From df60f4409384e4dae19a65f0415211f240f370d8 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Junio C Hamano Date: Wed, 7 Feb 2007 05:52:37 +0000 Subject: [PATCH] Autogenerated HTML docs for v1.5.0-rc3-175-g6506 --- git-diff-stages.html | 3 +- git-diff-stages.txt | 2 + git-fast-import.html | 1050 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ git-fast-import.txt | 739 +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ git-resolve.html | 4 +- git-resolve.txt | 2 +- git.html | 2 +- 7 files changed, 1797 insertions(+), 5 deletions(-) create mode 100644 git-fast-import.html create mode 100644 git-fast-import.txt diff --git a/git-diff-stages.html b/git-diff-stages.html index 6938a2e7a..0bbd9cf5b 100644 --- a/git-diff-stages.html +++ b/git-diff-stages.html @@ -276,6 +276,7 @@ git-diff-stages(1) Manual Page

DESCRIPTION

+

DEPRECATED and will be removed in 1.5.1.

Compares the content and mode of the blobs in two stages in an unmerged index file.

@@ -969,7 +970,7 @@ two unresolved merge parents with the working tree file diff --git a/git-diff-stages.txt b/git-diff-stages.txt index 120d14e87..b8f45b8cd 100644 --- a/git-diff-stages.txt +++ b/git-diff-stages.txt @@ -12,6 +12,8 @@ SYNOPSIS DESCRIPTION ----------- +DEPRECATED and will be removed in 1.5.1. + Compares the content and mode of the blobs in two stages in an unmerged index file. diff --git a/git-fast-import.html b/git-fast-import.html new file mode 100644 index 000000000..9344f6ea0 --- /dev/null +++ b/git-fast-import.html @@ -0,0 +1,1050 @@ + + + + + + +git-fast-import(1) + + + +

SYNOPSIS

+
+

frontend | git-fast-import [options]

+
+

DESCRIPTION

+
+

This program is usually not what the end user wants to run directly. +Most end users want to use one of the existing frontend programs, +which parses a specific type of foreign source and feeds the contents +stored there to git-fast-import (gfi).

+

gfi reads a mixed command/data stream from standard input and +writes one or more packfiles directly into the current repository. +When EOF is received on standard input, fast import writes out +updated branch and tag refs, fully updating the current repository +with the newly imported data.

+

The gfi backend itself can import into an empty repository (one that +has already been initialized by git-init(1)) or incrementally +update an existing populated repository. Whether or not incremental +imports are supported from a particular foreign source depends on +the frontend program in use.

+
+

OPTIONS

+
+
+
+--date-format=<fmt> +
+
+

+ Specify the type of dates the frontend will supply to + gfi within author, committer and tagger commands. + See “Date Formats” below for details about which formats + are supported, and their syntax. +

+
+
+--force +
+
+

+ Force updating modified existing branches, even if doing + so would cause commits to be lost (as the new commit does + not contain the old commit). +

+
+
+--max-pack-size=<n> +
+
+

+ Maximum size of each output packfile, expressed in MiB. + The default is 4096 (4 GiB) as that is the maximum allowed + packfile size (due to file format limitations). Some + importers may wish to lower this, such as to ensure the + resulting packfiles fit on CDs. +

+
+
+--depth=<n> +
+
+

+ Maximum delta depth, for blob and tree deltification. + Default is 10. +

+
+
+--active-branches=<n> +
+
+

+ Maximum number of branches to maintain active at once. + See “Memory Utilization” below for details. Default is 5. +

+
+
+--export-marks=<file> +
+
+

+ Dumps the internal marks table to <file> when complete. + Marks are written one per line as :markid SHA-1. + Frontends can use this file to validate imports after they + have been completed. +

+
+
+
+

Performance

+
+

The design of gfi allows it to import large projects in a minimum +amount of memory usage and processing time. Assuming the frontend +is able to keep up with gfi and feed it a constant stream of data, +import times for projects holding 10+ years of history and containing +100,000+ individual commits are generally completed in just 1-2 +hours on quite modest (~$2,000 USD) hardware.

+

Most bottlenecks appear to be in foreign source data access (the +source just cannot extract revisions fast enough) or disk IO (gfi +writes as fast as the disk will take the data). Imports will run +faster if the source data is stored on a different drive than the +destination Git repository (due to less IO contention).

