What's the difference between git-tf and git-tfs?
Disclaimer: I started the git-tf
project and although the project is now in very capable hands without me as a frequent contributor, you should absolutely consider my opinions on this to be strongly biased. (And, assuming you're on Windows, perhaps unexpected.)
There are two fundamental differences between the two tools:
git-tfs
was built for Windows users and written on top of the .NET TFS SDK. The TFS SDK will not run under Mono, so this makesgit-tfs
unsuitable for cross-platform use.git-tf
was built for cross-platform users and written on top of the Java TFS SDK. Thus, it will run anywhere that's supported by the Java TFS SDK (Windows, Mac, Linux, AIX, HP-UX, Solaris, etc...)git-tf
was explicitly created to allow Xcode users to access TFS.
On Windows, of course, you can use either. I'm not going to necessarily say one is better than the other. But I will say:
My biggest complaint about
git-tfs
is that it won't work on Mac OS. If there was a way to makegit-tfs
cross-platform, thengit-tf
almost certainly wouldn't exist.git-tfs
is faster in some cases thangit-tf
. Performance was not our priority in the first few revisions, correctness was.Because
git-tf
has a wide platform support matrix, this means that its functionality is necessarily constrained. For example, there is no UI.git-tfs
, on the other hand, has acheckintool
command that will open the normal TFS Checkin dialog. This can be exceptionally helpful in visualizing your changes. (If I recall, you can open up a proper visual diff from there, etc.)git-tf
works by populating the git repository directly, downloading TFS objects directly into the git object database.git-tfs
works by creating a TFS working folder mapping in a hidden folder, then populating the git repository from that. There's a disk penalty here, so if you have superginormous repositories, you might feel this.git-tfs
can try to map your TFS branches to your git branches. A lot of people will see this as a positive forgit-tfs
, though I don't: git's branching model (at the repository level) and TFS's branching model (represented as folders in the repository) are so radically different as to cause problems in anything but the most simplistic workflows. But your mileage may vary.git-tfs
is actively developed by a community.git-tf
has not had the community adoption.
I don't want to make it sound like I'm saying git-tf
is bad. It's not. I think it's actually pretty good. But it may not be your best choice.
Update: git-tf
has reached end-of-life. It is no longer maintained or supported by Microsoft. We recommend git-tfs
if you want a bidirectional TFS <-> git solution.
Disclaimer: I am a developper on the git-tfs project
Edit: git-tf is no more maintained...
Edit: git-tfs isn't actively maintained anymore either.
There is a support of TFS branching in git-tfs (fetching existing branches, creating branches, merge branches more easily than with TFS,... using branch
command). It works most of the time but not with complex TFVC branches workflow...
See:
- Managing branches with git-tfs
- git-tfs branch command documentation
- Another answer on stackoverflow on the subject
git-tfs is also perhaps the only tool that permit you to migrate from TFS(VC) to TFS(Git), managing workitems if needed, or plain git repository.
And some other good features...
(And it is more active and more supported)
To anyone finding this thread:
Git-TF
has been officially discontinued after not having been updated after 2013 and now explicitly suggests Git-TFS
as an alternative.
Git-TF End-of-Life
Git-TF has reached its end-of-life. It will have no further updates and is no longer be supported by Microsoft.
Microsoft Visual Studio Team Services now provides a simple import tool to import a Team Foundation Version Control repository into a Git repository. We recommend that you use this to convert TFVC repositories to Git.
If you require more advanced conversion needs, or you want to bridge a TFVC repository and work with a local Git repository, we recommend the git-tfs project.
Git-TF should not be used for new projects, but it will remain on the Codeplex archive for legacy users.
(Section added to the project's codeplex page in April 2017 by Edward Thomson, its initiator and author of the accepted answer)
Git-TFS
seems to be actively maintained:
https://github.com/git-tfs/git-tfs/commits/master