| git-sparse-checkout(1) |
| ====================== |
| |
| NAME |
| ---- |
| git-sparse-checkout - Reduce your working tree to a subset of tracked files |
| |
| |
| SYNOPSIS |
| -------- |
| [verse] |
| 'git sparse-checkout' (init | list | set | add | reapply | disable | check-rules) [<options>] |
| |
| |
| DESCRIPTION |
| ----------- |
| |
| This command is used to create sparse checkouts, which change the |
| working tree from having all tracked files present to only having a |
| subset of those files. It can also switch which subset of files are |
| present, or undo and go back to having all tracked files present in |
| the working copy. |
| |
| The subset of files is chosen by providing a list of directories in |
| cone mode (the default), or by providing a list of patterns in |
| non-cone mode. |
| |
| When in a sparse-checkout, other Git commands behave a bit differently. |
| For example, switching branches will not update paths outside the |
| sparse-checkout directories/patterns, and `git commit -a` will not record |
| paths outside the sparse-checkout directories/patterns as deleted. |
| |
| THIS COMMAND IS EXPERIMENTAL. ITS BEHAVIOR, AND THE BEHAVIOR OF OTHER |
| COMMANDS IN THE PRESENCE OF SPARSE-CHECKOUTS, WILL LIKELY CHANGE IN |
| THE FUTURE. |
| |
| |
| COMMANDS |
| -------- |
| 'list':: |
| Describe the directories or patterns in the sparse-checkout file. |
| |
| 'set':: |
| Enable the necessary sparse-checkout config settings |
| (`core.sparseCheckout`, `core.sparseCheckoutCone`, and |
| `index.sparse`) if they are not already set to the desired values, |
| populate the sparse-checkout file from the list of arguments |
| following the 'set' subcommand, and update the working directory to |
| match. |
| + |
| To ensure that adjusting the sparse-checkout settings within a worktree |
| does not alter the sparse-checkout settings in other worktrees, the 'set' |
| subcommand will upgrade your repository config to use worktree-specific |
| config if not already present. The sparsity defined by the arguments to |
| the 'set' subcommand are stored in the worktree-specific sparse-checkout |
| file. See linkgit:git-worktree[1] and the documentation of |
| `extensions.worktreeConfig` in linkgit:git-config[1] for more details. |
| + |
| When the `--stdin` option is provided, the directories or patterns are |
| read from standard in as a newline-delimited list instead of from the |
| arguments. |
| + |
| By default, the input list is considered a list of directories, matching |
| the output of `git ls-tree -d --name-only`. This includes interpreting |
| pathnames that begin with a double quote (") as C-style quoted strings. |
| Note that all files under the specified directories (at any depth) will |
| be included in the sparse checkout, as well as files that are siblings |
| of either the given directory or any of its ancestors (see 'CONE PATTERN |
| SET' below for more details). In the past, this was not the default, |
| and `--cone` needed to be specified or `core.sparseCheckoutCone` needed |
| to be enabled. |
| + |
| When `--no-cone` is passed, the input list is considered a list of |
| patterns. This mode has a number of drawbacks, including not working |
| with some options like `--sparse-index`. As explained in the |
| "Non-cone Problems" section below, we do not recommend using it. |
| + |
| Use the `--[no-]sparse-index` option to use a sparse index (the |
| default is to not use it). A sparse index reduces the size of the |
| index to be more closely aligned with your sparse-checkout |
| definition. This can have significant performance advantages for |
| commands such as `git status` or `git add`. This feature is still |
| experimental. Some commands might be slower with a sparse index until |
| they are properly integrated with the feature. |
| + |
| **WARNING:** Using a sparse index requires modifying the index in a way |
| that is not completely understood by external tools. If you have trouble |
| with this compatibility, then run `git sparse-checkout init --no-sparse-index` |
| to rewrite your index to not be sparse. Older versions of Git will not |
| understand the sparse directory entries index extension and may fail to |
| interact with your repository until it is disabled. |
| |
| 'add':: |
