Eric Wong wrote:
> Craig McQueen <craig.mcqu...@innerrange.com> wrote:
> > When doing "git svn dcommit", the SVN revision just has the date/time
> stamp of the time of the dcommit.
> 
> Yeah, that's sometimes annoying to me, too.
> 
> > Apparently SVN revisions can have an "svn:original-date" property, which
> would be good to set on dcommit, to preserve the timestamp from the git
> repository.
> >
> >
> https://subversion.apache.org/docs/api/1.7/group__svn__props__revision
> > __props.html#ga8f17351dd056149da9cb490f1daf4018
> 
> Any idea if which versions of SVN it's supported in and how recent the
> feature is?
I see discussion about it in 2003, so I guess it's been there right from 1.0.0.

> Perhaps we can enable it everywhere, and maybe only old clients won't
> understand it, but won't fail; and we could start using it as the author date
> with "git svn fetch".

Using it for author date sounds sensible.

> OTOH, that would break the (perhaps unofficial) independently-created-git-
> svn-mirrors-should-have-same-oids-by-default
> rule when people run different versions of git, so maybe it could be an
> option...

Hmm, good question. Maybe it should be an option, though I hope it would be 
enabled by default (since the feature would be more metadata-preserving, which 
is a good thing), with an option to disable it to allow backwards compatibility 
with people running an older version of git. That's my opinion anyway, and I 
realise my opinion is not necessarily well-informed regarding all 
considerations.

Note, I'm unclear as to whether Subversion is willing to store timezone 
information in svn:original-date. But I guess having git author date correspond 
to svn:original-date is an improvement for preserving more metadata, even if 
the timezone is lost in the process.

-- 
Craig McQueen

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