gitrepository-layout(5) — Linux manual page
GITREPOSITORY-LAYOUT(5) Git Manual GITREPOSITORY-LAYOUT(5)
NAME
gitrepository-layout - Git Repository Layout
SYNOPSIS
$GIT_DIR/*
DESCRIPTION
A Git repository comes in two different flavours:
• a .git directory at the root of the working tree;
• a <project>.git directory that is a bare repository (i.e.
without its own working tree), that is typically used for
exchanging histories with others by pushing into it and
fetching from it.
Note: Also you can have a plain text file .git at the root of
your working tree, containing gitdir: <path> to point at the real
directory that has the repository. This mechanism is called a
gitfile and is usually managed via the git submodule and git
worktree commands. It is often used for a working tree of a
submodule checkout, to allow you in the containing superproject
to git checkout a branch that does not have the submodule. The
checkout has to remove the entire submodule working tree, without
losing the submodule repository.
These things may exist in a Git repository.
objects
Object store associated with this repository. Usually an
object store is self sufficient (i.e. all the objects that
are referred to by an object found in it are also found in
it), but there are a few ways to violate it.
1. You could have an incomplete but locally usable
repository by creating a shallow clone. See git-clone(1).
2. You could be using the objects/info/alternates or
$GIT_ALTERNATE_OBJECT_DIRECTORIES mechanisms to borrow
objects from other object stores. A repository with this
kind of incomplete object store is not suitable to be
published for use with dumb transports but otherwise is
OK as long as objects/info/alternates points at the
object stores it borrows from.
This directory is ignored if $GIT_COMMON_DIR is set and
"$GIT_COMMON_DIR/objects" will be used instead.
objects/[0-9a-f][0-9a-f]
A newly created object is stored in its own file. The objects
are splayed over 256 subdirectories using the first two
characters of the sha1 object name to keep the number of
directory entries in objects itself to a manageable number.
Objects found here are often called unpacked (or loose)
objects.
objects/pack
Packs (files that store many objects in compressed form,
along with index files to allow them to be randomly accessed)
are found in this directory.
objects/info
Additional information about the object store is recorded in
this directory.
objects/info/packs
This file is to help dumb transports discover what packs are
available in this object store. Whenever a pack is added or
removed, git update-server-info should be run to keep this
file up to date if the repository is published for dumb
transports. git repack does this by default.
objects/info/alternates
This file records paths to alternate object stores that this
object store borrows objects from, one pathname per line.
Note that not only native Git tools use it locally, but the
HTTP fetcher also tries to use it remotely; this will usually
work if you have relative paths (relative to the object
database, not to the repository!) in your alternates file,
but it will not work if you use absolute paths unless the
absolute path in filesystem and web URL is the same. See also
objects/info/http-alternates.
objects/info/http-alternates
This file records URLs to alternate object stores that this
object store borrows objects from, to be used when the
repository is fetched over HTTP.
refs
References are stored in subdirectories of this directory.
The git prune command knows to preserve objects reachable
from refs found in this directory and its subdirectories.
This directory is ignored (except refs/bisect, refs/rewritten
and refs/worktree) if $GIT_COMMON_DIR is set and
"$GIT_COMMON_DIR/refs" will be used instead.
refs/heads/name
records tip-of-the-tree commit objects of branch name
refs/tags/name
records any object name (not necessarily a commit object, or
a tag object that points at a commit object).
refs/remotes/name
records tip-of-the-tree commit objects of branches copied
from a remote repository.
refs/replace/<obj-sha1>
records the SHA-1 of the object that replaces <obj-sha1>.
This is similar to info/grafts and is internally used and
maintained by git-replace(1). Such refs can be exchanged
between repositories while grafts are not.
packed-refs
records the same information as refs/heads/, refs/tags/, and
friends record in a more efficient way. See git-pack-refs(1).
This file is ignored if $GIT_COMMON_DIR is set and
"$GIT_COMMON_DIR/packed-refs" will be used instead.
HEAD
A symref (see glossary) to the refs/heads/ namespace
describing the currently active branch. It does not mean much
if the repository is not associated with any working tree
(i.e. a bare repository), but a valid Git repository must
have the HEAD file; some porcelains may use it to guess the
designated "default" branch of the repository (usually
master). It is legal if the named branch name does not (yet)
exist. In some legacy setups, it is a symbolic link instead
of a symref that points at the current branch.