+
+

Development Cost

+
+

A typical frontend for gfi tends to weigh in at approximately 200 +lines of Perl/Python/Ruby code. Most developers have been able to +create working importers in just a couple of hours, even though it +is their first exposure to gfi, and sometimes even to Git. This is +an ideal situation, given that most conversion tools are throw-away +(use once, and never look back).

+
+

Parallel Operation

+
+

Like git-push or git-fetch, imports handled by gfi are safe to +run alongside parallel git repack -a -d or git gc invocations, +or any other Git operation (including git prune, as loose objects +are never used by gfi).

+

gfi does not lock the branch or tag refs it is actively importing. +After the import, during its ref update phase, gfi tests each +existing branch ref to verify the update will be a fast-forward +update (the commit stored in the ref is contained in the new +history of the commit to be written). If the update is not a +fast-forward update, gfi will skip updating that ref and instead +prints a warning message. gfi will always attempt to update all +branch refs, and does not stop on the first failure.

+

Branch updates can be forced with --force, but its recommended that +this only be used on an otherwise quiet repository. Using --force +is not necessary for an initial import into an empty repository.

+
+

Technical Discussion

+
+

gfi tracks a set of branches in memory. Any branch can be created +or modified at any point during the import process by sending a +commit command on the input stream. This design allows a frontend +program to process an unlimited number of branches simultaneously, +generating commits in the order they are available from the source +data. It also simplifies the frontend programs considerably.

+

gfi does not use or alter the current working directory, or any +file within it. (It does however update the current Git repository, +as referenced by GIT_DIR.) Therefore an import frontend may use +the working directory for its own purposes, such as extracting file +revisions from the foreign source. This ignorance of the working +directory also allows gfi to run very quickly, as it does not +need to perform any costly file update operations when switching +between branches.

+
+

Input Format

+
+

With the exception of raw file data (which Git does not interpret) +the gfi input format is text (ASCII) based. This text based +format simplifies development and debugging of frontend programs, +especially when a higher level language such as Perl, Python or +Ruby is being used.

+

gfi is very strict about its input. Where we say SP below we mean +exactly one space. Likewise LF means one (and only one) linefeed. +Supplying additional whitespace characters will cause unexpected +results, such as branch names or file names with leading or trailing +spaces in their name, or early termination of gfi when it encounters +unexpected input.

+

Date Formats

+

The following date formats are supported. A frontend should select +the format it will use for this import by passing the format name +in the --date-format=<fmt> command line option.

+
+
+raw +
+
+

+ This is the Git native format and is <time> SP <tz>. + It is also gfi's default format, if --date-format was + not specified. +

+

The time of the event is specified by <time> as the number of +seconds since the UNIX epoch (midnight, Jan 1, 1970, UTC) and is +written as an ASCII decimal integer.

+

The timezone is specified by <tz> as a positive or negative offset +from UTC. For example EST (which is typically 5 hours behind GMT) +would be expressed in <tz> by “-0500” while GMT is “+0000”.

+

If the timezone is not available in the source material, use +“+0000”, or the most common local timezone. For example many +organizations have a CVS repository which has only ever been accessed +by users who are located in the same location and timezone. In this +case the user's timezone can be easily assumed.

+

Unlike the rfc2822 format, this format is very strict. Any +variation in formatting will cause gfi to reject the value.

+
+
+rfc2822 +
+
+

+ This is the standard email format as described by RFC 2822. +

+

An example value is “Tue Feb 6 11:22:18 2007 -0500”. The Git +parser is accurate, but a little on the lenient side. Its the +same parser used by git-am(1) when applying patches +received from email.

+

Some malformed strings may be accepted as valid dates. In some of +these cases Git will still be able to obtain the correct date from +the malformed string. There are also some types of malformed +strings which Git will parse wrong, and yet consider valid. +Seriously malformed strings will be rejected.

+

If the source material is formatted in RFC 2822 style dates, +the frontend should let gfi handle the parsing and conversion +(rather than attempting to do it itself) as the Git parser has +been well tested in the wild.

+

Frontends should prefer the raw format if the source material +is already in UNIX-epoch format, or is easily convertible to +that format, as there is no ambiguity in parsing.

