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NAMEgit-maintenance - Run tasks to optimize Git repository data SYNOPSISgit maintenance run [<options>] git maintenance start [--scheduler=<scheduler>] git maintenance (stop|register|unregister) [<options>] DESCRIPTIONRun tasks to optimize Git repository data, speeding up other Git commands and reducing storage requirements for the repository. Git commands that add repository data, such as git add or git fetch, are optimized for a responsive user experience. These commands do not take time to optimize the Git data, since such optimizations scale with the full size of the repository while these user commands each perform a relatively small action. The git maintenance command provides flexibility for how to optimize the Git repository. SUBCOMMANDSrun Run one or more maintenance tasks. If one or more
--task options are specified, then those tasks are run in that order.
Otherwise, the tasks are determined by which
maintenance.<task>.enabled config options are true.
By default, only maintenance.gc.enabled is true.
start Start running maintenance on the current repository. This
performs the same config updates as the register subcommand, then
updates the background scheduler to run git maintenance
run --scheduled on an hourly basis.
stop Halt the background maintenance schedule. The current
repository is not removed from the list of maintained repositories, in case
the background maintenance is restarted later.
register Initialize Git config values so any scheduled maintenance
will start running on this repository. This adds the repository to the
maintenance.repo config variable in the current user’s global
config, or the config specified by --config-file option, and enables some
recommended configuration values for
maintenance.<task>.schedule. The tasks that are
enabled are safe for running in the background without disrupting foreground
processes.
The register subcommand will also set the maintenance.strategy config value to incremental, if this value is not previously set. The incremental strategy uses the following schedule for each maintenance task: •gc: disabled.
•commit-graph: hourly.
•prefetch: hourly.
•loose-objects: daily.
•incremental-repack: daily.
git maintenance register will also disable foreground maintenance by setting maintenance.auto = false in the current repository. This config setting will remain after a git maintenance unregister command. unregister Remove the current repository from background
maintenance. This only removes the repository from the configured list. It
does not stop the background maintenance processes from running.
The unregister subcommand will report an error if the current repository is not already registered. Use the --force option to return success even when the current repository is not registered. TASKScommit-graph The commit-graph job updates the
commit-graph files incrementally, then verifies that the written data
is correct. The incremental write is safe to run alongside concurrent Git
processes since it will not expire .graph files that were in the
previous commit-graph-chain file. They will be deleted by a later run
based on the expiration delay.
prefetch The prefetch task updates the object directory
with the latest objects from all registered remotes. For each remote, a
git fetch command is run. The configured refspec is modified to
place all requested refs within refs/prefetch/. Also, tags are not
updated.
This is done to avoid disrupting the remote-tracking branches. The end users expect these refs to stay unmoved unless they initiate a fetch. However, with the prefetch task, the objects necessary to complete a later real fetch would already be obtained, making the real fetch faster. In the ideal case, it will just become an update to a bunch of remote-tracking branches without any object transfer. The remote.<name>.skipFetchAll configuration can be used to exclude a particular remote from getting prefetched. gc Clean up unnecessary files and optimize the local
repository. "GC" stands for "garbage collection," but this
task performs many smaller tasks. This task can be expensive for large
repositories, as it repacks all Git objects into a single pack-file. It can
also be disruptive in some situations, as it deletes stale data. See
git-gc(1) for more details on garbage collection in Git.
loose-objects The loose-objects job cleans up loose objects and
places them into pack-files. In order to prevent race conditions with
concurrent Git commands, it follows a two-step process. First, it deletes any
loose objects that already exist in a pack-file; concurrent Git processes will
examine the pack-file for the object data instead of the loose object. Second,
it creates a new pack-file (starting with "loose-") containing a
batch of loose objects.
The batch size defaults to fifty thousand objects to prevent the job from taking too long on a repository with many loose objects. Use the maintenance.loose-objects.batchSize config option to adjust this size, including a value of 0 to remove the limit. The gc task writes unreachable objects as loose objects to be cleaned up by a later step only if they are not re-added to a pack-file; for this reason it is not advisable to enable both the loose-objects and gc tasks at the same time. incremental-repack The incremental-repack job repacks the object
directory using the multi-pack-index feature. In order to prevent race
conditions with concurrent Git commands, it follows a two-step process. First,
it calls git multi-pack-index expire to delete pack-files
unreferenced by the multi-pack-index file. Second, it calls git
multi-pack-index repack to select several small pack-files and
repack them into a bigger one, and then update the multi-pack-index
entries that refer to the small pack-files to refer to the new pack-file. This
prepares those small pack-files for deletion upon the next run of git
multi-pack-index expire. The selection of the small pack-files
is such that the expected size of the big pack-file is at least the batch
size; see the --batch-size option for the repack subcommand in
git-multi-pack-index(1). The default batch-size is zero, which is a
special case that attempts to repack all pack-files into a single
pack-file.
pack-refs The pack-refs task collects the loose reference
files and collects them into a single file. This speeds up operations that
need to iterate across many references. See git-pack-refs(1) for more
information.
reflog-expire The reflog-expire task deletes any entries in the
reflog older than the expiry threshold. See git-reflog(1) for more
information.
rerere-gc The rerere-gc task invokes garbage collection for
stale entries in the rerere cache. See git-rerere(1) for more
information.
worktree-prune The worktree-prune task deletes stale or broken
worktrees. See git-worktree(1) for more information.
