DESCRIPTION¶
You may find these things in your git repository (.git directory
for a repository associated with your working tree, or <project>.git
directory for a public bare repository. It is also possible to have a
working tree where .git is a plain ascii file containing gitdir:
<path>, i.e. the path to the real 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 couple of ways to
violate it.
1.You could populate the repository by running a commit
walker without -a option. Depending on which options are given, you could have
only commit objects without associated blobs and trees this way, for example.
A repository with this kind of incomplete object store is not suitable to be
published to the outside world but sometimes useful for private
repository.
2.You also could have an incomplete but locally usable
repository by cloning shallowly. See
git-clone(1).
3.You can be using objects/info/alternates mechanism, or
$GIT_ALTERNATE_OBJECT_DIRECTORIES mechanism 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 right object stores it
borrows from.
objects/[0-9a-f][0-9a-f]
Traditionally, each object is stored in its own file.
They are split into 256 subdirectories using the first two letters from its
object name to keep the number of directory entries objects directory itself
needs to hold. Objects found here are often called unpacked (or
loose) objects.
objects/pack
Packs (files that store many object 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 keep objects reachable from
refs found in this directory and its subdirectories.
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.
packed-refs
records the same information as refs/heads/, refs/tags/,
and friends record in a more efficient way. See
git-pack-refs(1).
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, and almost all commands work identically as normal.
See git-checkout(1) for details.
branches
A slightly deprecated way to store shorthands to be used
to specify URL to git fetch, git pull and git push
commands is to store a file in branches/<name> and give name to
these commands in place of repository argument.
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.
index
The current index file for the repository. It is usually
not found in a bare repository.
info
Additional information about the repository is recorded
in this directory.
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.
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).
remotes
Stores shorthands to be used to give URL and default
refnames to interact with remote repository to git fetch, git
pull and git push commands.
logs
Records of changes made to refs are stored in this
directory. See
git-update-ref(1) for more information.
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).