+
+
+now +
+
+

+ Always use the current time and timezone. The literal + now must always be supplied for <when>. +

+

This is a toy format. The current time and timezone of this system +is always copied into the identity string at the time it is being +created by gfi. There is no way to specify a different time or +timezone.

+

This particular format is supplied as its short to implement and +may be useful to a process that wants to create a new commit +right now, without needing to use a working directory or +git-update-index(1).

+

If separate author and committer commands are used in a commit +the timestamps may not match, as the system clock will be polled +twice (once for each command). The only way to ensure that both +author and committer identity information has the same timestamp +is to omit author (thus copying from committer) or to use a +date format other than now.

+
+
+

Commands

+

gfi accepts several commands to update the current repository +and control the current import process. More detailed discussion +(with examples) of each command follows later.

+
+
+commit +
+
+

+ Creates a new branch or updates an existing branch by + creating a new commit and updating the branch to point at + the newly created commit. +

+
+
+tag +
+
+

+ Creates an annotated tag object from an existing commit or + branch. Lightweight tags are not supported by this command, + as they are not recommended for recording meaningful points + in time. +

+
+
+reset +
+
+

+ Reset an existing branch (or a new branch) to a specific + revision. This command must be used to change a branch to + a specific revision without making a commit on it. +

+
+
+blob +
+
+

+ Convert raw file data into a blob, for future use in a + commit command. This command is optional and is not + needed to perform an import. +

+
+
+checkpoint +
+
+

+ Forces gfi to close the current packfile, generate its + unique SHA-1 checksum and index, and start a new packfile. + This command is optional and is not needed to perform + an import. +

+
+
+

commit

+

Create or update a branch with a new commit, recording one logical +change to the project.

+
+
+
        'commit' SP <ref> LF
+        mark?
+        ('author' SP <name> SP LT <email> GT SP <when> LF)?
+        'committer' SP <name> SP LT <email> GT SP <when> LF
+        data
+        ('from' SP <committish> LF)?
+        ('merge' SP <committish> LF)?
+        (filemodify | filedelete)*
+        LF
+
+

where <ref> is the name of the branch to make the commit on. +Typically branch names are prefixed with refs/heads/ in +Git, so importing the CVS branch symbol RELENG-1_0 would use +refs/heads/RELENG-1_0 for the value of <ref>. The value of +<ref> must be a valid refname in Git. As LF is not valid in +a Git refname, no quoting or escaping syntax is supported here.

+

A mark command may optionally appear, requesting gfi to save a +reference to the newly created commit for future use by the frontend +(see below for format). It is very common for frontends to mark +every commit they create, thereby allowing future branch creation +from any imported commit.

+

The data command following committer must supply the commit +message (see below for data command syntax). To import an empty +commit message use a 0 length data. Commit messages are free-form +and are not interpreted by Git. Currently they must be encoded in +UTF-8, as gfi does not permit other encodings to be specified.

+

Zero or more filemodify and filedelete commands may be +included to update the contents of the branch prior to the commit. +These commands can be supplied in any order, gfi is not sensitive +to pathname or operation ordering.

+

author

+

An author command may optionally appear, if the author information +might differ from the committer information. If author is omitted +then gfi will automatically use the committer's information for +the author portion of the commit. See below for a description of +the fields in author, as they are identical to committer.

+

committer

+

The committer command indicates who made this commit, and when +they made it.

+

Here <name> is the person's display name (for example +“Com M Itter”) and <email> is the person's email address +(“cm@example.com”). LT and GT are the literal less-than (\x3c) +and greater-than (\x3e) symbols. These are required to delimit +the email address from the other fields in the line. Note that +<name> is free-form and may contain any sequence of bytes, except +LT and LF. It is typically UTF-8 encoded.

+

The time of the change is specified by <when> using the date format +that was selected by the --date-format=<fmt> command line option. +See “Date Formats” above for the set of supported formats, and +their syntax.

+

from

+

Only valid for the first commit made on this branch by this +gfi process. The from command is used to specify the commit +to initialize this branch from. This revision will be the first +ancestor of the new commit.

+

Omitting the from command in the first commit of a new branch will +cause gfi to create that commit with no ancestor. This tends to be +desired only for the initial commit of a project. Omitting the +from command on existing branches is required, as the current +commit on that branch is automatically assumed to be the first +ancestor of the new commit.