OPTIONS--auto When combined with the run subcommand, run
maintenance tasks only if certain thresholds are met. For example, the
gc task runs when the number of loose objects exceeds the number stored
in the gc.auto config setting, or when the number of pack-files exceeds
the gc.autoPackLimit config setting. Not compatible with the
--schedule option.
--schedule When combined with the run subcommand, run
maintenance tasks only if certain time conditions are met, as specified by the
maintenance.<task>.schedule config value for each
<task>. This config value specifies a number of seconds since the
last time that task ran, according to the
maintenance.<task>.lastRun config value. The tasks
that are tested are those provided by the --task=<task>
option(s) or those with maintenance.<task>.enabled
set to true.
--quiet Do not report progress or other information over
stderr.
--task=<task> If this option is specified one or more times, then only
run the specified tasks in the specified order. If no
--task=<task> arguments are specified, then only the tasks
with maintenance.<task>.enabled configured as
true are considered. See the TASKS section for the list of
accepted <task> values.
--scheduler=auto|crontab|systemd-timer|launchctl|schtasks When combined with the start subcommand, specify
the scheduler for running the hourly, daily and weekly executions of
git maintenance run. Possible values for
<scheduler> are auto, crontab (POSIX),
systemd-timer (Linux), launchctl (macOS), and schtasks
(Windows). When auto is specified, the appropriate platform-specific
scheduler is used; on Linux, systemd-timer is used if available,
otherwise crontab. Default is auto.
TROUBLESHOOTINGThe git maintenance command is designed to simplify the repository maintenance patterns while minimizing user wait time during Git commands. A variety of configuration options are available to allow customizing this process. The default maintenance options focus on operations that complete quickly, even on large repositories. Users may find some cases where scheduled maintenance tasks do not run as frequently as intended. Each git maintenance run command takes a lock on the repository’s object database, and this prevents other concurrent git maintenance run commands from running on the same repository. Without this safeguard, competing processes could leave the repository in an unpredictable state. The background maintenance schedule runs git maintenance run processes on an hourly basis. Each run executes the "hourly" tasks. At midnight, that process also executes the "daily" tasks. At midnight on the first day of the week, that process also executes the "weekly" tasks. A single process iterates over each registered repository, performing the scheduled tasks for that frequency. The processes are scheduled to a random minute of the hour per client to spread out the load that multiple clients might generate (e.g. from prefetching). Depending on the number of registered repositories and their sizes, this process may take longer than an hour. In this case, multiple git maintenance run commands may run on the same repository at the same time, colliding on the object database lock. This results in one of the two tasks not running. If you find that some maintenance windows are taking longer than one hour to complete, then consider reducing the complexity of your maintenance tasks. For example, the gc task is much slower than the incremental-repack task. However, this comes at a cost of a slightly larger object database. Consider moving more expensive tasks to be run less frequently. Expert users may consider scheduling their own maintenance tasks using a different schedule than is available through git maintenance start and Git configuration options. These users should be aware of the object database lock and how concurrent git maintenance run commands behave. Further, the git gc command should not be combined with git maintenance run commands. git gc modifies the object database but does not take the lock in the same way as git maintenance run. If possible, use git maintenance run --task=gc instead of git gc. The following sections describe the mechanisms put in place to run background maintenance by git maintenance start and how to customize them. BACKGROUND MAINTENANCE ON POSIX SYSTEMSThe standard mechanism for scheduling background tasks on POSIX systems is cron(8). This tool executes commands based on a given schedule. The current list of user-scheduled tasks can be found by running crontab -l. The schedule written by git maintenance start is similar to this: # BEGIN GIT MAINTENANCE SCHEDULE # The following schedule was created by Git # Any edits made in this region might be # replaced in the future by a Git command. 0 1-23 * * * "/<path>/git" --exec-path="/<path>" for-each-repo --config=maintenance.repo maintenance run --schedule=hourly 0 0 * * 1-6 "/<path>/git" --exec-path="/<path>" for-each-repo --config=maintenance.repo maintenance run --schedule=daily 0 0 * * 0 "/<path>/git" --exec-path="/<path>" for-each-repo --config=maintenance.repo maintenance run --schedule=weekly # END GIT MAINTENANCE SCHEDULE The comments are used as a region to mark the schedule as written by Git. Any modifications within this region will be completely deleted by git maintenance stop or overwritten by git maintenance start. The crontab entry specifies the full path of the git executable to ensure that the executed git command is the same one with which git maintenance start was issued independent of PATH. If the same user runs git maintenance start with multiple Git executables, then only the latest executable is used. These commands use git for-each-repo --config=maintenance.repo to run git maintenance run --schedule=<frequency> on each repository listed in the multi-valued maintenance.repo config option. These are typically loaded from the user-specific global config. The git maintenance process then determines which maintenance tasks are configured to run on each repository with each <frequency> using the maintenance.