On 10/08/19 11:47PM, Farhan Khan wrote: > Hi, > > I am trying to write an implementation of git clone over ssh and am a little confused how to determine a server response has ended. Specifically, after a client sends its requested 'want', the server sends the pack content over. However, how does the client know to stop reading data? If I run a simple read() of the file descriptor: > > A. If I use reading blocking, the client will wait until new data is available, potentially forever. > B. If I use non-blocking, the client might terminate reading for new data, when in reality new data is in transit. > > I do not see a mechanism to specify the size or to indicate the end of the pack content. Am I missing something? Well, I am not very familiar with git-clone internals, but I did some digging around, and I think I know what answer to your problem is. Looking at Documentation/technical/protocol-v2.txt:34, the flush packet indicates the end of a message. Looking in the output section of the fetch command (protocol-v2.txt:342), it sends you some optional sections, and then the packfile and then sends a flush packet. So your read should stop reading data when it sees the flush packet. Another way would be to look at the packfile contents. Looking at Documentation/technical/pack-format.txt, the packfile contains the number of objects in the packfile, and each object entry has the object size. So you can stop reading after you have received the last object in the packfile (plus the 20-byte trailer). I don't know which is the better way, but the former seems like a better choice to me. -- Regards, Pratyush Yadav