Thank you :) On 1/10/14, Thomas Gummerer <t.gummerer@xxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > Hi, > > Enno Weichert <enno.weichert@xxxxxxxxx> writes: >> Hi, >> >> I'd like to have a more technical look into the index file and what/how >> it >> stores data; call it educational spelunking. >> >> I know the index-format.txt but I'd really like to save me the work to >> implement a pretty-printed output based on it. >> I know ls-files but that's obviously not the whole thing. >> >> So: is there something like cat-file, that basically gives me a readable >> version of the information (version number and all...) in the index >> already >> implemented or did nobody care until now? > > You can use `git ls-files --debug` and `git ls-files --stage` to get all > the information about the files in the index. The meaning of the flags > is the only thing that's not shown by the command, and I don't think > there is a tool yet to examine them. > > The undocumented --resolve-undo flag to git ls-files shows you the > resolve undo data that is stored in the index. > > If you build git yourself, the `test-dump-cache-tree` helper can be used > to show all information about the cache-tree that is stored in the > index. > > The you can get the version of the index either by using > `test-index-version` when you build git yourself, or by using `file > .git/index`, which in addition will give you the number of entries that > are in the index. > > -- > Thomas > -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe git" in the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html