Pack heads and tags for efficient repository access
Man Page
Description
Traditionally, tips of branches and tags (collectively known as
refs) were stored one file per ref in a (sub)directory
under $GIT_DIR/refs
directory. While many branch tips tend to be updated often,
most tags and some branch tips are never updated. When a
repository has hundreds or thousands of tags, this
one-file-per-ref format both wastes storage and hurts
performance.
This command is used to solve the storage and performance
problem by storing the refs in a single file,
$GIT_DIR/packed-refs
. When a ref is missing from the
traditional $GIT_DIR/refs
directory hierarchy, it is looked
up in this
file and used if found.
Subsequent updates to branches always create new files under
$GIT_DIR/refs
directory hierarchy.
A recommended practice to deal with a repository with too many
refs is to pack its refs with --all
once, and
occasionally run git pack-refs
. Tags are by
definition stationary and are not expected to change. Branch
heads will be packed with the initial pack-refs --all
, but
only the currently active branch heads will become unpacked,
and the next pack-refs
(without --all
) will leave them
unpacked.
Options
- --all
-
The command by default packs all tags and refs that are already packed, and leaves other refs alone. This is because branches are expected to be actively developed and packing their tips does not help performance. This option causes branch tips to be packed as well. Useful for a repository with many branches of historical interests.
- --no-prune
-
The command usually removes loose refs under
$GIT_DIR/refs
hierarchy after packing them. This option tells it not to.
Bugs
Older documentation written before the packed-refs mechanism was introduced may still say things like ".git/refs/heads/<branch> file exists" when it means "branch <branch> exists".
GIT
Part of the git[1] suite