HEAD can also record a specific commit directly, instead of
being a symref to point at the current branch. Such a state
is often called detached HEAD. See git-checkout(1) for
details.
config
Repository specific configuration file. This file is ignored
if $GIT_COMMON_DIR is set and "$GIT_COMMON_DIR/config" will
be used instead.
config.worktree
Working directory specific configuration file for the main
working directory in multiple working directory setup (see
git-worktree(1)).
branches
A slightly deprecated way to store shorthands to be used to
specify a URL to git fetch, git pull and git push. A file can
be stored as branches/<name> and then name can be given to
these commands in place of repository argument. See the
REMOTES section in git-fetch(1) for details. This mechanism
is legacy and not likely to be found in modern repositories.
This directory is ignored if $GIT_COMMON_DIR is set and
"$GIT_COMMON_DIR/branches" will be used instead.
hooks
Hooks are customization scripts used by various Git commands.
A handful of sample hooks are installed when git init is run,
but all of them are disabled by default. To enable, the
.sample suffix has to be removed from the filename by
renaming. Read githooks(5) for more details about each hook.
This directory is ignored if $GIT_COMMON_DIR is set and
"$GIT_COMMON_DIR/hooks" will be used instead.
common
When multiple working trees are used, most of files in
$GIT_DIR are per-worktree with a few known exceptions. All
files under common however will be shared between all working
trees.
index
The current index file for the repository. It is usually not
found in a bare repository.
sharedindex.<SHA-1>
The shared index part, to be referenced by $GIT_DIR/index and
other temporary index files. Only valid in split index mode.
info
Additional information about the repository is recorded in
this directory. This directory is ignored if $GIT_COMMON_DIR
is set and "$GIT_COMMON_DIR/info" will be used instead.
info/refs
This file helps dumb transports discover what refs are
available in this repository. If the repository is published
for dumb transports, this file should be regenerated by git
update-server-info every time a tag or branch is created or
modified. This is normally done from the hooks/update hook,
which is run by the git-receive-pack command when you git
push into the repository.
info/grafts
This file records fake commit ancestry information, to
pretend the set of parents a commit has is different from how
the commit was actually created. One record per line
describes a commit and its fake parents by listing their
40-byte hexadecimal object names separated by a space and
terminated by a newline.
Note that the grafts mechanism is outdated and can lead to
problems transferring objects between repositories; see
git-replace(1) for a more flexible and robust system to do
the same thing.
info/exclude
This file, by convention among Porcelains, stores the exclude
pattern list. .gitignore is the per-directory ignore file.
git status, git add, git rm and git clean look at it but the
core Git commands do not look at it. See also: gitignore(5).
info/attributes
Defines which attributes to assign to a path, similar to
per-directory .gitattributes files. See also:
gitattributes(5).
info/sparse-checkout
This file stores sparse checkout patterns. See also:
git-read-tree(1).
remotes
Stores shorthands for URL and default refnames for use when
interacting with remote repositories via git fetch, git pull
and git push commands. See the REMOTES section in
git-fetch(1) for details. This mechanism is legacy and not
likely to be found in modern repositories. This directory is
ignored if $GIT_COMMON_DIR is set and
"$GIT_COMMON_DIR/remotes" will be used instead.
logs
Records of changes made to refs are stored in this directory.
See git-update-ref(1) for more information. This directory is
ignored (except logs/HEAD) if $GIT_COMMON_DIR is set and
"$GIT_COMMON_DIR/logs" will be used instead.
logs/refs/heads/name
Records all changes made to the branch tip named name.
logs/refs/tags/name
Records all changes made to the tag named name.
shallow
This is similar to info/grafts but is internally used and
maintained by shallow clone mechanism. See --depth option to
git-clone(1) and git-fetch(1). This file is ignored if
$GIT_COMMON_DIR is set and "$GIT_COMMON_DIR/shallow" will be
used instead.
commondir
If this file exists, $GIT_COMMON_DIR (see git(1)) will be set
to the path specified in this file if it is not explicitly
set. If the specified path is relative, it is relative to
$GIT_DIR. The repository with commondir is incomplete without
the repository pointed by "commondir".
modules
Contains the git-repositories of the submodules.
worktrees
Contains administrative data for linked working trees. Each
subdirectory contains the working tree-related part of a
linked working tree. This directory is ignored if
$GIT_COMMON_DIR is set, in which case
"$GIT_COMMON_DIR/worktrees" will be used instead.
worktrees/<id>/gitdir
A text file containing the absolute path back to the .git
file that points to here. This is used to check if the linked
repository has been manually removed and there is no need to
keep this directory any more. The mtime of this file should
be updated every time the linked repository is accessed.
worktrees/<id>/locked
If this file exists, the linked working tree may be on a
portable device and not available. The presence of this file
prevents worktrees/<id> from being pruned either
automatically or manually by git worktree prune. The file may
contain a string explaining why the repository is locked.
worktrees/<id>/config.worktree
Working directory specific configuration file.
