Prerequisites
To follow these steps, you must use a macOS or Linux system and have the following tools installed:
- Mercurial
- Git
- Git Large File Storage (Git LFS) (see Installing Git Large File Storage)
- Python, including the pippackage manager
Importing a Mercurial repository
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Create a new repository on GitHub. To avoid errors, do not initialize the new repository with README, license, or gitignore files. You can add these files after your project has been pushed to GitHub. For more information, see Creating a new repository. 
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To confirm that Mercurial is installed on your machine, run hg --version.The output should be similar to Mercurial Distributed SCM (version 6.4).
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To confirm that Git is installed on your machine, run git --version.The output should be similar to git version 2.40.0.
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To confirm that Git LFS is installed on your machine, run git lfs --version.The output should be similar to git-lfs/3.1.4 (GitHub; darwin arm64; go 1.18.1).
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To confirm that pipis installed on your machine, runpip --version.The output should be similar to pip 21.2.4.
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To install the mercurialPython package, runpip install mercurial.
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Download the latest release of fast-export to your machine, then extract the archive. 
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Move into the extracted directory, then run ./hg-fast-export.sh --help.The output should start with usage: hg-fast-export.sh.
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Clone your Mercurial repository. For example, to clone the source code of Mercurial itself to the mercurial-repodirectory, runhg clone https://www.mercurial-scm.org/repo/hg mercurial-repo.
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Create a new directory, move into the new directory, then initialize a fresh Git repository. For example, if you want to name your new repository mercurial-git, runmkdir mercurial-git && cd mercurial-git && git init.
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Move into the directory for the newly-created Git repository. 
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To configure your new Git repository to handle the case of filenames in the same way as Mercurial, run git config core.ignoreCase false.
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To get a list of committers in your Mercurial project and store the list in committers.txt, run the following script.Shell hg log --template "{author}\n" | sort | uniq > committers.txthg log --template "{author}\n" | sort | uniq > committers.txt
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Update your committers.txtfile, mapping the committer name used in the Mercurial repository to the name you want to use in your Git repository, with the following format:“The Octocat <octocato@gmail.com>”=”Octocat <octocat@github.com>”
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In your initialized Git repository, run hg-fast-export.sh, passing in the path to your Mercurial repository and the path to yourcommitters.txtfile as arguments.For example, ../fast-export-221024/hg-fast-export.sh -r ../mercurial-repo -A ../mercurial-repo/committers.txt -M main.
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After the import finishes, to check out your newly-created Git repository, run git checkout HEAD.
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To add your GitHub repository as a remote, run git remote add origin URL, replacingURLwith the URL for the GitHub repository you created earlier, such ashttps://github.com/octocat/example-repository.git.
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To push the repository to GitHub, run git push --mirror origin.If your repository contains any files that are larger than GitHub's file size limit, your push may fail. Move the large files to Git LFS by running git lfs import, then try again.