Re: Question about fsck-objects output

[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index]

 



Excellent, I have done a rebase, so that could certainly be it. I'll take a look at the contents using the suggestions you provided.

Thanks for the enlightenment. :-)

Larry.

Linus Torvalds wrote:
[ Maybe this should be a FAQ answer in some git documentation? Feel free to edit up this email and use it as a base.. ]

On Thu, 25 Jan 2007, Larry Streepy wrote:

Sorry to ask such a basic question, but I can't quite decipher the output of
fsck-objects.  When I run it, I get this:

 git fsck-objects
dangling commit 2213f6d4dd39ca8baebd0427723723e63208521b
dangling commit f0d4e00196bd5ee54463e9ea7a0f0e8303da767f
dangling blob 6a6d0b01b3e96d49a8f2c7addd4ef8c3bd1f5761


Even after a "repack -a -d" they still exist.  The man page has a short
explanation, but, at least for me, it wasn't fully enlightening. :-)

The man page says that dangling commits could be "root" commits, but since my
repo started as a clone of another repo, I don't see how I could have any root
commits.  Also, the page doesn't really describe what a dangling blob is.

So, can someone explain what these artifacts are and if they are a problem
that I should be worried about?

The most common situation is that you've rebased a branch (or you have pulled from somebody else who rebased a branch, like the "pu" branch in the git.git archive itself).

What happens is that the old head of the original branch still exists, as does obviously everything it pointed to. The branch pointer itself just doesn't, since you replaced it with another one.

However, there are certainly other situations too that cause dangling objects. For example, the "dangling blob" situation you have tends to be because you did a "git add" of a file, but then, before you actually committed it and made it part of the bigger picture, you changed something else in that file and committed that *updated* thing - the old state that you added originally ends up not being pointed to by any commit/tree, so it's now a dangling blob object.

Similarly, when the "recursive" merge strategy runs, and finds that there are criss-cross merges and thus more than one merge base (which is fairly unusual, but it does happen), it will generate one temporary midway tree (or possibly even more, if you had lots of criss-crossing merges and more than two merge bases) as a temporary internal merge base, and again, those are real objects, but the end result will not end up pointing to them, so they end up "dangling" in your repository.

Generally, dangling objects aren't anything to worry about. They can even be very useful: if you screw something up, the dangling objects can be how you recover your old tree (say, you did a rebase, and realized that you really didn't want to - you can look at what dangling objects you have, and decide to reset your head to some old dangling state).

For commits, the most useful thing to do with dangling objects tends to be to do a simple

	gitk <dangling-commit-sha-goes-here> --not --all

which means exactly what it sounds like: it says that you want to see the commit history that is described by the dangling commit(s), but you do NOT want to see the history that is described by all your branches and tags (which are the things you normally reach). That basically shows you in a nice way what the danglign commit was (and notice that it might not be just one commit: we only report the "tip of the line" as being dangling, but there might be a whole deep and complex commit history that has gotten dropped - rebasing will do that).

For blobs and trees, you can't do the same, but you can examine them. You can just do

	git show <dangling-blob/tree-sha-goes-here>

to show what the contents of the blob were (or, for a tree, basically what the "ls" for that directory was), and that may give you some idea of what the operation was that left that dangling object.

Usually, dangling blobs and trees aren't very interesting. They're almost always the result of either being a half-way mergebase (the blob will often even have the conflict markers from a merge in it, if you have had conflicting merges that you fixed up by hand), or simply because you interrupted a "git fetch" with ^C or something like that, leaving _some_ of the new objects in the object database, but just dangling and useless.

Anyway, once you are sure that you're not interested in any dangling state, you can just prune all unreachable objects:

	git prune

and they'll be gone. But you should only run "git prune" on a quiescent repository - it's kind of like doing a filesystem fsck recovery: you don't want to do that while the filesystem is mounted.

(The same is true of "git-fsck-objects" itself, btw - but since git-fsck-objects never actually *changes* the repository, it just reports on what it found, git-fsck-objects itself is never "dangerous" to run. Running it while somebody is actually changing the repository can cause confusing and scary messages, but it won't actually do anything bad. In contrast, running "git prune" while somebody is actively changing the repository is a *BAD* idea).

			Linus

begin:vcard
fn:Larry Streepy
n:Streepy;Larry
org:Lightspeed Logic
adr;dom:Building 2, suite 130;;11612 Bee Caves Road;Austin;TX;78738
email;internet:larry@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx
title:Sr. Staff Software Engineer
tel;work:408-616-3292
x-mozilla-html:TRUE
url:http://ww.lightspeed.com
version:2.1
end:vcard


[Index of Archives]     [Linux Kernel Development]     [Gcc Help]     [IETF Annouce]     [DCCP]     [Netdev]     [Networking]     [Security]     [V4L]     [Bugtraq]     [Yosemite]     [MIPS Linux]     [ARM Linux]     [Linux Security]     [Linux RAID]     [Linux SCSI]     [Fedora Users]