| Update the sparse-checkout file to include additional directories |
| (in cone mode) or patterns (in non-cone mode). By default, these |
| directories or patterns are read from the command-line arguments, |
| but they can be read from stdin using the `--stdin` option. |
| |
| 'reapply':: |
| Reapply the sparsity pattern rules to paths in the working tree. |
| Commands like merge or rebase can materialize paths to do their |
| work (e.g. in order to show you a conflict), and other |
| sparse-checkout commands might fail to sparsify an individual file |
| (e.g. because it has unstaged changes or conflicts). In such |
| cases, it can make sense to run `git sparse-checkout reapply` later |
| after cleaning up affected paths (e.g. resolving conflicts, undoing |
| or committing changes, etc.). |
| + |
| The `reapply` command can also take `--[no-]cone` and `--[no-]sparse-index` |
| flags, with the same meaning as the flags from the `set` command, in order |
| to change which sparsity mode you are using without needing to also respecify |
| all sparsity paths. |
| |
| 'disable':: |
| Disable the `core.sparseCheckout` config setting, and restore the |
| working directory to include all files. |
| |
| 'init':: |
| Deprecated command that behaves like `set` with no specified paths. |
| May be removed in the future. |
| + |
| Historically, `set` did not handle all the necessary config settings, |
| which meant that both `init` and `set` had to be called. Invoking |
| both meant the `init` step would first remove nearly all tracked files |
| (and in cone mode, ignored files too), then the `set` step would add |
| many of the tracked files (but not ignored files) back. In addition |
| to the lost files, the performance and UI of this combination was |
| poor. |
| + |
| Also, historically, `init` would not actually initialize the |
| sparse-checkout file if it already existed. This meant it was |
| possible to return to a sparse-checkout without remembering which |
| paths to pass to a subsequent 'set' or 'add' command. However, |
| `--cone` and `--sparse-index` options would not be remembered across |
| the disable command, so the easy restore of calling a plain `init` |
| decreased in utility. |
| |
| 'check-rules':: |
| Check whether sparsity rules match one or more paths. |
| + |
| By default `check-rules` reads a list of paths from stdin and outputs only |
| the ones that match the current sparsity rules. The input is expected to consist |
| of one path per line, matching the output of `git ls-tree --name-only` including |
| that pathnames that begin with a double quote (") are interpreted as C-style |
| quoted strings. |
| + |
| When called with the `--rules-file <file>` flag the input files are matched |
| against the sparse checkout rules found in `<file>` instead of the current ones. |
| The rules in the files are expected to be in the same form as accepted by `git |
| sparse-checkout set --stdin` (in particular, they must be newline-delimited). |
| + |
| By default, the rules passed to the `--rules-file` option are interpreted as |
| cone mode directories. To pass non-cone mode patterns with `--rules-file`, |
| combine the option with the `--no-cone` option. |
| + |
| When called with the `-z` flag, the format of the paths input on stdin as well |
| as the output paths are \0 terminated and not quoted. Note that this does not |
| apply to the format of the rules passed with the `--rules-file` option. |
| |
| |
| EXAMPLES |
| -------- |
| `git sparse-checkout set MY/DIR1 SUB/DIR2`:: |
| |
| Change to a sparse checkout with all files (at any depth) under |
| MY/DIR1/ and SUB/DIR2/ present in the working copy (plus all |
| files immediately under MY/ and SUB/ and the toplevel |
| directory). If already in a sparse checkout, change which files |
| are present in the working copy to this new selection. Note |
| that this command will also delete all ignored files in any |
| directory that no longer has either tracked or |
| non-ignored-untracked files present. |
| |
| `git sparse-checkout disable`:: |
| |
| Repopulate the working directory with all files, disabling sparse |
| checkouts. |
| |
| `git sparse-checkout add SOME/DIR/ECTORY`:: |
| |
| Add all files under SOME/DIR/ECTORY/ (at any depth) to the |
