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This is a general guide for Git LFS clients. Typically it should be
implemented by a command line git-lfs tool, but the details may be useful
for other tools.
The Pointer
The core Git LFS idea is that instead of writing large blobs to a Git repository,
only a pointer file is written.
Pointer files are text files which MUST contain only UTF-8 characters.
Each line MUST be of the format {key} {value}\n (trailing unix newline).
Only a single space character between {key} and {value}.
Keys MUST only use the characters [a-z] [0-9] . -.
The first key is alwaysversion.
Lines of key/value pairs MUST be sorted alphabetically in ascending order
(with the exception of version, which is always first).
Values MUST NOT contain return or newline characters.
Pointer files MUST be stored in Git with their executable bit matching that
of the replaced file.
Pointer files are unique: that is, there is exactly one valid encoding for a
pointer file.
An empty file is the pointer for an empty file. That is, empty files are
passed through LFS without any change.
The required keys are:
version is a URL that identifies the pointer file spec. Parsers MUST use
simple string comparison on the version, without any URL parsing or
normalization. It is case sensitive, and %-encoding is discouraged.
oid tracks the unique object id for the file, prefixed by its hashing
method: {hash-method}:{hash}. Currently, only sha256 is supported. The
hash is lower case hexadecimal.
size is in bytes.
Example of a v1 text pointer:
version https://git-lfs.github.com/spec/v1
oid sha256:4d7a214614ab2935c943f9e0ff69d22eadbb8f32b1258daaa5e2ca24d17e2393
size 12345
(ending \n)
Blobs created with the pre-release version of the tool generated files with
a different version URL. Git LFS can read these files, but writes them using
the version URL above.
version https://hawser.github.com/spec/v1
oid sha256:4d7a214614ab2935c943f9e0ff69d22eadbb8f32b1258daaa5e2ca24d17e2393
size 12345
(ending \n)
For testing compliance of any tool generating its own pointer files, the
reference is this official Git LFS tool:
NOTE: exact pointer command behavior TBD!
Tools that parse and regenerate pointer files MUST preserve keys that they
don't know or care about.
Run the pointer command to generate a pointer file for the given local
file:
$ git lfs pointer --file=path/to/file
Git LFS pointer for path/to/file:
version https://git-lfs.github.com/spec/v1
oid sha256:4d7a214614ab2935c943f9e0ff69d22eadbb8f32b1258daaa5e2ca24d17e2393
size 12345
Run pointer to compare the blob OID of a pointer file built by Git LFS with
a pointer built by another tool.
Write the other implementation's pointer to "other/pointer/file":
$ git lfs pointer --file=path/to/file --pointer=other/pointer/file
Git LFS pointer for path/to/file:
version https://git-lfs.github.com/spec/v1
oid sha256:4d7a214614ab2935c943f9e0ff69d22eadbb8f32b1258daaa5e2ca24d17e2393
size 12345
Blob OID: 60c8d8ab2adcf57a391163a7eeb0cdb8bf348e44
Pointer from other/pointer/file
version https://git-lfs.github.com/spec/v1
oid sha256 4d7a214614ab2935c943f9e0ff69d22eadbb8f32b1258daaa5e2ca24d17e2393
size 12345
Blob OID: 08e593eeaa1b6032e971684825b4b60517e0638d
Pointers do not match
It can also read STDIN to get the other implementation's pointer:
$ cat other/pointer/file | git lfs pointer --file=path/to/file --stdin
Git LFS pointer for path/to/file:
version https://git-lfs.github.com/spec/v1
oid sha256:4d7a214614ab2935c943f9e0ff69d22eadbb8f32b1258daaa5e2ca24d17e2393
size 12345
Blob OID: 60c8d8ab2adcf57a391163a7eeb0cdb8bf348e44
Pointer from STDIN
version https://git-lfs.github.com/spec/v1
oid sha256 4d7a214614ab2935c943f9e0ff69d22eadbb8f32b1258daaa5e2ca24d17e2393
size 12345
Blob OID: 08e593eeaa1b6032e971684825b4b60517e0638d
Pointers do not match
Intercepting Git
Git LFS uses the clean and smudge filters to decide which files use it. The
global filters can be set up with git lfs install:
$ git lfs install
These filters ensure that large files aren't written into the repository proper,
instead being stored locally at .git/lfs/objects/{OID-PATH} (where {OID-PATH}
is a sharded filepath of the form OID[0:2]/OID[2:4]/OID), synchronized with
the Git LFS server as necessary. Here is a sample path to a file:
The clean filter runs as files are added to repositories. Git sends the
content of the file being added as STDIN, and expects the content to write
to Git as STDOUT.