+

As LF is not valid in a Git refname or SHA-1 expression, no +quoting or escaping syntax is supported within <committish>.

+

Here <committish> is any of the following:

+ +

The special case of restarting an incremental import from the +current branch value should be written as:

+
+
+
        from refs/heads/branch^0
+
+

The ^0 suffix is necessary as gfi does not permit a branch to +start from itself, and the branch is created in memory before the +from command is even read from the input. Adding ^0 will force +gfi to resolve the commit through Git's revision parsing library, +rather than its internal branch table, thereby loading in the +existing value of the branch.

+

merge

+

Includes one additional ancestor commit, and makes the current +commit a merge commit. An unlimited number of merge commands per +commit are permitted by gfi, thereby establishing an n-way merge. +However Git's other tools never create commits with more than 15 +additional ancestors (forming a 16-way merge). For this reason +it is suggested that frontends do not use more than 15 merge +commands per commit.

+

Here <committish> is any of the commit specification expressions +also accepted by from (see above).

+

filemodify

+

Included in a commit command to add a new file or change the +content of an existing file. This command has two different means +of specifying the content of the file.

+
+
+External data format +
+
+

+ The data content for the file was already supplied by a prior + blob command. The frontend just needs to connect it. +

+
+
+
        'M' SP <mode> SP <dataref> SP <path> LF
+
+

Here <dataref> can be either a mark reference (:<idnum>) +set by a prior blob command, or a full 40-byte SHA-1 of an +existing Git blob object.

+
+
+Inline data format +
+
+

+ The data content for the file has not been supplied yet. + The frontend wants to supply it as part of this modify + command. +

+
+
+
        'M' SP <mode> SP 'inline' SP <path> LF
+        data
+
+

See below for a detailed description of the data command.

+
+
+

In both formats <mode> is the type of file entry, specified +in octal. Git only supports the following modes:

+ +

In both formats <path> is the complete path of the file to be added +(if not already existing) or modified (if already existing).

+

A <path> string must use UNIX-style directory seperators (forward +slash /), may contain any byte other than LF, and must not +start with double quote (").

+

If an LF or double quote must be encoded into <path> shell-style +quoting should be used, e.g. "path/with\n and \" in it".

+

The value of <path> must be in canoncial form. That is it must not:

+ +

It is recommended that <path> always be encoded using UTF-8.

+

filedelete

+

Included in a commit command to remove a file from the branch. +If the file removal makes its directory empty, the directory will +be automatically removed too. This cascades up the tree until the +first non-empty directory or the root is reached.

+
+
+
        'D' SP <path> LF
+
+

here <path> is the complete path of the file to be removed. +See filemodify above for a detailed description of <path>.

+

mark

+

Arranges for gfi to save a reference to the current object, allowing +the frontend to recall this object at a future point in time, without +knowing its SHA-1. Here the current object is the object creation +command the mark command appears within. This can be commit, +tag, and blob, but commit is the most common usage.

+
+
+
        'mark' SP ':' <idnum> LF
+
+

where <idnum> is the number assigned by the frontend to this mark. +The value of <idnum> is expressed as an ASCII decimal integer. +The value 0 is reserved and cannot be used as +a mark. Only values greater than or equal to 1 may be used as marks.

+

New marks are created automatically. Existing marks can be moved +to another object simply by reusing the same <idnum> in another +mark command.

+

tag

+

Creates an annotated tag referring to a specific commit. To create +lightweight (non-annotated) tags see the reset command below.

+
+
+
        'tag' SP <name> LF
+        'from' SP <committish> LF
+        'tagger' SP <name> SP LT <email> GT SP <when> LF
+        data
+        LF
+
+

where <name> is the name of the tag to create.

+

Tag names are automatically prefixed with refs/tags/ when stored +in Git, so importing the CVS branch symbol RELENG-1_0-FINAL would +use just RELENG-1_0-FINAL for <name>, and gfi will write the +corresponding ref as refs/tags/RELENG-1_0-FINAL.

+

The value of <name> must be a valid refname in Git and therefore +may contain forward slashes. As LF is not valid in a Git refname, +no quoting or escaping syntax is supported here.

+

The from command is the same as in the commit command; see +above for details.

+

The tagger command uses the same format as committer within +commit; again see above for details.

+

The data command following tagger must supply the annotated tag +message (see below for data command syntax). To import an empty +tag message use a 0 length data. Tag messages are free-form and are +not interpreted by Git. Currently they must be encoded in UTF-8, +as gfi does not permit other encodings to be specified.

+

Signing annotated tags during import from within gfi is not +supported. Trying to include your own PGP/GPG signature is not +recommended, as the frontend does not (easily) have access to the +complete set of bytes which normally goes into such a signature. +If signing is required, create lightweight tags from within gfi with +reset, then create the annotated versions of those tags offline +with the standard git-tag(1) process.

+

reset

+

Creates (or recreates) the named branch, optionally starting from +a specific revision. The reset command allows a frontend to issue +a new from command for an existing branch, or to create a new +branch from an existing commit without creating a new commit.

+
+
+
        'reset' SP <ref> LF
+        ('from' SP <committish> LF)?
+        LF
+
+

For a detailed description of <ref> and <committish> see above +under commit and from.

+

The reset command can also be used to create lightweight +(non-annotated) tags. For example:

+
+
+
+
+
reset refs/tags/938
+from :938
+
+
+

would create the lightweight tag refs/tags/938 referring to +whatever commit mark :938 references.

+

blob

+

Requests writing one file revision to the packfile. The revision +is not connected to any commit; this connection must be formed in +a subsequent commit command by referencing the blob through an +assigned mark.

+
+
+
        'blob' LF
+        mark?
+        data
+
+

The mark command is optional here as some frontends have chosen +to generate the Git SHA-1 for the blob on their own, and feed that +directly to commit. This is typically more work than its worth +however, as marks are inexpensive to store and easy to use.

+

data

+

Supplies raw data (for use as blob/file content, commit messages, or +annotated tag messages) to gfi. Data can be supplied using an exact +byte count or delimited with a terminating line. Real frontends +intended for production-quality conversions should always use the +exact byte count format, as it is more robust and performs better. +The delimited format is intended primarily for testing gfi.

+
+
+Exact byte count format +
+
+

+ The frontend must specify the number of bytes of data. +

+
+
+
        'data' SP <count> LF
+        <raw> LF
+
+

where <count> is the exact number of bytes appearing within +<raw>. The value of <count> is expressed as an ASCII decimal +integer. The LF on either side of <raw> is not +included in <count> and will not be included in the imported data.

+
+
+Delimited format +
+
+

+ A delimiter string is used to mark the end of the data. + gfi will compute the length by searching for the delimiter. + This format is primarly useful for testing and is not + recommended for real data. +

+
+
+
        'data' SP '<<' <delim> LF
+        <raw> LF
+        <delim> LF
+
+

where <delim> is the chosen delimiter string. The string <delim> +must not appear on a line by itself within <raw>, as otherwise +gfi will think the data ends earlier than it really does. The LF +immediately trailing <raw> is part of <raw>. This is one of +the limitations of the delimited format, it is impossible to supply +a data chunk which does not have an LF as its last byte.

+
+
+

checkpoint

+

Forces gfi to close the current packfile and start a new one. +As this requires a significant amount of CPU time and disk IO +(to compute the overall pack SHA-1 checksum and generate the +corresponding index file) it can easily take several minutes for +a single checkpoint command to complete.

+
+
+
        'checkpoint' LF
+        LF
+
+
+

Packfile Optimization

+
+

When packing a blob gfi always attempts to deltify against the last +blob written. Unless specifically arranged for by the frontend, +this will probably not be a prior version of the same file, so the +generated delta will not be the smallest possible. The resulting +packfile will be compressed, but will not be optimal.

+

Frontends which have efficient access to all revisions of a +single file (for example reading an RCS/CVS ,v file) can choose +to supply all revisions of that file as a sequence of consecutive +blob commands. This allows gfi to deltify the different file +revisions against each other, saving space in the final packfile. +Marks can be used to later identify individual file revisions during +a sequence of commit commands.

+

The packfile(s) created by gfi do not encourage good disk access +patterns. This is caused by gfi writing the data in the order +it is received on standard input, while Git typically organizes +data within packfiles to make the most recent (current tip) data +appear before historical data. Git also clusters commits together, +speeding up revision traversal through better cache locality.

+

For this reason it is strongly recommended that users repack the +repository with git repack -a -d after gfi completes, allowing +Git to reorganize the packfiles for faster data access. If blob +deltas are suboptimal (see above) then also adding the -f option +to force recomputation of all deltas can significantly reduce the +final packfile size (30-50% smaller can be quite typical).

+
+

Memory Utilization

+
+

There are a number of factors which affect how much memory gfi +requires to perform an import. Like critical sections of core +Git, gfi uses its own memory allocators to ammortize any overheads +associated with malloc. In practice gfi tends to ammoritize any +malloc overheads to 0, due to its use of large block allocations.

+

per object

+

gfi maintains an in-memory structure for every object written in +this execution. On a 32 bit system the structure is 32 bytes, +on a 64 bit system the structure is 40 bytes (due to the larger +pointer sizes). Objects in the table are not deallocated until +gfi terminates. Importing 2 million objects on a 32 bit system +will require approximately 64 MiB of memory.

+

The object table is actually a hashtable keyed on the object name +(the unique SHA-1). This storage configuration allows gfi to reuse +an existing or already written object and avoid writing duplicates +to the output packfile. Duplicate blobs are surprisingly common +in an import, typically due to branch merges in the source.

+

per mark

+

Marks are stored in a sparse array, using 1 pointer (4 bytes or 8 +bytes, depending on pointer size) per mark. Although the array +is sparse, frontends are still strongly encouraged to use marks +between 1 and n, where n is the total number of marks required for +this import.

+

per branch

+

Branches are classified as active and inactive. The memory usage +of the two classes is significantly different.

+

Inactive branches are stored in a structure which uses 96 or 120 +bytes (32 bit or 64 bit systems, respectively), plus the length of +the branch name (typically under 200 bytes), per branch. gfi will +easily handle as many as 10,000 inactive branches in under 2 MiB +of memory.

+

Active branches have the same overhead as inactive branches, but +also contain copies of every tree that has been recently modified on +that branch. If subtree include has not been modified since the +branch became active, its contents will not be loaded into memory, +but if subtree src has been modified by a commit since the branch +became active, then its contents will be loaded in memory.

+

As active branches store metadata about the files contained on that +branch, their in-memory storage size can grow to a considerable size +(see below).

+

gfi automatically moves active branches to inactive status based on +a simple least-recently-used algorithm. The LRU chain is updated on +each commit command. The maximum number of active branches can be +increased or decreased on the command line with --active-branches=.

+

per active tree

+

Trees (aka directories) use just 12 bytes of memory on top of the +memory required for their entries (see “per active file” below). +The cost of a tree is virtually 0, as its overhead ammortizes out +over the individual file entries.

+

per active file entry

+

Files (and pointers to subtrees) within active trees require 52 or 64 +bytes (32/64 bit platforms) per entry. To conserve space, file and +tree names are pooled in a common string table, allowing the filename +“Makefile” to use just 16 bytes (after including the string header +overhead) no matter how many times it occurs within the project.

+

The active branch LRU, when coupled with the filename string pool +and lazy loading of subtrees, allows gfi to efficiently import +projects with 2,000+ branches and 45,114+ files in a very limited +memory footprint (less than 2.7 MiB per active branch).

+
+

Author

+
+

Written by Shawn O. Pearce <spearce@spearce.org>.

+
+

Documentation

+
+

Documentation by Shawn O. Pearce <spearce@spearce.org>.

+
+

GIT

+
+

Part of the git(7) suite

+
+ + + diff --git a/git-fast-import.txt b/git-fast-import.txt new file mode 100644 index 000000000..1fe2c1dcf --- /dev/null +++ b/git-fast-import.txt @@ -0,0 +1,739 @@ +git-fast-import(1) +================== + +NAME +---- +git-fast-import - Backend for fast Git data importers. + + +SYNOPSIS +-------- +frontend | 'git-fast-import' [options] + +DESCRIPTION +----------- +This program is usually not what the end user wants to run directly. +Most end users want to use one of the existing frontend programs, +which parses a specific type of foreign source and feeds the contents +stored there to git-fast-import (gfi). + +gfi reads a mixed command/data stream from standard input and +writes one or more packfiles directly into the current repository. +When EOF is received on standard input, fast import writes out +updated branch and tag refs, fully updating the current repository +with the newly imported data. + +The gfi backend itself can import into an empty repository (one that +has already been initialized by gitlink:git-init[1]) or incrementally +update an existing populated repository. Whether or not incremental +imports are supported from a particular foreign source depends on +the frontend program in use. + + +OPTIONS +------- +--date-format=:: + Specify the type of dates the frontend will supply to + gfi within `author`, `committer` and `tagger` commands. + See ``Date Formats'' below for details about which formats + are supported, and their syntax. + +--force:: + Force updating modified existing branches, even if doing + so would cause commits to be lost (as the new commit does + not contain the old commit). + +--max-pack-size=:: + Maximum size of each output packfile, expressed in MiB. + The default is 4096 (4 GiB) as that is the maximum allowed + packfile size (due to file format limitations). Some + importers may wish to lower this, such as to ensure the + resulting packfiles fit on CDs. + +--depth=:: + Maximum delta depth, for blob and tree deltification. + Default is 10. + +--active-branches=:: + Maximum number of branches to maintain active at once. + See ``Memory Utilization'' below for details. Default is 5. + +--export-marks=:: + Dumps the internal marks table to when complete. + Marks are written one per line as `:markid SHA-1`. + Frontends can use this file to validate imports after they + have been completed. + +Performance +----------- +The design of gfi allows it to import large projects in a minimum +amount of memory usage and processing time. Assuming the frontend +is able to keep up with gfi and feed it a constant stream of data, +import times for projects holding 10+ years of history and containing +100,000+ individual commits are generally completed in just 1-2 +hours on quite modest (~$2,000 USD) hardware. + +Most bottlenecks appear to be in foreign source data access (the +source just cannot extract revisions fast enough) or disk IO (gfi +writes as fast as the disk will take the data). Imports will run +faster if the source data is stored on a different drive than the +destination Git repository (due to less IO contention). + + +Development Cost +---------------- +A typical frontend for gfi tends to weigh in at approximately 200 +lines of Perl/Python/Ruby code. Most developers have been able to +create working importers in just a couple of hours, even though it +is their first exposure to gfi, and sometimes even to Git. This is +an ideal situation, given that most conversion tools are throw-away +(use once, and never look back). + + +Parallel Operation +------------------ +Like `git-push` or `git-fetch`, imports handled by gfi are safe to +run alongside parallel `git repack -a -d` or `git gc` invocations, +or any other Git operation (including `git prune`, as loose objects +are never used by gfi). + +gfi does not lock the branch or tag refs it is actively importing. +After the import, during its ref update phase, gfi tests each +existing branch ref to verify the update will be a fast-forward +update (the commit stored in the ref is contained in the new +history of the commit to be written). If the update is not a +fast-forward update, gfi will skip updating that ref and instead +prints a warning message. gfi will always attempt to update all +branch refs, and does not stop on the first failure. + +Branch updates can be forced with `--force`, but its recommended that +this only be used on an otherwise quiet repository. Using `--force` +is not necessary for an initial import into an empty repository. + + +Technical Discussion +-------------------- +gfi tracks a set of branches in memory. Any branch can be created +or modified at any point during the import process by sending a +`commit` command on the input stream. This design allows a frontend +program to process an unlimited number of branches simultaneously, +generating commits in the order they are available from the source +data. It also simplifies the frontend programs considerably. + +gfi does not use or alter the current working directory, or any +file within it. (It does however update the current Git repository, +as referenced by `GIT_DIR`.) Therefore an import frontend may use +the working directory for its own purposes, such as extracting file +revisions from the foreign source. This ignorance of the working +directory also allows gfi to run very quickly, as it does not +need to perform any costly file update operations when switching +between branches. + +Input Format +------------ +With the exception of raw file data (which Git does not interpret) +the gfi input format is text (ASCII) based. This text based +format simplifies development and debugging of frontend programs, +especially when a higher level language such as Perl, Python or +Ruby is being used. + +gfi is very strict about its input. Where we say SP below we mean +*exactly* one space. Likewise LF means one (and only one) linefeed. +Supplying additional whitespace characters will cause unexpected +results, such as branch names or file names with leading or trailing +spaces in their name, or early termination of gfi when it encounters +unexpected input. + +Date Formats +~~~~~~~~~~~~ +The following date formats are supported. A frontend should select +the format it will use for this import by passing the format name +in the `--date-format=` command line option. + +`raw`:: + This is the Git native format and is `