| sparse checkout, as well as all files immediately under |
| SOME/DIR/ and immediately under SOME/. Must already be in a |
| sparse checkout before using this command. |
| |
| `git sparse-checkout reapply`:: |
| |
| It is possible for commands to update the working tree in a |
| way that does not respect the selected sparsity directories. |
| This can come from tools external to Git writing files, or |
| even affect Git commands because of either special cases (such |
| as hitting conflicts when merging/rebasing), or because some |
| commands didn't fully support sparse checkouts (e.g. the old |
| `recursive` merge backend had only limited support). This |
| command reapplies the existing sparse directory specifications |
| to make the working directory match. |
| |
| INTERNALS -- SPARSE CHECKOUT |
| ---------------------------- |
| |
| "Sparse checkout" allows populating the working directory sparsely. It |
| uses the skip-worktree bit (see linkgit:git-update-index[1]) to tell Git |
| whether a file in the working directory is worth looking at. If the |
| skip-worktree bit is set, and the file is not present in the working tree, |
| then its absence is ignored. Git will avoid populating the contents of |
| those files, which makes a sparse checkout helpful when working in a |
| repository with many files, but only a few are important to the current |
| user. |
| |
| The `$GIT_DIR/info/sparse-checkout` file is used to define the |
| skip-worktree reference bitmap. When Git updates the working |
| directory, it updates the skip-worktree bits in the index based |
| on this file. The files matching the patterns in the file will |
| appear in the working directory, and the rest will not. |
| |
| INTERNALS -- NON-CONE PROBLEMS |
| ------------------------------ |
| |
| The `$GIT_DIR/info/sparse-checkout` file populated by the `set` and |
| `add` subcommands is defined to be a bunch of patterns (one per line) |
| using the same syntax as `.gitignore` files. In cone mode, these |
| patterns are restricted to matching directories (and users only ever |
| need supply or see directory names), while in non-cone mode any |
| gitignore-style pattern is permitted. Using the full gitignore-style |
| patterns in non-cone mode has a number of shortcomings: |
| |
| * Fundamentally, it makes various worktree-updating processes (pull, |
| merge, rebase, switch, reset, checkout, etc.) require O(N*M) pattern |
| matches, where N is the number of patterns and M is the number of |
| paths in the index. This scales poorly. |
| |
| * Avoiding the scaling issue has to be done via limiting the number |
| of patterns via specifying leading directory name or glob. |
| |
| * Passing globs on the command line is error-prone as users may |
| forget to quote the glob, causing the shell to expand it into all |
| matching files and pass them all individually along to |
| sparse-checkout set/add. While this could also be a problem with |
| e.g. "git grep -- *.c", mistakes with grep/log/status appear in |
| the immediate output. With sparse-checkout, the mistake gets |
| recorded at the time the sparse-checkout command is run and might |
| not be problematic until the user later switches branches or rebases |
| or merges, thus putting a delay between the user's error and when |
| they have a chance to catch/notice it. |
| |
| * Related to the previous item, sparse-checkout has an 'add' |
| subcommand but no 'remove' subcommand. Even if a 'remove' |
| subcommand were added, undoing an accidental unquoted glob runs |
| the risk of "removing too much", as it may remove entries that had |
| been included before the accidental add. |
| |
| * Non-cone mode uses gitignore-style patterns to select what to |
| *include* (with the exception of negated patterns), while |
| .gitignore files use gitignore-style patterns to select what to |
| *exclude* (with the exception of negated patterns). The |
| documentation on gitignore-style patterns usually does not talk in |
| terms of matching or non-matching, but on what the user wants to |
| "exclude". This can cause confusion for users trying to learn how |
| to specify sparse-checkout patterns to get their desired behavior. |
| |
| * Every other git subcommand that wants to provide "special path |
| pattern matching" of some sort uses pathspecs, but non-cone mode |