Stream binary content from STDIN to a temp file, while calculating its SHA-256
signature.
Atomically move the temp file to .git/lfs/objects/{OID-PATH} if it does not
exist, and the sha-256 signature of the contents matches the given OID.
Delete the temp file.
Write the pointer file to STDOUT.
Note that the clean filter does not push the file to the server. Use the git push command to do that (lfs files are pushed before commits in a pre-push hook).
The smudge filter runs as files are being checked out from the Git repository
to the working directory. Git sends the content of the Git blob as STDIN, and
expects the content to write to the working directory as STDOUT.
Read 100 bytes.
If the content is ASCII and matches the pointer file format:
Look for the file in .git/lfs/objects/{OID-PATH}.
If it's not there, download it from the server.
Write its contents to STDOUT
Otherwise, simply pass the STDIN out through STDOUT.
The .gitattributes file controls when the filters run. Here's a sample file that
runs all mp3 and zip files through Git LFS:
Git LFS Specification
This is a general guide for Git LFS clients. Typically it should be
implemented by a command line
git-lfs
tool, but the details may be usefulfor other tools.
The Pointer
The core Git LFS idea is that instead of writing large blobs to a Git repository,
only a pointer file is written.
{key} {value}\n
(trailing unix newline).{key}
and{value}
.[a-z] [0-9] . -
.version
.(with the exception of
version
, which is always first).of the replaced file.
pointer file.
An empty file is the pointer for an empty file. That is, empty files are
passed through LFS without any change.
The required keys are:
version
is a URL that identifies the pointer file spec. Parsers MUST usesimple string comparison on the version, without any URL parsing or
normalization. It is case sensitive, and %-encoding is discouraged.
oid
tracks the unique object id for the file, prefixed by its hashingmethod:
{hash-method}:{hash}
. Currently, onlysha256
is supported. Thehash is lower case hexadecimal.
size
is in bytes.Example of a v1 text pointer:
Blobs created with the pre-release version of the tool generated files with
a different version URL. Git LFS can read these files, but writes them using
the version URL above.
For testing compliance of any tool generating its own pointer files, the
reference is this official Git LFS tool:
NOTE: exact pointer command behavior TBD!
Tools that parse and regenerate pointer files MUST preserve keys that they
don't know or care about.
Run the
pointer
command to generate a pointer file for the given localfile:
Run
pointer
to compare the blob OID of a pointer file built by Git LFS witha pointer built by another tool.
Write the other implementation's pointer to "other/pointer/file":
It can also read STDIN to get the other implementation's pointer:
Intercepting Git
Git LFS uses the
clean
andsmudge
filters to decide which files use it. Theglobal filters can be set up with
git lfs install
:These filters ensure that large files aren't written into the repository proper,
instead being stored locally at
.git/lfs/objects/{OID-PATH}
(where{OID-PATH}
is a sharded filepath of the form
OID[0:2]/OID[2:4]/OID
), synchronized withthe Git LFS server as necessary. Here is a sample path to a file:
The
clean
filter runs as files are added to repositories. Git sends thecontent of the file being added as STDIN, and expects the content to write
to Git as STDOUT.
signature.
.git/lfs/objects/{OID-PATH}
if it does notexist, and the sha-256 signature of the contents matches the given OID.
Note that the
clean
filter does not push the file to the server. Use thegit push
command to do that (lfs files are pushed before commits in a pre-push hook).The
smudge
filter runs as files are being checked out from the Git repositoryto the working directory. Git sends the content of the Git blob as STDIN, and
expects the content to write to the working directory as STDOUT.
.git/lfs/objects/{OID-PATH}
.The
.gitattributes
file controls when the filters run. Here's a sample file thatruns all mp3 and zip files through Git LFS:
Use the
git lfs track
command to view and add to.gitattributes
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