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git/Documentation/technical/pack-format.txt
Junio C Hamano a6080a0a44 War on whitespace
This uses "git-apply --whitespace=strip" to fix whitespace errors that have
crept in to our source files over time.  There are a few files that need
to have trailing whitespaces (most notably, test vectors).  The results
still passes the test, and build result in Documentation/ area is unchanged.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2007-06-07 00:04:01 -07:00

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GIT pack format
===============
= pack-*.pack file has the following format:
- The header appears at the beginning and consists of the following:
4-byte signature:
The signature is: {'P', 'A', 'C', 'K'}
4-byte version number (network byte order):
GIT currently accepts version number 2 or 3 but
generates version 2 only.
4-byte number of objects contained in the pack (network byte order)
Observation: we cannot have more than 4G versions ;-) and
more than 4G objects in a pack.
- The header is followed by number of object entries, each of
which looks like this:
(undeltified representation)
n-byte type and length (3-bit type, (n-1)*7+4-bit length)
compressed data
(deltified representation)
n-byte type and length (3-bit type, (n-1)*7+4-bit length)
20-byte base object name
compressed delta data
Observation: length of each object is encoded in a variable
length format and is not constrained to 32-bit or anything.
- The trailer records 20-byte SHA1 checksum of all of the above.
= pack-*.idx file has the following format:
- The header consists of 256 4-byte network byte order
integers. N-th entry of this table records the number of
objects in the corresponding pack, the first byte of whose
object name are smaller than N. This is called the
'first-level fan-out' table.
Observation: we would need to extend this to an array of
8-byte integers to go beyond 4G objects per pack, but it is
not strictly necessary.
- The header is followed by sorted 24-byte entries, one entry
per object in the pack. Each entry is:
4-byte network byte order integer, recording where the
object is stored in the packfile as the offset from the
beginning.
20-byte object name.
Observation: we would definitely need to extend this to
8-byte integer plus 20-byte object name to handle a packfile
that is larger than 4GB.
- The file is concluded with a trailer:
A copy of the 20-byte SHA1 checksum at the end of
corresponding packfile.
20-byte SHA1-checksum of all of the above.
Pack Idx file:
idx
+--------------------------------+
| fanout[0] = 2 |-.
+--------------------------------+ |
| fanout[1] | |
+--------------------------------+ |
| fanout[2] | |
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| fanout[255] | |
+--------------------------------+ |
main | offset | |
index | object name 00XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX | |
table +--------------------------------+ |
| offset | |
| object name 00XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX | |
+--------------------------------+ |
.-| offset |<+
| | object name 01XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX |
| +--------------------------------+
| | offset |
| | object name 01XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
| | offset |
| | object name FFXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX |
| +--------------------------------+
trailer | | packfile checksum |
| +--------------------------------+
| | idxfile checksum |
| +--------------------------------+
.-------.
|
Pack file entry: <+
packed object header:
1-byte size extension bit (MSB)
type (next 3 bit)
size0 (lower 4-bit)
n-byte sizeN (as long as MSB is set, each 7-bit)
size0..sizeN form 4+7+7+..+7 bit integer, size0
is the least significant part, and sizeN is the
most significant part.
packed object data:
If it is not DELTA, then deflated bytes (the size above
is the size before compression).
If it is DELTA, then
20-byte base object name SHA1 (the size above is the
size of the delta data that follows).
delta data, deflated.