155
votes

I have an account of a Gitlab installation where I created the repository "ffki-startseite"

Now I want to clone the repository git://freifunk.in-kiel.de/ffki-startseite.git into that repository with all commits and branches, so I can start working on it in my own scope.

How can I import it?

10
A new feature of gitlab, create project and then go to the project-page. Here you will see basic instructions.Martijn van Wezel
Possible duplicate of Gitlab repository mirroringkelvin
The basic instructions are gone in the newer versions of Gitlab, could anyone that had copied them copy them here?jdevora

10 Answers

167
votes

I was able to fully export my project along with all commits, branches and tags to gitlab via following commands run locally on my computer:

To illustrate my example, I will be using https://github.com/raveren/kint as the source repository that I want to import into gitlab. I created an empty project named Kint (under namespace raveren) in gitlab beforehand and it told me the http git url of the newly created project there is http://gitlab.example.com/raveren/kint.git

The commands are OS agnostic.

In a new directory:

git clone --mirror https://github.com/raveren/kint
cd kint.git
git remote add gitlab http://gitlab.example.com/raveren/kint.git
git push gitlab --mirror

Now if you have a locally cloned repository that you want to keep using with the new remote, just run the following commands* there:

git remote remove origin
git remote add origin http://gitlab.example.com/raveren/kint.git
git fetch --all

*This assumes that you did not rename your remote master from origin, otherwise, change the first two lines to reflect it.

110
votes

Add the new gitlab remote to your existing repository and push:

git remote add gitlab url-to-gitlab-repo
git push gitlab master
23
votes

To keep ALL TAGS AND BRANCHES

Just simply run this command in an existing Git repository

cd existing_repo
git remote rename origin previous-hosts
git remote add gitlab [email protected]:hutber/kindred.com.git
git push -u gitlab --all
git push -u gitlab --tags
20
votes

Here are the steps provided by the Gitlab:

cd existing_repo
git remote rename origin old-origin
git remote add origin https://gitlab.example.com/rmishra/demoapp.git
git push -u origin --all
git push -u origin --tags
18
votes

This is a basic move one repo to new location. I use this sequence all te time. With --bare no source files will be seen.

Open Git Bash.
Create a bare clone of the repository.

git clone --bare https://github.com/exampleuser/old-repository.git

Mirror-push to the new repository.

cd old-repository.git

git push --mirror https://github.com/exampleuser/new-repository.git

Remove the temporary local repository you created in step 1.

cd ../
rm -rf old-repository.git

Why mirror? See documentation of git: https://git-scm.com/docs/git-push

--all Push all branches (i.e. refs under refs/heads/); cannot be used with other .

--mirror Instead of naming each ref to push, specifies that all refs under refs/ (which includes but is not limited to refs/heads/, refs/remotes/, and refs/tags/) be mirrored to the remote repository. Newly created local refs will be pushed to the remote end, locally updated refs will be force updated on the remote end, and deleted refs will be removed from the remote end. This is the default if the configuration option remote..mirror is set.

13
votes

rake gitlab:import:repos might be a more suitable method for mass importing:

  • copy the bare repository under repos_path (/home/git/repositories/group/repo.git). Directory name must end in .git and be under a group or user namespace.
  • run bundle exec rake gitlab:import:repos

The owner will the first admin, and a group will get created if not already existent.

See also: How to import an existing bare git repository into Gitlab?

4
votes
git clone --mirror [email protected]:username/repo-name.git

git remote add gitlab ssh://[email protected]/username/repo.git

git push -f --tags gitlab refs/heads/*:refs/heads/*

It is better to do it over ssh, the https might won't work

2
votes

Moving a project from GitHub to GitLab including issues, pull requests Wiki, Milestones, Labels, Release notes and comments

There is a thorough instruction on GitLab Docs:

https://docs.gitlab.com/ee/user/project/import/github.html

tl;dr

  • Ensure that any GitHub users who you want to map to GitLab users have either:

    • A GitLab account that has logged in using the GitHub icon - or -
    • A GitLab account with an email address that matches the public email address of the GitHub user
  • From the top navigation bar, click + and select New project.

  • Select the Import project tab and then select GitHub.
  • Select the first button to List your GitHub repositories. You are redirected to a page on github.com to authorize the GitLab application.
  • Click Authorize gitlabhq. You are redirected back to GitLab's Import page and all of your GitHub repositories are listed.
  • Continue on to selecting which repositories to import.

But Please read the GitLab Docs page for details and hooks!

(it's not much)

2
votes

You create an empty project in gitlab then on your local terminal follow one of these:

Push an existing folder

cd existing_folder
git init
git remote add origin [email protected]:GITLABUSERNAME/YOURGITPROJECTNAME.git
git add .
git commit -m "Initial commit"
git push -u origin master

Push an existing Git repository

cd existing_repo
git remote rename origin old-origin
git remote add origin [email protected]:GITLABUSERNAME/YOURGITPROJECTNAME.git
git push -u origin --all
git push -u origin --tags
1
votes

Gitlab is a little bit bugged on this feature. You can lose a lot of time doing troubleshooting specially if your project is any big.

The best solution would be using the create/import tool, do not forget put your user name and password, otherwise it won't import anything at all.

Follow my screenshots

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