<task>.schedule config options. These values are loaded from the global or repository config values. If the config values are insufficient to achieve your desired background maintenance schedule, then you can create your own schedule. If you run crontab -e, then an editor will load with your user-specific cron schedule. In that editor, you can add your own schedule lines. You could start by adapting the default schedule listed earlier, or you could read the crontab(5) documentation for advanced scheduling techniques. Please do use the full path and --exec-path techniques from the default schedule to ensure you are executing the correct binaries in your schedule. BACKGROUND MAINTENANCE ON LINUX SYSTEMD SYSTEMSWhile Linux supports cron, depending on the distribution, cron may be an optional package not necessarily installed. On modern Linux distributions, systemd timers are superseding it. If user systemd timers are available, they will be used as a replacement of cron. In this case, git maintenance start will create user systemd timer units and start the timers. The current list of user-scheduled tasks can be found by running systemctl --user list-timers. The timers written by git maintenance start are similar to this: $ systemctl --user list-timers NEXT LEFT LAST PASSED UNIT ACTIVATES Thu 2021-04-29 19:00:00 CEST 42min left Thu 2021-04-29 18:00:11 CEST 17min ago git-maintenance@hourly.timer git-maintenance@hourly.service Fri 2021-04-30 00:00:00 CEST 5h 42min left Thu 2021-04-29 00:00:11 CEST 18h ago git-maintenance@daily.timer git-maintenance@daily.service Mon 2021-05-03 00:00:00 CEST 3 days left Mon 2021-04-26 00:00:11 CEST 3 days ago git-maintenance@weekly.timer git-maintenance@weekly.service One timer is registered for each --schedule=<frequency> option. The definition of the systemd units can be inspected in the following files: ~/.config/systemd/user/git-maintenance@.timer ~/.config/systemd/user/git-maintenance@.service ~/.config/systemd/user/timers.target.wants/git-maintenance@hourly.timer ~/.config/systemd/user/timers.target.wants/git-maintenance@daily.timer ~/.config/systemd/user/timers.target.wants/git-maintenance@weekly.timer git maintenance start will overwrite these files and start the timer again with systemctl --user, so any customization should be done by creating a drop-in file, i.e. a .conf suffixed file in the ~/.config/systemd/user/git-maintenance@.service.d directory. git maintenance stop will stop the user systemd timers and delete the above mentioned files. For more details, see systemd.timer(5). BACKGROUND MAINTENANCE ON MACOS SYSTEMSWhile macOS technically supports cron, using crontab -e requires elevated privileges and the executed process does not have a full user context. Without a full user context, Git and its credential helpers cannot access stored credentials, so some maintenance tasks are not functional. Instead, git maintenance start interacts with the launchctl tool, which is the recommended way to schedule timed jobs in macOS. Scheduling maintenance through git maintenance (start|stop) requires some launchctl features available only in macOS 10.11 or later. Your user-specific scheduled tasks are stored as XML-formatted .plist files in ~/Library/LaunchAgents/. You can see the currently-registered tasks using the following command: $ ls ~/Library/LaunchAgents/org.git-scm.git* org.git-scm.git.daily.plist org.git-scm.git.hourly.plist org.git-scm.git.weekly.plist One task is registered for each --schedule=<frequency> option. To inspect how the XML format describes each schedule, open one of these .plist files in an editor and inspect the <array> element following the <key>StartCalendarInterval</key> element. git maintenance start will overwrite these files and register the tasks again with launchctl, so any customizations should be done by creating your own .plist files with distinct names. Similarly, the git maintenance stop command will unregister the tasks with launchctl and delete the .plist files. To create more advanced customizations to your background tasks, see launchctl.plist(5) for more information. BACKGROUND MAINTENANCE ON WINDOWS SYSTEMSWindows does not support cron and instead has its own system for scheduling background tasks. The git maintenance start command uses the schtasks command to submit tasks to this system. You can inspect all background tasks using the Task Scheduler application. The tasks added by Git have names of the form Git Maintenance (<frequency>). The Task Scheduler GUI has ways to inspect these tasks, but you can also export the tasks to XML files and view the details there. Note that since Git is a console application, these background tasks create a console window visible to the current user. This can be changed manually by selecting the "Run whether user is logged in or not" option in Task Scheduler. This change requires a password input, which is why git maintenance start does not select it by default. If you want to customize the background tasks, please rename the tasks so future calls to git maintenance (start|stop) do not overwrite your custom tasks. CONFIGURATIONEverything below this line in this section is selectively included from the git-config(1) documentation. The content is the same as what’s found there: maintenance.auto This boolean config option controls whether some commands
run git maintenance run --auto after doing their
normal work. Defaults to true.
