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NAME | SYNOPSIS | DESCRIPTION | OPTIONS | CONFIGURATION | DISCUSSION | EXTRACTED DIAGNOSTICS | ENVIRONMENT VARIABLES | GIT | COLOPHON |
GIT-FSCK(1) Git Manual GIT-FSCK(1)
git-fsck - Verifies the connectivity and validity of the objects in
the database
git fsck [--tags] [--root] [--unreachable] [--cache] [--no-reflogs]
[--[no-]full] [--strict] [--verbose] [--lost-found]
[--[no-]dangling] [--[no-]progress] [--connectivity-only]
[--[no-]name-objects] [<object>*]
Verifies the connectivity and validity of the objects in the
database.
<object>
An object to treat as the head of an unreachability trace.
If no objects are given, git fsck defaults to using the index
file, all SHA-1 references in refs namespace, and all reflogs
(unless --no-reflogs is given) as heads.
--unreachable
Print out objects that exist but that aren’t reachable from any
of the reference nodes.
--[no-]dangling
Print objects that exist but that are never directly used
(default). --no-dangling can be used to omit this information
from the output.
--root
Report root nodes.
--tags
Report tags.
--cache
Consider any object recorded in the index also as a head node for
an unreachability trace.
--no-reflogs
Do not consider commits that are referenced only by an entry in a
reflog to be reachable. This option is meant only to search for
commits that used to be in a ref, but now aren’t, but are still
in that corresponding reflog.
--full
Check not just objects in GIT_OBJECT_DIRECTORY
($GIT_DIR/objects), but also the ones found in alternate object
pools listed in GIT_ALTERNATE_OBJECT_DIRECTORIES or
$GIT_DIR/objects/info/alternates, and in packed Git archives
found in $GIT_DIR/objects/pack and corresponding pack
subdirectories in alternate object pools. This is now default;
you can turn it off with --no-full.
--connectivity-only
Check only the connectivity of reachable objects, making sure
that any objects referenced by a reachable tag, commit, or tree
is present. This speeds up the operation by avoiding reading
blobs entirely (though it does still check that referenced blobs
exist). This will detect corruption in commits and trees, but not
do any semantic checks (e.g., for format errors). Corruption in
blob objects will not be detected at all.
Unreachable tags, commits, and trees will also be accessed to
find the tips of dangling segments of history. Use --no-dangling
if you don’t care about this output and want to speed it up
further.
--strict
Enable more strict checking, namely to catch a file mode recorded
with g+w bit set, which was created by older versions of Git.
Existing repositories, including the Linux kernel, Git itself,
and sparse repository have old objects that triggers this check,
but it is recommended to check new projects with this flag.
--verbose
Be chatty.
--lost-found
Write dangling objects into .git/lost-found/commit/ or
.git/lost-found/other/, depending on type. If the object is a
blob, the contents are written into the file, rather than its
object name.
--name-objects
When displaying names of reachable objects, in addition to the
SHA-1 also display a name that describes how they are reachable,
compatible with git-rev-parse(1), e.g.
HEAD@{1234567890}~25^2:src/.
--[no-]progress
Progress status is reported on the standard error stream by
default when it is attached to a terminal, unless --no-progress
or --verbose is specified. --progress forces progress status even
if the standard error stream is not directed to a terminal.
fsck.<msg-id>
During fsck git may find issues with legacy data which wouldn’t
be generated by current versions of git, and which wouldn’t be
sent over the wire if transfer.fsckObjects was set. This feature
is intended to support working with legacy repositories
containing such data.
Setting fsck.<msg-id> will be picked up by git-fsck(1), but to
accept pushes of such data set receive.fsck.<msg-id> instead, or
to clone or fetch it set fetch.fsck.<msg-id>.
The rest of the documentation discusses fsck.* for brevity, but
the same applies for the corresponding receive.fsck.* and
fetch.<msg-id>.*. variables.
Unlike variables like color.ui and core.editor the
receive.fsck.<msg-id> and fetch.fsck.<msg-id> variables will not
fall back on the fsck.<msg-id> configuration if they aren’t set.
To uniformly configure the same fsck settings in different
circumstances all three of them they must all set to the same
values.
When fsck.<msg-id> is set, errors can be switched to warnings and
vice versa by configuring the fsck.<msg-id> setting where the
<msg-id> is the fsck message ID and the value is one of error,
warn or ignore. For convenience, fsck prefixes the error/warning
with the message ID, e.g. "missingEmail: invalid author/committer
line - missing email" means that setting fsck.missingEmail =
ignore will hide that issue.
