git-tfs is a two-way bridge between TFS (Team Foundation Server) and git, similar to git-svn. It fetches TFS commits into a git repository, and lets you push your updates back to TFS.
The most recent version is 0.20.0. See the change history for details.
If you're having problems, check out the troubleshooting page. And read how to report an issue, before doing so ;)
Three differents ways to get git-tfs:
- Download a binary. Find it on the release page,
- Using Chocolatey. If Chocolatey is already installed on your computer, run
cinst gittfs
to install the Chocolatey package - Build from source code. See §Building for more informations...
Whatever the way you get git-tfs, you should have git-tfs.exe in your path (and git, too).
Add the git-tfs folder path to your PATH. You could also set it temporary (the time of your current terminal session) using :
set PATH=%PATH%;%cd%\GitTfs\bin\Debug
You need .NET 4 and either the 2010, 2012 or 2013 version of Team Explorer installed (or Visual Studio).
#lists the available commands
git tfs help
#shows a summary of the usage of a given command
git tfs help <command>
# [optional] find a tfs repository path to clone :
git tfs list-remote-branches https://tfs:8080/tfs/DefaultCollection
# clone the whole repository (wait for a while...) :
git tfs clone https://tfs:8080/tfs/DefaultCollection $/some_project
# or, if you're impatient (and want to work from the last changeset) :
git tfs quick-clone https://tfs:8080/tfs/DefaultCollection $/some_project
# or, if you're impatient (and want a specific changeset) :
git tfs quick-clone https://tfs:8080/tfs/DefaultCollection $/some_project -c=145
cd some_project
git log # shows your TFS history, unless you did quick-clone
tf history # error: no workspace ;)
# [do work, do work, just using git], then...
# gets latest from TFS to the branch tfs/default :
git tfs fetch
# report all the commits on TFS :
git tfs rcheckin
# or commit using the tfs checkin window
git tfs checkintool
# or commit with a message
git tfs checkin -m "Did stuff"
# or shelve your changes :
git tfs shelve MY_AWESOME_CHANGES
You could find more interesting use cases on how to use git-tfs.
git-tfs is designed to work outside of any existing TFS workspaces.
This is the complete list of commands in the master branch on github.
- list-remote-branches - since 0.17
- clone - since 0.9
- quick-clone - since 0.9
- bootstrap - since 0.11
- init - since 0.9
- clone - since 0.9
- fetch - since 0.9
- pull - since 0.9
- quick-clone - since 0.9
- unshelve - since 0.11
- shelve-list - since 0.12
- labels - since v0.17
- rcheckin - since 0.12
- checkin - since 0.10
- checkintool - since 0.10
- shelve - since 0.9
- list-remote-branches - since 0.17
- branch - since 0.17
- info
- cleanup - since 0.10
- cleanup-workspaces - since 0.10
- diagnostics - since 0.9
- help - since 0.9
- verify - since 0.11
- autotag option - since 0.12
- subtree - since 0.19
- reset-remote - since 0.19
- MSBuild (included in .NET 4)
And depending of the version of TFS you use :
#get the source code
git clone --recursive git:https://github.com/git-tfs/git-tfs.git
cd git-tfs
#building with MSBuild (with the default configuration)
msbuild GitTfs.sln
#or building with MSBuild in debug
msbuild GitTfs.sln /p:Configuration=debug
#or building with MSBuild in release
msbuild GitTfs.sln /p:Configuration=release
#or with Rake (Ruby)
rake build:debug
Note : if the build fails because it can't find libgit2sharp dependency, update submodules with git submodule update
Contributions are always welcome.
There are some simple guidelines.
Especially, don't forget to set core.autocrlf
to true
. (git config core.autocrlf true
)
If you're migrating a TFS server from 2008 or 2005 to 2010, you might want to Specify Alternate TFS URLs.
If you have questions or suggestions about how we could improve git-tfs you could go to google group.
Example of setting up central git repository that tracks TFS automatically.
#git-tfs
on FreeNode, and the mailing list
Thanks to travis-ci and jetbrains (teamcity) for providing CI!