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1 gitprotocol-v2(5)
2 =================
3
4 NAME
5 ----
6 gitprotocol-v2 - Git Wire Protocol, Version 2
7
8 SYNOPSIS
9 --------
10 [verse]
11 <over-the-wire-protocol>
12
13 DESCRIPTION
14 -----------
15
16 This document presents a specification for a version 2 of Git's wire
17 protocol. Protocol v2 will improve upon v1 in the following ways:
18
19 * Instead of multiple service names, multiple commands will be
20 supported by a single service
21 * Easily extendable as capabilities are moved into their own section
22 of the protocol, no longer being hidden behind a NUL byte and
23 limited by the size of a pkt-line
24 * Separate out other information hidden behind NUL bytes (e.g. agent
25 string as a capability and symrefs can be requested using 'ls-refs')
26 * Reference advertisement will be omitted unless explicitly requested
27 * ls-refs command to explicitly request some refs
28 * Designed with http and stateless-rpc in mind. With clear flush
29 semantics the http remote helper can simply act as a proxy
30
31 In protocol v2 communication is command oriented. When first contacting a
32 server a list of capabilities will be advertised. Some of these capabilities
33 will be commands which a client can request be executed. Once a command
34 has completed, a client can reuse the connection and request that other
35 commands be executed.
36
37 Packet-Line Framing
38 -------------------
39
40 All communication is done using packet-line framing, just as in v1. See
41 linkgit:gitprotocol-pack[5] and linkgit:gitprotocol-common[5] for more information.
42
43 In protocol v2 these special packets will have the following semantics:
44
45 * '0000' Flush Packet (flush-pkt) - indicates the end of a message
46 * '0001' Delimiter Packet (delim-pkt) - separates sections of a message
47 * '0002' Response End Packet (response-end-pkt) - indicates the end of a
48 response for stateless connections
49
50 Initial Client Request
51 ----------------------
52
53 In general a client can request to speak protocol v2 by sending
54 `version=2` through the respective side-channel for the transport being
55 used which inevitably sets `GIT_PROTOCOL`. More information can be
56 found in linkgit:gitprotocol-pack[5] and linkgit:gitprotocol-http[5], as well as the
57 `GIT_PROTOCOL` definition in `git.txt`. In all cases the
58 response from the server is the capability advertisement.
59
60 Git Transport
61 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~
62
63 When using the git:// transport, you can request to use protocol v2 by
64 sending "version=2" as an extra parameter:
65
66 003egit-upload-pack /project.git\0host=myserver.com\0\0version=2\0
67
68 SSH and File Transport
69 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
70
71 When using either the ssh:// or file:// transport, the GIT_PROTOCOL
72 environment variable must be set explicitly to include "version=2".
73 The server may need to be configured to allow this environment variable
74 to pass.
75
76 HTTP Transport
77 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
78
79 When using the http:// or https:// transport a client makes a "smart"
80 info/refs request as described in linkgit:gitprotocol-http[5] and requests that
81 v2 be used by supplying "version=2" in the `Git-Protocol` header.
82
83 C: GET $GIT_URL/info/refs?service=git-upload-pack HTTP/1.0
84 C: Git-Protocol: version=2
85
86 A v2 server would reply:
87
88 S: 200 OK
89 S: <Some headers>
90 S: ...
91 S:
92 S: 000eversion 2\n
93 S: <capability-advertisement>
94
95 Subsequent requests are then made directly to the service
96 `$GIT_URL/git-upload-pack`. (This works the same for git-receive-pack).
97
98 Uses the `--http-backend-info-refs` option to
99 linkgit:git-upload-pack[1].
100
101 The server may need to be configured to pass this header's contents via
102 the `GIT_PROTOCOL` variable. See the discussion in `git-http-backend.txt`.
103
104 Capability Advertisement
105 ------------------------
106
107 A server which decides to communicate (based on a request from a client)
108 using protocol version 2, notifies the client by sending a version string
109 in its initial response followed by an advertisement of its capabilities.
110 Each capability is a key with an optional value. Clients must ignore all
111 unknown keys. Semantics of unknown values are left to the definition of
112 each key. Some capabilities will describe commands which can be requested
113 to be executed by the client.
