.gz large_files/** *.mp4 ``` ### Step 3: Run hg-fast-export with the Plugin ```bash hg-fast-export.sh \ -r \ --plugin git_lfs_importer=lfs-spec.txt \ --first-commit-hash \ --force ``` Replace `` with the hash obtained from Step 1. ## How It Works 1. **Pattern Matching**: Files are matched against patterns in the LFS specification file using gitignore-style matching 2. **File Processing**: For each matching file: - Calculates SHA256 hash of the file content - Stores the actual file content in `.git/lfs/objects//` - Replaces the file data with an LFS pointer containing: - LFS version specification - SHA256 hash of the original content - Original file size 3. **Git Fast-Import**: The LFS pointer is committed instead of the actual file content ## Important Notes ### First Commit Hash Requirement The `--first-commit-hash` option must be provided with the Git commit hash that contains your `.gitattributes` file. This allows the plugin to chain from the existing Git history rather than creating a completely new history. ### Deletions The plugin safely handles file deletions (data=None) and does not process them. ### Large Files and Largefiles If the Mercurial repository uses Mercurial's largefiles extension, those files are already converted to their original content before reaching this plugin, allowing the plugin to apply LFS conversion if they match the patterns. ## Example Workflow ```bash # Configuration variables HG_REPO=/path/to/mercurial/repo GIT_DIR_NAME=my-project-git LFS_PATTERN_FILE=../lfs-patterns.txt # 1. Prepare destination git repo mkdir "$GIT_DIR_NAME" cd "$GIT_DIR_NAME" git init git lfs install # Create .gitattributes cat > .gitattributes << EOF *.bin filter=lfs diff=lfs merge=lfs -text *.iso filter=lfs diff=lfs merge=lfs -text EOF git add .gitattributes git commit -m "Add LFS configuration" FIRST_HASH=$(git rev-parse HEAD) # 2. Create LFS patterns file cat > "$LFS_PATTERN_FILE" << EOF *.bin *.iso build/artifacts/** EOF # 3. Run conversion /path/to/hg-fast-export.sh \ -r "$HG_REPO" \ --plugin "git_lfs_importer=$LFS_PATTERN_FILE" \ --first-commit-hash $FIRST_HASH \ --force # 4. Verify git log --oneline git lfs ls-files ``` ## Troubleshooting ### LFS Files Not Tracked Verify that: - The `.gitattributes` file exists in the destination repository - Patterns in `.gitattributes` match the files being converted - `git lfs install` was run in the repository ### "pathspec" Module Not Found Install the required dependency: ```bash pip install pathspec ``` ### Conversion Fails at Import Ensure the `--first-commit-hash` value is: - A valid commit hash in the destination repository - From a commit that exists before the conversion starts - The hash of the commit containing `.gitattributes` ### Force Requirement You only need to pass the `--force` option when converting the *first* Mercurial commit into a non-empty Git repository. By default, `hg-fast-export` prevents importing Mercurial commits onto a non-empty Git repo to avoid creating conflicting histories. Passing `--force` overrides that safety check and allows the exporter to write the LFS pointer objects and integrate the converted data with the existing Git history. If you are doing an incremental conversion (i.e., running the script a second time to import new changesets into an already converted repository), the --force flag is not required. Omitting `--force` when attempting to import the first Mercurial commit into a non-empty repository will cause the importer to refuse the operation. ## See Also - [Git LFS Documentation](https://git-lfs.github.com/) - [gitignore Pattern Format](https://git-scm.com/docs/gitignore) - [hg-fast-export Documentation](../README.md)