GIT REPOSITORY FORMAT VERSIONS
Every git repository is marked with a numeric version in the
core.repositoryformatversion key of its config file. This version
specifies the rules for operating on the on-disk repository data.
An implementation of git which does not understand a particular
version advertised by an on-disk repository MUST NOT operate on
that repository; doing so risks not only producing wrong results,
but actually losing data.
Because of this rule, version bumps should be kept to an absolute
minimum. Instead, we generally prefer these strategies:
• bumping format version numbers of individual data files
(e.g., index, packfiles, etc). This restricts the
incompatibilities only to those files.
• introducing new data that gracefully degrades when used by
older clients (e.g., pack bitmap files are ignored by older
clients, which simply do not take advantage of the
optimization they provide).
A whole-repository format version bump should only be part of a
change that cannot be independently versioned. For instance, if
one were to change the reachability rules for objects, or the
rules for locking refs, that would require a bump of the
repository format version.
Note that this applies only to accessing the repository’s disk
contents directly. An older client which understands only format
0 may still connect via git:// to a repository using format 1, as
long as the server process understands format 1.
The preferred strategy for rolling out a version bump (whether
whole repository or for a single file) is to teach git to read
the new format, and allow writing the new format with a config
switch or command line option (for experimentation or for those
who do not care about backwards compatibility with older gits).
Then after a long period to allow the reading capability to
become common, we may switch to writing the new format by
default.
The currently defined format versions are:
Version 0
This is the format defined by the initial version of git,
including but not limited to the format of the repository
directory, the repository configuration file, and the object and
ref storage. Specifying the complete behavior of git is beyond
the scope of this document.
Version 1
This format is identical to version 0, with the following
exceptions:
1. When reading the core.repositoryformatversion variable, a git
implementation which supports version 1 MUST also read any
configuration keys found in the extensions section of the
configuration file.
2. If a version-1 repository specifies any extensions.* keys
that the running git has not implemented, the operation MUST
NOT proceed. Similarly, if the value of any known key is not
understood by the implementation, the operation MUST NOT
proceed.
Note that if no extensions are specified in the config file, then
core.repositoryformatversion SHOULD be set to 0 (setting it to 1
provides no benefit, and makes the repository incompatible with
older implementations of git).
This document will serve as the master list for extensions. Any
implementation wishing to define a new extension should make a
note of it here, in order to claim the name.
The defined extensions are:
noop
This extension does not change git’s behavior at all. It is
useful only for testing format-1 compatibility.
preciousObjects
When the config key extensions.preciousObjects is set to
true, objects in the repository MUST NOT be deleted (e.g., by
git-prune or git repack -d).
partialClone
When the config key extensions.partialClone is set, it
indicates that the repo was created with a partial clone (or
later performed a partial fetch) and that the remote may have
omitted sending certain unwanted objects. Such a remote is
called a "promisor remote" and it promises that all such
omitted objects can be fetched from it in the future.
The value of this key is the name of the promisor remote.
worktreeConfig
If set, by default "git config" reads from both "config" and
"config.worktree" files from GIT_DIR in that order. In
multiple working directory mode, "config" file is shared
while "config.worktree" is per-working directory (i.e., it’s
in GIT_COMMON_DIR/worktrees/<id>/config.worktree)
refStorage
Specifies the file format for the ref database. The valid
values are files (loose references with a packed-refs file)
and reftable (see Documentation/technical/reftable.txt).
SEE ALSO
git-init(1), git-clone(1), git-fetch(1), git-pack-refs(1),
git-gc(1), git-checkout(1), gitglossary(7), The Git User’s
Manual[1]
GIT
Part of the git(1) suite
NOTES
1. The Git User’s Manual
file:///home/mtk/share/doc/git-doc/user-manual.html
COLOPHON
This page is part of the git (Git distributed version control
system) project. Information about the project can be found at
⟨http://git-scm.com/⟩. If you have a bug report for this manual
page, see ⟨http://git-scm.com/community⟩. This page was obtained
from the project's upstream Git repository
⟨https://github.com/git/git.git⟩ on 2024-06-14. (At that time,
the date of the most recent commit that was found in the
repository was 2024-06-12.) If you discover any rendering
problems in this HTML version of the page, or you believe there
is a better or more up-to-date source for the page, or you have
corrections or improvements to the information in this COLOPHON
(which is not part of the original manual page), send a mail to
man-pages@man7.org
Git 2.45.2.492.gd63586 2024-06-12 GITREPOSITORY-LAYOUT(5)
Pages that refer to this page: git(1), git-config(1), git-gc(1), git-help(1), git-repack(1), git-show-ref(1), git-update-server-info(1), git-worktree(1), gitignore(5), gitcore-tutorial(7), gitglossary(7)