As amusing as Linus's original prose[1] is here it doesn't really explain in any detail to the uninitiated why you would or wouldn't enable this, and the counter-intuitive reason for why git wouldn't fsync your precious data. So elaborate (a lot) on why this may or may not be needed. This is my best-effort attempt to summarize the various points raised in the last ML[2] discussion about this. 1. aafe9fbaf4 ("Add config option to enable 'fsync()' of object files", 2008-06-18) 2. https://lore.kernel.org/git/20180117184828.31816-1-hch@xxxxxx/ Signed-off-by: Ævar Arnfjörð Bjarmason <avarab@xxxxxxxxx> --- Documentation/config/core.txt | 42 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++----- 1 file changed, 36 insertions(+), 6 deletions(-) diff --git a/Documentation/config/core.txt b/Documentation/config/core.txt index 74619a9c03..5b47670c16 100644 --- a/Documentation/config/core.txt +++ b/Documentation/config/core.txt @@ -548,12 +548,42 @@ core.whitespace:: errors. The default tab width is 8. Allowed values are 1 to 63. core.fsyncObjectFiles:: - This boolean will enable 'fsync()' when writing object files. -+ -This is a total waste of time and effort on a filesystem that orders -data writes properly, but can be useful for filesystems that do not use -journalling (traditional UNIX filesystems) or that only journal metadata -and not file contents (OS X's HFS+, or Linux ext3 with "data=writeback"). + This boolean will enable 'fsync()' when writing loose object + files. Both the file itself and its containng directory will + be fsynced. ++ +When git writes data any required object writes will precede the +corresponding reference update(s). For example, a +linkgit:git-receive-pack[1] accepting a push might write a pack or +loose objects (depending on settings such as `transfer.unpackLimit`). ++ +Therefore on a journaled file system which ensures that data is +flushed to disk in chronological order an fsync shouldn't be +needed. The loose objects might be lost with a crash, but so will the +ref update that would have referenced them. Git's own state in such a +crash will remain consistent. ++ +This option exists because that assumption doesn't hold on filesystems +where the data ordering is not preserved, such as on ext3 and ext4 +with "data=writeback". On such a filesystem the `rename()` that drops +the new reference in place might be preserved, but the contents or +directory entry for the loose object(s) might not have been synced to +disk. ++ +Enabling this option might slow git down by a lot in some +cases. E.g. in the case of a naïve bulk import tool which might create +a million loose objects before a final ref update and `gc`. In other +more common cases such as on a server being pushed to with default +`transfer.unpackLimit` settings the difference might not be noticable. ++ +However, that's highly filesystem-dependent, on some filesystems +simply calling fsync() might force an unrelated bulk background write +to be serialized to disk. Such edge cases are the reason this option +is off by default. That default setting might change in future +versions. ++ +In older versions of git only the descriptor for the file itself was +fsynced, not its directory entry. core.preloadIndex:: Enable parallel index preload for operations like 'git diff' -- 2.28.0.297.g1956fa8f8d