maintenance.autoDetach Many Git commands trigger automatic maintenance after
they have written data into the repository. This boolean config option
controls whether this automatic maintenance shall happen in the foreground or
whether the maintenance process shall detach and continue to run in the
background.
If unset, the value of gc.autoDetach is used as a fallback. Defaults to true if both are unset, meaning that the maintenance process will detach. maintenance.strategy This string config option provides a way to specify one
of a few recommended schedules for background maintenance. This only affects
which tasks are run during git maintenance run
--schedule=X commands, provided no --task=<task>
arguments are provided. Further, if a
maintenance.<task>.schedule config value is set,
then that value is used instead of the one provided by
maintenance.strategy. The possible strategy strings are:
•none: This default setting implies no
tasks are run at any schedule.
•incremental: This setting optimizes for
performing small maintenance activities that do not delete any data. This does
not schedule the gc task, but runs the prefetch and
commit-graph tasks hourly, the loose-objects and
incremental-repack tasks daily, and the pack-refs task
weekly.
maintenance.<task>.enabled This boolean config option controls whether the
maintenance task with name <task> is run when no --task
option is specified to git maintenance run. These config
values are ignored if a --task option exists. By default, only
maintenance.gc.enabled is true.
maintenance.<task>.schedule This config option controls whether or not the given
<task> runs during a git maintenance run
--schedule=<frequency> command. The value must be one of
"hourly", "daily", or "weekly".
maintenance.commit-graph.auto This integer config option controls how often the
commit-graph task should be run as part of git
maintenance run --auto. If zero, then the
commit-graph task will not run with the --auto option. A
negative value will force the task to run every time. Otherwise, a positive
value implies the command should run when the number of reachable commits that
are not in the commit-graph file is at least the value of
maintenance.commit-graph.auto. The default value is 100.
maintenance.loose-objects.auto This integer config option controls how often the
loose-objects task should be run as part of git
maintenance run --auto. If zero, then the
loose-objects task will not run with the --auto option. A
negative value will force the task to run every time. Otherwise, a positive
value implies the command should run when the number of loose objects is at
least the value of maintenance.loose-objects.auto. The default value is
100.
maintenance.loose-objects.batchSize This integer config option controls the maximum number of
loose objects written into a packfile during the loose-objects task.
The default is fifty thousand. Use value 0 to indicate no limit.
maintenance.incremental-repack.auto This integer config option controls how often the
incremental-repack task should be run as part of git
maintenance run --auto. If zero, then the
incremental-repack task will not run with the --auto option. A
negative value will force the task to run every time. Otherwise, a positive
value implies the command should run when the number of pack-files not in the
multi-pack-index is at least the value of
maintenance.incremental-repack.auto. The default value is 10.
maintenance.reflog-expire.auto This integer config option controls how often the
reflog-expire task should be run as part of git
maintenance run --auto. If zero, then the
reflog-expire task will not run with the --auto option. A
negative value will force the task to run every time. Otherwise, a positive
value implies the command should run when the number of expired reflog entries
in the "HEAD" reflog is at least the value of
maintenance.loose-objects.auto. The default value is 100.
maintenance.rerere-gc.auto This integer config option controls how often the
rerere-gc task should be run as part of git maintenance
run --auto. If zero, then the rerere-gc task will not run
with the --auto option. A negative value will force the task to run
every time. Otherwise, any positive value implies the command will run when
the "rr-cache" directory exists and has at least one entry,
regardless of whether it is stale or not. This heuristic may be refined in the
future. The default value is 1.
maintenance.worktree-prune.auto This integer config option controls how often the
worktree-prune task should be run as part of git
maintenance run --auto. If zero, then the
worktree-prune task will not run with the --auto option. A
negative value will force the task to run every time. Otherwise, a positive
value implies the command should run when the number of prunable worktrees
exceeds the value. The default value is 1.
GITPart of the git(1) suite
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