114
115 capability-advertisement = protocol-version
116 capability-list
117 flush-pkt
118
119 protocol-version = PKT-LINE("version 2" LF)
120 capability-list = *capability
121 capability = PKT-LINE(key[=value] LF)
122
123 key = 1*(ALPHA | DIGIT | "-_")
124 value = 1*(ALPHA | DIGIT | " -_.,?\/{}[]()<>!@#$%^&*+=:;")
125
126 Command Request
127 ---------------
128
129 After receiving the capability advertisement, a client can then issue a
130 request to select the command it wants with any particular capabilities
131 or arguments. There is then an optional section where the client can
132 provide any command specific parameters or queries. Only a single
133 command can be requested at a time.
134
135 request = empty-request | command-request
136 empty-request = flush-pkt
137 command-request = command
138 capability-list
139 delim-pkt
140 command-args
141 flush-pkt
142 command = PKT-LINE("command=" key LF)
143 command-args = *command-specific-arg
144
145 command-specific-args are packet line framed arguments defined by
146 each individual command.
147
148 The server will then check to ensure that the client's request is
149 comprised of a valid command as well as valid capabilities which were
150 advertised. If the request is valid the server will then execute the
151 command. A server MUST wait till it has received the client's entire
152 request before issuing a response. The format of the response is
153 determined by the command being executed, but in all cases a flush-pkt
154 indicates the end of the response.
155
156 When a command has finished, and the client has received the entire
157 response from the server, a client can either request that another
158 command be executed or can terminate the connection. A client may
159 optionally send an empty request consisting of just a flush-pkt to
160 indicate that no more requests will be made.
161
162 Capabilities
163 ------------
164
165 There are two different types of capabilities: normal capabilities,
166 which can be used to convey information or alter the behavior of a
167 request, and commands, which are the core actions that a client wants to
168 perform (fetch, push, etc).
169
170 Protocol version 2 is stateless by default. This means that all commands
171 must only last a single round and be stateless from the perspective of the
172 server side, unless the client has requested a capability indicating that
173 state should be maintained by the server. Clients MUST NOT require state
174 management on the server side in order to function correctly. This
175 permits simple round-robin load-balancing on the server side, without
176 needing to worry about state management.
177
178 agent
179 ~~~~~
180
181 The server can advertise the `agent` capability with a value `X` (in the
182 form `agent=X`) to notify the client that the server is running version
183 `X`. The client may optionally send its own agent string by including
184 the `agent` capability with a value `Y` (in the form `agent=Y`) in its
185 request to the server (but it MUST NOT do so if the server did not
186 advertise the agent capability). The `X` and `Y` strings may contain any
187 printable ASCII characters except space (i.e., the byte range 32 < x <
188 127), and are typically of the form "package/version" (e.g.,
189 "git/1.8.3.1"). The agent strings are purely informative for statistics
190 and debugging purposes, and MUST NOT be used to programmatically assume
191 the presence or absence of particular features.
192
193 ls-refs
194 ~~~~~~~
195
196 `ls-refs` is the command used to request a reference advertisement in v2.
197 Unlike the current reference advertisement, ls-refs takes in arguments
198 which can be used to limit the refs sent from the server.
199
200 Additional features not supported in the base command will be advertised
201 as the value of the command in the capability advertisement in the form
202 of a space separated list of features: "<command>=<feature-1> <feature-2>"
203
204 ls-refs takes in the following arguments:
205
206 symrefs
207 In addition to the object pointed by it, show the underlying ref
208 pointed by it when showing a symbolic ref.
209 peel
210 Show peeled tags.
211 ref-prefix <prefix>
212 When specified, only references having a prefix matching one of
213 the provided prefixes are displayed. Multiple instances may be
214 given, in which case references matching any prefix will be
215 shown. Note that this is purely for optimization; a server MAY
216 show refs not matching the prefix if it chooses, and clients
217 should filter the result themselves.
218
219 If the 'unborn' feature is advertised the following argument can be
220 included in the client's request.
221
222 unborn
223 The server will send information about HEAD even if it is a symref
224 pointing to an unborn branch in the form "unborn HEAD
225 symref-target:<target>".
226
227 The output of ls-refs is as follows:
228
229 output = *ref
230 flush-pkt
231 obj-id-or-unborn = (obj-id | "unborn")
232 ref = PKT-LINE(obj-id-or-unborn SP refname *(SP ref-attribute) LF)
233 ref-attribute = (symref | peeled)
234 symref = "symref-target:" symref-target
235 peeled = "peeled:" obj-id
236
237 fetch
238 ~~~~~
239
240 `fetch` is the command used to fetch a packfile in v2. It can be looked
241 at as a modified version of the v1 fetch where the ref-advertisement is
242 stripped out (since the `ls-refs` command fills that role) and the
243 message format is tweaked to eliminate redundancies and permit easy
244 addition of future extensions.
245
246 Additional features not supported in the base command will be advertised
247 as the value of the command in the capability advertisement in the form
248 of a space separated list of features: "<command>=<feature-1> <feature-2>"
249
250 A `fetch` request can take the following arguments:
251
252 want <oid>
253 Indicates to the server an object which the client wants to
254 retrieve. Wants can be anything and are not limited to
255 advertised objects.
256
257 have <oid>
258 Indicates to the server an object which the client has locally.
259 This allows the server to make a packfile which only contains
260 the objects that the client needs. Multiple 'have' lines can be
261 supplied.
262
263 done
264 Indicates to the server that negotiation should terminate (or
265 not even begin if performing a clone) and that the server should
266 use the information supplied in the request to construct the
267 packfile.
268
269 thin-pack
270 Request that a thin pack be sent, which is a pack with deltas
271 which reference base objects not contained within the pack (but
272 are known to exist at the receiving end). This can reduce the
273 network traffic significantly, but it requires the receiving end
274 to know how to "thicken" these packs by adding the missing bases
275 to the pack.
276
277 no-progress
278 Request that progress information that would normally be sent on
279 side-band channel 2, during the packfile transfer, should not be
280 sent. However, the side-band channel 3 is still used for error
281 responses.
282
283 include-tag
284 Request that annotated tags should be sent if the objects they
285 point to are being sent.
286
287 ofs-delta
288 Indicate that the client understands PACKv2 with delta referring
289 to its base by position in pack rather than by an oid. That is,
290 they can read OBJ_OFS_DELTA (aka type 6) in a packfile.
291
292 If the 'shallow' feature is advertised the following arguments can be
293 included in the clients request as well as the potential addition of the
294 'shallow-info' section in the server's response as explained below.
295
296 shallow <oid>
297 A client must notify the server of all commits for which it only
298 has shallow copies (meaning that it doesn't have the parents of
299 a commit) by supplying a 'shallow <oid>' line for each such
300 object so that the server is aware of the limitations of the
301 client's history. This is so that the server is aware that the
302 client may not have all objects reachable from such commits.
303
304 deepen <depth>
305 Requests that the fetch/clone should be shallow having a commit
306 depth of <depth> relative to the remote side.
307
308 deepen-relative
309 Requests that the semantics of the "deepen" command be changed
310 to indicate that the depth requested is relative to the client's
311 current shallow boundary, instead of relative to the requested
312 commits.
313
314 deepen-since <timestamp>
315 Requests that the shallow clone/fetch should be cut at a
316 specific time, instead of depth. Internally it's equivalent to
317 doing "git rev-list --max-age=<timestamp>". Cannot be used with
318 "deepen".
319
320 deepen-not <rev>
321 Requests that the shallow clone/fetch should be cut at a
322 specific revision specified by '<rev>', instead of a depth.
323 Internally it's equivalent of doing "git rev-list --not <rev>".
324 Cannot be used with "deepen", but can be used with
325 "deepen-since".
326
327 If the 'filter' feature is advertised, the following argument can be
328 included in the client's request:
329
330 filter <filter-spec>
331 Request that various objects from the packfile be omitted
332 using one of several filtering techniques. These are intended
333 for use with partial clone and partial fetch operations. See
334 `rev-list` for possible "filter-spec" values. When communicating
335 with other processes, senders SHOULD translate scaled integers
336 (e.g. "1k") into a fully-expanded form (e.g. "1024") to aid
337 interoperability with older receivers that may not understand
338 newly-invented scaling suffixes. However, receivers SHOULD
339 accept the following suffixes: 'k', 'm', and 'g' for 1024,
340 1048576, and 1073741824, respectively.
341
342 If the 'ref-in-want' feature is advertised, the following argument can
343 be included in the client's request as well as the potential addition of
344 the 'wanted-refs' section in the server's response as explained below.
345
346 want-ref <ref>
347 Indicates to the server that the client wants to retrieve a
348 particular ref, where <ref> is the full name of a ref on the
349 server. It is a protocol error to send want-ref for the
350 same ref more than once.
351
352 If the 'sideband-all' feature is advertised, the following argument can be
353 included in the client's request:
354
355 sideband-all
356 Instruct the server to send the whole response multiplexed, not just
357 the packfile section. All non-flush and non-delim PKT-LINE in the
358 response (not only in the packfile section) will then start with a byte
359 indicating its sideband (1, 2, or 3), and the server may send "0005\2"
360 (a PKT-LINE of sideband 2 with no payload) as a keepalive packet.
361
362 If the 'packfile-uris' feature is advertised, the following argument
363 can be included in the client's request as well as the potential
364 addition of the 'packfile-uris' section in the server's response as
365 explained below. Note that at most one `packfile-uris` line can be sent
366 to the server.
367
368 packfile-uris <comma-separated-list-of-protocols>
369 Indicates to the server that the client is willing to receive
370 URIs of any of the given protocols in place of objects in the
371 sent packfile. Before performing the connectivity check, the
372 client should download from all given URIs. Currently, the
373 protocols supported are "http" and "https".
374
375 If the 'wait-for-done' feature is advertised, the following argument
376 can be included in the client's request.
377
378 wait-for-done
379 Indicates to the server that it should never send "ready", but
380 should wait for the client to say "done" before sending the
381 packfile.
382
383 The response of `fetch` is broken into a number of sections separated by
384 delimiter packets (0001), with each section beginning with its section
385 header. Most sections are sent only when the packfile is sent.
386
387 output = acknowledgements flush-pkt |
388 [acknowledgments delim-pkt] [shallow-info delim-pkt]
389 [wanted-refs delim-pkt] [packfile-uris delim-pkt]
390 packfile flush-pkt
391
392 acknowledgments = PKT-LINE("acknowledgments" LF)
393 (nak | *ack)
394 (ready)
395 ready = PKT-LINE("ready" LF)
396 nak = PKT-LINE("NAK" LF)
397 ack = PKT-LINE("ACK" SP obj-id LF)
398
399 shallow-info = PKT-LINE("shallow-info" LF)
400 *PKT-LINE((shallow | unshallow) LF)
401 shallow = "shallow" SP obj-id
402 unshallow = "unshallow" SP obj-id
403
404 wanted-refs = PKT-LINE("wanted-refs" LF)
405 *PKT-LINE(wanted-ref LF)
406 wanted-ref = obj-id SP refname
407
408 packfile-uris = PKT-LINE("packfile-uris" LF) *packfile-uri
409 packfile-uri = PKT-LINE(40*(HEXDIGIT) SP *%x20-ff LF)
410
411 packfile = PKT-LINE("packfile" LF)
412 *PKT-LINE(%x01-03 *%x00-ff)
413
414 acknowledgments section
415 * If the client determines that it is finished with negotiations by
416 sending a "done" line (thus requiring the server to send a packfile),
417 the acknowledgments sections MUST be omitted from the server's
418 response.
419
420 * Always begins with the section header "acknowledgments"
421
422 * The server will respond with "NAK" if none of the object ids sent
423 as have lines were common.
424
425 * The server will respond with "ACK obj-id" for all of the
426 object ids sent as have lines which are common.
427
428 * A response cannot have both "ACK" lines as well as a "NAK"
429 line.
430
431 * The server will respond with a "ready" line indicating that
432 the server has found an acceptable common base and is ready to
433 make and send a packfile (which will be found in the packfile
434 section of the same response)
435
436 * If the server has found a suitable cut point and has decided
437 to send a "ready" line, then the server can decide to (as an
438 optimization) omit any "ACK" lines it would have sent during
439 its response. This is because the server will have already
440 determined the objects it plans to send to the client and no
441 further negotiation is needed.
442
443 shallow-info section
444 * If the client has requested a shallow fetch/clone, a shallow
445 client requests a fetch or the server is shallow then the
446 server's response may include a shallow-info section. The
447 shallow-info section will be included if (due to one of the
448 above conditions) the server needs to inform the client of any
449 shallow boundaries or adjustments to the clients already
450 existing shallow boundaries.
451
452 * Always begins with the section header "shallow-info"
453
454 * If a positive depth is requested, the server will compute the
455 set of commits which are no deeper than the desired depth.
456
457 * The server sends a "shallow obj-id" line for each commit whose
458 parents will not be sent in the following packfile.
459
460 * The server sends an "unshallow obj-id" line for each commit
461 which the client has indicated is shallow, but is no longer
462 shallow as a result of the fetch (due to its parents being
463 sent in the following packfile).
464
465 * The server MUST NOT send any "unshallow" lines for anything
466 which the client has not indicated was shallow as a part of
467 its request.
468
469 wanted-refs section
470 * This section is only included if the client has requested a
471 ref using a 'want-ref' line and if a packfile section is also
472 included in the response.
473
474 * Always begins with the section header "wanted-refs".
475
476 * The server will send a ref listing ("<oid> <refname>") for
477 each reference requested using 'want-ref' lines.
478
479 * The server MUST NOT send any refs which were not requested
480 using 'want-ref' lines.
481
482 packfile-uris section
483 * This section is only included if the client sent
484 'packfile-uris' and the server has at least one such URI to
485 send.
486
487 * Always begins with the section header "packfile-uris".
488
489 * For each URI the server sends, it sends a hash of the pack's
490 contents (as output by git index-pack) followed by the URI.
491
492 * The hashes are 40 hex characters long. When Git upgrades to a new
493 hash algorithm, this might need to be updated. (It should match
494 whatever index-pack outputs after "pack\t" or "keep\t".
495
496 packfile section
497 * This section is only included if the client has sent 'want'
498 lines in its request and either requested that no more
499 negotiation be done by sending 'done' or if the server has
500 decided it has found a sufficient cut point to produce a
501 packfile.
502
503 * Always begins with the section header "packfile"
504
505 * The transmission of the packfile begins immediately after the
506 section header
507
508 * The data transfer of the packfile is always multiplexed, using
509 the same semantics of the 'side-band-64k' capability from
510 protocol version 1. This means that each packet, during the
511 packfile data stream, is made up of a leading 4-byte pkt-line
512 length (typical of the pkt-line format), followed by a 1-byte
513 stream code, followed by the actual data.
514
515 The stream code can be one of:
516 1 - pack data
517 2 - progress messages
518 3 - fatal error message just before stream aborts
519
520 server-option
521 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~
522
523 If advertised, indicates that any number of server specific options can be
524 included in a request. This is done by sending each option as a
525 "server-option=<option>" capability line in the capability-list section of
526 a request.
527
528 The provided options must not contain a NUL or LF character.
529
530 object-format
531 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
532
533 The server can advertise the `object-format` capability with a value `X` (in the
534 form `object-format=X`) to notify the client that the server is able to deal
535 with objects using hash algorithm X. If not specified, the server is assumed to
536 only handle SHA-1. If the client would like to use a hash algorithm other than
537 SHA-1, it should specify its object-format string.
538
539 session-id=<session-id>
540 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
541
542 The server may advertise a session ID that can be used to identify this process
543 across multiple requests. The client may advertise its own session ID back to
544 the server as well.
545
546 Session IDs should be unique to a given process. They must fit within a
547 packet-line, and must not contain non-printable or whitespace characters. The
548 current implementation uses trace2 session IDs (see
549 link:technical/api-trace2.html[api-trace2] for details), but this may change
550 and users of the session ID should not rely on this fact.
551
552 object-info
553 ~~~~~~~~~~~
554
555 `object-info` is the command to retrieve information about one or more objects.
556 Its main purpose is to allow a client to make decisions based on this
557 information without having to fully fetch objects. Object size is the only
558 information that is currently supported.
559
560 An `object-info` request takes the following arguments:
561
562 size
563 Requests size information to be returned for each listed object id.
564
565 oid <oid>
566 Indicates to the server an object which the client wants to obtain
567 information for.
568
569 The response of `object-info` is a list of the requested object ids
570 and associated requested information, each separated by a single space.
571
572 output = info flush-pkt
573
574 info = PKT-LINE(attrs) LF)
575 *PKT-LINE(obj-info LF)
576
577 attrs = attr | attrs SP attrs
578
579 attr = "size"
580
581 obj-info = obj-id SP obj-size
582
583 bundle-uri
584 ~~~~~~~~~~
585
586 If the 'bundle-uri' capability is advertised, the server supports the
587 `bundle-uri' command.
588
589 The capability is currently advertised with no value (i.e. not
590 "bundle-uri=somevalue"), a value may be added in the future for
591 supporting command-wide extensions. Clients MUST ignore any unknown
592 capability values and proceed with the 'bundle-uri` dialog they
593 support.
594
595 The 'bundle-uri' command is intended to be issued before `fetch` to
596 get URIs to bundle files (see linkgit:git-bundle[1]) to "seed" and
597 inform the subsequent `fetch` command.
598
599 The client CAN issue `bundle-uri` before or after any other valid
600 command. To be useful to clients it's expected that it'll be issued
601 after an `ls-refs` and before `fetch`, but CAN be issued at any time
602 in the dialog.
603
604 DISCUSSION of bundle-uri
605 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
606
607 The intent of the feature is optimize for server resource consumption
608 in the common case by changing the common case of fetching a very
609 large PACK during linkgit:git-clone[1] into a smaller incremental
610 fetch.
611
612 It also allows servers to achieve better caching in combination with
613 an `uploadpack.packObjectsHook` (see linkgit:git-config[1]).
614
615 By having new clones or fetches be a more predictable and common
616 negotiation against the tips of recently produces *.bundle file(s).
617 Servers might even pre-generate the results of such negotiations for
618 the `uploadpack.packObjectsHook` as new pushes come in.
619
620 One way that servers could take advantage of these bundles is that the
621 server would anticipate that fresh clones will download a known bundle,
622 followed by catching up to the current state of the repository using ref
623 tips found in that bundle (or bundles).
624
625 PROTOCOL for bundle-uri
626 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
627
628 A `bundle-uri` request takes no arguments, and as noted above does not
629 currently advertise a capability value. Both may be added in the
630 future.
631
632 When the client issues a `command=bundle-uri` request, the response is a
633 list of key-value pairs provided as packet lines with value
634 `<key>=<value>`. Each `<key>` should be interpreted as a config key from
635 the `bundle.*` namespace to construct a list of bundles. These keys are
636 grouped by a `bundle.<id>.` subsection, where each key corresponding to a
637 given `<id>` contributes attributes to the bundle defined by that `<id>`.
638 See linkgit:git-config[1] for the specific details of these keys and how
639 the Git client will interpret their values.
640
641 Clients MUST parse the line according to the above format, lines that do
642 not conform to the format SHOULD be discarded. The user MAY be warned in
643 such a case.
644
645 bundle-uri CLIENT AND SERVER EXPECTATIONS
646 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
647
648 URI CONTENTS::
649 The content at the advertised URIs MUST be one of two types.
650 +
651 The advertised URI may contain a bundle file that `git bundle verify`
652 would accept. I.e. they MUST contain one or more reference tips for
653 use by the client, MUST indicate prerequisites (in any) with standard
654 "-" prefixes, and MUST indicate their "object-format", if
655 applicable.
656 +
657 The advertised URI may alternatively contain a plaintext file that `git
658 config --list` would accept (with the `--file` option). The key-value
659 pairs in this list are in the `bundle.*` namespace (see
660 linkgit:git-config[1]).
661
662 bundle-uri CLIENT ERROR RECOVERY::
663 A client MUST above all gracefully degrade on errors, whether that
664 error is because of bad missing/data in the bundle URI(s), because
665 that client is too dumb to e.g. understand and fully parse out bundle
666 headers and their prerequisite relationships, or something else.
667 +
668 Server operators should feel confident in turning on "bundle-uri" and
669 not worry if e.g. their CDN goes down that clones or fetches will run
670 into hard failures. Even if the server bundle(s) are
671 incomplete, or bad in some way the client should still end up with a
672 functioning repository, just as if it had chosen not to use this
673 protocol extension.
674 +
675 All subsequent discussion on client and server interaction MUST keep
676 this in mind.
677
678 bundle-uri SERVER TO CLIENT::
679 The ordering of the returned bundle uris is not significant. Clients
680 MUST parse their headers to discover their contained OIDS and
681 prerequisites. A client MUST consider the content of the bundle(s)
682 themselves and their header as the ultimate source of truth.
683 +
684 A server MAY even return bundle(s) that don't have any direct
685 relationship to the repository being cloned (either through accident,
686 or intentional "clever" configuration), and expect a client to sort
687 out what data they'd like from the bundle(s), if any.
688
689 bundle-uri CLIENT TO SERVER::
690 The client SHOULD provide reference tips found in the bundle header(s)
691 as 'have' lines in any subsequent `fetch` request. A client MAY also
692 ignore the bundle(s) entirely if doing so is deemed worse for some
693 reason, e.g. if the bundles can't be downloaded, it doesn't like the
694 tips it finds etc.
695
696 WHEN ADVERTISED BUNDLE(S) REQUIRE NO FURTHER NEGOTIATION::
697 If after issuing `bundle-uri` and `ls-refs`, and getting the header(s)
698 of the bundle(s) the client finds that the ref tips it wants can be
699 retrieved entirely from advertised bundle(s), the client MAY disconnect
700 from the Git server. The results of such a 'clone' or 'fetch' should be
701 indistinguishable from the state attained without using bundle-uri.
702
703 EARLY CLIENT DISCONNECTIONS AND ERROR RECOVERY::
704 A client MAY perform an early disconnect while still downloading the
705 bundle(s) (having streamed and parsed their headers). In such a case
706 the client MUST gracefully recover from any errors related to
707 finishing the download and validation of the bundle(s).
708 +
709 I.e. a client might need to re-connect and issue a 'fetch' command,
710 and possibly fall back to not making use of 'bundle-uri' at all.
711 +
712 This "MAY" behavior is specified as such (and not a "SHOULD") on the
713 assumption that a server advertising bundle uris is more likely than
714 not to be serving up a relatively large repository, and to be pointing
715 to URIs that have a good chance of being in working order. A client
716 MAY e.g. look at the payload size of the bundles as a heuristic to see
717 if an early disconnect is worth it, should falling back on a full
718 "fetch" dialog be necessary.
719
720 WHEN ADVERTISED BUNDLE(S) REQUIRE FURTHER NEGOTIATION::
721 A client SHOULD commence a negotiation of a PACK from the server via
722 the "fetch" command using the OID tips found in advertised bundles,
723 even if's still in the process of downloading those bundle(s).
724 +
725 This allows for aggressive early disconnects from any interactive
726 server dialog. The client blindly trusts that the advertised OID tips
727 are relevant, and issues them as 'have' lines, it then requests any
728 tips it would like (usually from the "ls-refs" advertisement) via
729 'want' lines. The server will then compute a (hopefully small) PACK
730 with the expected difference between the tips from the bundle(s) and
731 the data requested.
732 +
733 The only connection the client then needs to keep active is to the
734 concurrently downloading static bundle(s), when those and the
735 incremental PACK are retrieved they should be inflated and
736 validated. Any errors at this point should be gracefully recovered
737 from, see above.
738
739 bundle-uri PROTOCOL FEATURES
740 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
741
742 The client constructs a bundle list from the `<key>=<value>` pairs
743 provided by the server. These pairs are part of the `bundle.*` namespace
744 as documented in linkgit:git-config[1]. In this section, we discuss some
745 of these keys and describe the actions the client will do in response to
746 this information.
747
748 In particular, the `bundle.version` key specifies an integer value. The
749 only accepted value at the moment is `1`, but if the client sees an
750 unexpected value here then the client MUST ignore the bundle list.
751
752 As long as `bundle.version` is understood, all other unknown keys MAY be
753 ignored by the client. The server will guarantee compatibility with older
754 clients, though newer clients may be better able to use the extra keys to
755 minimize downloads.
756
757 Any backwards-incompatible addition of pre-URI key-value will be
758 guarded by a new `bundle.version` value or values in 'bundle-uri'
759 capability advertisement itself, and/or by new future `bundle-uri`
760 request arguments.
761
762 Some example key-value pairs that are not currently implemented but could
763 be implemented in the future include:
764
765 * Add a "hash=<val>" or "size=<bytes>" advertise the expected hash or
766 size of the bundle file.
767
768 * Advertise that one or more bundle files are the same (to e.g. have
769 clients round-robin or otherwise choose one of N possible files).
770
771 * A "oid=<OID>" shortcut and "prerequisite=<OID>" shortcut. For
772 expressing the common case of a bundle with one tip and no
773 prerequisites, or one tip and one prerequisite.
774 +
775 This would allow for optimizing the common case of servers who'd like
776 to provide one "big bundle" containing only their "main" branch,
777 and/or incremental updates thereof.
778 +
779 A client receiving such a a response MAY assume that they can skip
780 retrieving the header from a bundle at the indicated URI, and thus
781 save themselves and the server(s) the request(s) needed to inspect the
782 headers of that bundle or bundles.
783
784 GIT
785 ---
786 Part of the linkgit:git[1] suite