debian-mirror-gitlab/doc/user/project/import/cvs.md
2022-07-29 14:03:07 +02:00

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reference, howto Manage Import To determine the technical writer assigned to the Stage/Group associated with this page, see https://about.gitlab.com/handbook/engineering/ux/technical-writing/#assignments

Migrating from CVS (FREE)

CVS is an old centralized version control system similar to SVN.

CVS vs Git

The following list illustrates the main differences between CVS and Git:

  • Git is distributed. On the other hand, CVS is centralized using a client-server architecture. This translates to Git having a more flexible workflow since your working area is a copy of the entire repository. This decreases the overhead when switching branches or merging for example, since you don't have to communicate with a remote server.
  • Atomic operations. In Git all operations are atomic, either they succeed as whole, or they fail without any changes. In CVS, commits (and other operations) are not atomic. If an operation on the repository is interrupted in the middle, the repository can be left in an inconsistent state.
  • Storage method. Changes in CVS are per file (changeset), while in Git, committed files are stored in their entirety (snapshot). This means it is very easy in Git to revert or undo a whole change.
  • Revision IDs. The fact that in CVS changes are per files, the revision ID is depicted by version numbers, for example 1.4 reflects how many times a given file has been changed. In Git, each version of a project as a whole (each commit) has its unique name given by SHA-1.
  • Merge tracking. Git uses a commit-before-merge approach rather than merge-before-commit (or update-then-commit) like CVS. If while you were preparing to create a new commit (new revision) somebody created a new commit on the same branch and pushed to the central repository, CVS would force you to first update your working directory and resolve conflicts before allowing you to commit. This is not the case with Git. You first commit, save your state in version control, then you merge the other developer's changes. You can also ask the other developer to do the merge and resolve any conflicts themselves.
  • Signed commits. Git supports signing your commits with GPG for additional security and verification that the commit indeed came from its original author. GitLab can integrate with GPG and show whether a signed commit is correctly verified.

Some of the items above were taken from this great Stack Overflow post. For a more complete list of differences, consult the Wikipedia article on comparing the different version control software.

Why migrate

CVS is old with no new release since 2008. Git provides more tools to work with (git bisect for one) which makes for a more productive workflow. Migrating to Git/GitLab will benefit you:

  • Shorter learning curve, Git has a big community and a vast number of tutorials to get you started (see our Git topic).
  • Integration with modern tools, migrating to Git and GitLab you can have an open source end-to-end software development platform with built-in version control, issue tracking, code review, CI/CD, and more.
  • Support for many network protocols. Git supports SSH, HTTP/HTTPS and rsync among others, whereas CVS supports only SSH and its own insecure pserver protocol with no user authentication.

How to migrate

Here's a few links to get you started with the migration: