GITFORMAT-CHUNK(5) | Git Manual | GITFORMAT-CHUNK(5) |
NAME¶
gitformat-chunk - Chunk-based file formats
SYNOPSIS¶
Used by gitformat-commit-graph(5) and the "MIDX" format (see the pack format documentation in gitformat-pack(5)).
DESCRIPTION¶
Some file formats in Git use a common concept of "chunks" to describe sections of the file. This allows structured access to a large file by scanning a small "table of contents" for the remaining data. This common format is used by the commit-graph and multi-pack-index files. See the multi-pack-index format in gitformat-pack(5) and the commit-graph format in gitformat-commit-graph(5) for how they use the chunks to describe structured data.
A chunk-based file format begins with some header information custom to that format. That header should include enough information to identify the file type, format version, and number of chunks in the file. From this information, that file can determine the start of the chunk-based region.
The chunk-based region starts with a table of contents describing where each chunk starts and ends. This consists of (C+1) rows of 12 bytes each, where C is the number of chunks. Consider the following table:
| Chunk ID (4 bytes) | Chunk Offset (8 bytes) | |--------------------|------------------------| | ID[0] | OFFSET[0] | | ... | ... | | ID[C] | OFFSET[C] | | 0x0000 | OFFSET[C+1] |
Each row consists of a 4-byte chunk identifier (ID) and an 8-byte offset. Each integer is stored in network-byte order.
The chunk identifier ID[i] is a label for the data stored within this file from OFFSET[i] (inclusive) to OFFSET[i+1] (exclusive). Thus, the size of the i`th chunk is equal to the difference between `OFFSET[i+1] and OFFSET[i]. This requires that the chunk data appears contiguously in the same order as the table of contents.
The final entry in the table of contents must be four zero bytes. This confirms that the table of contents is ending and provides the offset for the end of the chunk-based data.
Note: The chunk-based format expects that the file contains at least a trailing hash after OFFSET[C+1].
Functions for working with chunk-based file formats are declared in chunk-format.h. Using these methods provide extra checks that assist developers when creating new file formats.
WRITING CHUNK-BASED FILE FORMATS¶
To write a chunk-based file format, create a struct chunkfile by calling init_chunkfile() and pass a struct hashfile pointer. The caller is responsible for opening the hashfile and writing header information so the file format is identifiable before the chunk-based format begins.
Then, call add_chunk() for each chunk that is intended for writing. This populates the chunkfile with information about the order and size of each chunk to write. Provide a chunk_write_fn function pointer to perform the write of the chunk data upon request.
Call write_chunkfile() to write the table of contents to the hashfile followed by each of the chunks. This will verify that each chunk wrote the expected amount of data so the table of contents is correct.
Finally, call free_chunkfile() to clear the struct chunkfile data. The caller is responsible for finalizing the hashfile by writing the trailing hash and closing the file.
READING CHUNK-BASED FILE FORMATS¶
To read a chunk-based file format, the file must be opened as a memory-mapped region. The chunk-format API expects that the entire file is mapped as a contiguous memory region.
Initialize a struct chunkfile pointer with init_chunkfile(NULL).
After reading the header information from the beginning of the file, including the chunk count, call read_table_of_contents() to populate the struct chunkfile with the list of chunks, their offsets, and their sizes.
Extract the data information for each chunk using pair_chunk() or read_chunk():
After calling these methods, call free_chunkfile() to clear the struct chunkfile data. This will not close the memory-mapped region. Callers are expected to own that data for the timeframe the pointers into the region are needed.
EXAMPLES¶
These file formats use the chunk-format API, and can be used as examples for future formats:
GIT¶
Part of the git(1) suite
11/20/2023 | Git 2.43.0 |