In general, it is better to enumerate existing objects with
problems with fsck.skipList, instead of listing the kind of
breakages these problematic objects share to be ignored, as doing
the latter will allow new instances of the same breakages go
unnoticed.
Setting an unknown fsck.<msg-id> value will cause fsck to die,
but doing the same for receive.fsck.<msg-id> and
fetch.fsck.<msg-id> will only cause git to warn.
fsck.skipList
The path to a list of object names (i.e. one unabbreviated SHA-1
per line) that are known to be broken in a non-fatal way and
should be ignored. On versions of Git 2.20 and later comments
(#), empty lines, and any leading and trailing whitespace is
ignored. Everything but a SHA-1 per line will error out on older
versions.
This feature is useful when an established project should be
accepted despite early commits containing errors that can be
safely ignored such as invalid committer email addresses. Note:
corrupt objects cannot be skipped with this setting.
Like fsck.<msg-id> this variable has corresponding
receive.fsck.skipList and fetch.fsck.skipList variants.
Unlike variables like color.ui and core.editor the
receive.fsck.skipList and fetch.fsck.skipList variables will not
fall back on the fsck.skipList configuration if they aren’t set.
To uniformly configure the same fsck settings in different
circumstances all three of them they must all set to the same
values.
Older versions of Git (before 2.20) documented that the object
names list should be sorted. This was never a requirement, the
object names could appear in any order, but when reading the list
we tracked whether the list was sorted for the purposes of an
internal binary search implementation, which could save itself
some work with an already sorted list. Unless you had a humongous
list there was no reason to go out of your way to pre-sort the
list. After Git version 2.20 a hash implementation is used
instead, so there’s now no reason to pre-sort the list.
git-fsck tests SHA-1 and general object sanity, and it does full
tracking of the resulting reachability and everything else. It prints
out any corruption it finds (missing or bad objects), and if you use
the --unreachable flag it will also print out objects that exist but
that aren’t reachable from any of the specified head nodes (or the
default set, as mentioned above).
Any corrupt objects you will have to find in backups or other
archives (i.e., you can just remove them and do an rsync with some
other site in the hopes that somebody else has the object you have
corrupted).
If core.commitGraph is true, the commit-graph file will also be
inspected using git commit-graph verify. See git-commit-graph(1).
expect dangling commits - potential heads - due to lack of head
information
You haven’t specified any nodes as heads so it won’t be possible
to differentiate between un-parented commits and root nodes.
missing sha1 directory <dir>
The directory holding the sha1 objects is missing.
unreachable <type> <object>
The <type> object <object>, isn’t actually referred to directly
or indirectly in any of the trees or commits seen. This can mean
that there’s another root node that you’re not specifying or that
the tree is corrupt. If you haven’t missed a root node then you
might as well delete unreachable nodes since they can’t be used.
missing <type> <object>
The <type> object <object>, is referred to but isn’t present in
the database.
dangling <type> <object>
The <type> object <object>, is present in the database but never
directly used. A dangling commit could be a root node.
hash mismatch <object>
The database has an object whose hash doesn’t match the object
database value. This indicates a serious data integrity problem.
GIT_OBJECT_DIRECTORY
used to specify the object database root (usually
$GIT_DIR/objects)
GIT_INDEX_FILE
used to specify the index file of the index
GIT_ALTERNATE_OBJECT_DIRECTORIES
used to specify additional object database roots (usually unset)
Part of the git(1) suite
This page is part of the git (Git distributed version control system)
project. Information about the project can be found at
⟨http://git-scm.com/⟩. If you have a bug report for this manual page,
see ⟨http://git-scm.com/community⟩. This page was obtained from the
project's upstream Git repository ⟨https://github.com/git/git.git⟩ on
2020-08-13. (At that time, the date of the most recent commit that
was found in the repository was 2020-08-11.) If you discover any
rendering problems in this HTML version of the page, or you believe
there is a better or more up-to-date source for the page, or you have
corrections or improvements to the information in this COLOPHON
(which is not part of the original manual page), send a mail to
man-pages@man7.org
Git 2.28.0.202.g7814e8 08/12/2020 GIT-FSCK(1)
Pages that refer to this page: git(1) , git-config(1) , git-fsck(1) , git-fsck-objects(1) , git-prune(1)