Source: cvs-fast-export Maintainer: Anthony Fok Section: vcs Priority: optional Build-Depends: debhelper (>= 11), dh-python, python, bison, flex, rcs, cvs, git, asciidoc-base, docbook-xml, docbook-xsl, libxml2-utils, xsltproc Standards-Version: 4.1.5 Vcs-Browser: https://salsa.debian.org/debian/cvs-fast-export Vcs-Git: https://salsa.debian.org/debian/cvs-fast-export.git Homepage: http://www.catb.org/esr/cvs-fast-export/ Package: cvs-fast-export Architecture: any Depends: ${shlibs:Depends}, ${misc:Depends}, ${python:Depends} Recommends: reposurgeon, cvs, git, rsync Suggests: rcs, bzr-fastimport Description: Export an RCS or CVS history as a fast-import stream cvs-fast-export, formerly "parsecvs", does what its new name implies: exports CVS repositories in a format suitable for git fast-import. . This program analyzes a collection of RCS files in a CVS repository (or outside of one) and, when possible, emits an equivalent history in the form of a fast-import stream. Not all possible histories can be rendered this way; the program tries to emit useful warnings when it can't. The program can also produce a visualization of the resulting commit DAG in the DOT format handled by the graphviz suite. . The distribution includes a tool, cvssync, for fetching masters from CVS remote repositories so cvs-fast-export can see them. You will need rsync installed to use it. . A wrapper script called cvsconvert runs a conversion to git and looks for content mismatches with the original CVS. You will need CVS and Git installed to use it. . Also included is a tool called cvsreduce that strips content out of trees of RCS/CVS masters, leaving only metadata structure in place.