>> The second one is easy, and I did that for various old h grepositories of
>> mine a couple of years ago (when Sage and others things switched to git).
>> After a quick Google, I think what I used was this:
>> http://hivelogic.com/articles/converting-from-mercurial-to-git/ -- very easy
>> and kept all the commit history intact.
>
>
> By the way, if you don't wan to convert the repo to git then you can use
> bitbucket.org instead
> (bitbucket can host both hg and git repos)
>
> As to how github/bitbucket works - well, apart from some bells and whistles,
> you get an account where you can host your repos.
> And to (from) these you can push (resp. pull) just as you do with
> git.sagemath.org.

Github sort of has a 1GB repo size restriction, though they say it
isn't a hard rule.  Putting 30GB+ data in a single repo would be
questionable and probably not allowed (not sure).   Bitbucket is
clearer -- if you exceed 2GB they disable your ability to push to the
repo [1].

Anyway, let's stop telling Simon King that Bitbucket or Github will
solve his 30GB of data hosting problem, when they don't.

[1] 
https://confluence.atlassian.com/bitbucket/what-kind-of-limits-do-you-have-on-repository-file-upload-size-273877699.html

William

-- 
William (http://wstein.org)

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