| for sparse-checkout uses gitignore patterns, which feels |
| inconsistent. |
| |
| * It has edge cases where the "right" behavior is unclear. Two examples: |
| |
| First, two users are in a subdirectory, and the first runs |
| git sparse-checkout set '/toplevel-dir/*.c' |
| while the second runs |
| git sparse-checkout set relative-dir |
| Should those arguments be transliterated into |
| current/subdirectory/toplevel-dir/*.c |
| and |
| current/subdirectory/relative-dir |
| before inserting into the sparse-checkout file? The user who typed |
| the first command is probably aware that arguments to set/add are |
| supposed to be patterns in non-cone mode, and probably would not be |
| happy with such a transliteration. However, many gitignore-style |
| patterns are just paths, which might be what the user who typed the |
| second command was thinking, and they'd be upset if their argument |
| wasn't transliterated. |
| |
| Second, what should bash-completion complete on for set/add commands |
| for non-cone users? If it suggests paths, is it exacerbating the |
| problem above? Also, if it suggests paths, what if the user has a |
| file or directory that begins with either a '!' or '#' or has a '*', |
| '\', '?', '[', or ']' in its name? And if it suggests paths, will |
| it complete "/pro" to "/proc" (in the root filesystem) rather than to |
| "/progress.txt" in the current directory? (Note that users are |
| likely to want to start paths with a leading '/' in non-cone mode, |
| for the same reason that .gitignore files often have one.) |
| Completing on files or directories might give nasty surprises in |
| all these cases. |
| |
| * The excessive flexibility made other extensions essentially |
| impractical. `--sparse-index` is likely impossible in non-cone |
| mode; even if it is somehow feasible, it would have been far more |
| work to implement and may have been too slow in practice. Some |
| ideas for adding coupling between partial clones and sparse |
| checkouts are only practical with a more restricted set of paths |
| as well. |
| |
| For all these reasons, non-cone mode is deprecated. Please switch to |
| using cone mode. |
| |
| |
| INTERNALS -- CONE MODE HANDLING |
| ------------------------------- |
| |
| The "cone mode", which is the default, lets you specify only what |
| directories to include. For any directory specified, all paths below |
| that directory will be included, and any paths immediately under |
| leading directories (including the toplevel directory) will also be |
| included. Thus, if you specified the directory |
| Documentation/technical/ |
| then your sparse checkout would contain: |
| |
| * all files in the toplevel-directory |
| * all files immediately under Documentation/ |
| * all files at any depth under Documentation/technical/ |
| |
| Also, in cone mode, even if no directories are specified, then the |
| files in the toplevel directory will be included. |
| |
| When changing the sparse-checkout patterns in cone mode, Git will inspect each |
| tracked directory that is not within the sparse-checkout cone to see if it |
| contains any untracked files. If all of those files are ignored due to the |
| `.gitignore` patterns, then the directory will be deleted. If any of the |
| untracked files within that directory is not ignored, then no deletions will |
| occur within that directory and a warning message will appear. If these files |
| are important, then reset your sparse-checkout definition so they are included, |
| use `git add` and `git commit` to store them, then remove any remaining files |
| manually to ensure Git can behave optimally. |
| |
| See also the "Internals -- Cone Pattern Set" section to learn how the |
| directories are transformed under the hood into a subset of the |
| Full Pattern Set of sparse-checkout. |
| |
| |
| INTERNALS -- FULL PATTERN SET |
| ----------------------------- |
| |
| The full pattern set allows for arbitrary pattern matches and complicated |
| inclusion/exclusion rules. These can result in O(N*M) pattern matches when |
| updating the index, where N is the number of patterns and M is the number |
| of paths in the index. To combat this performance issue, a more restricted |
| pattern set is allowed when `core.sparseCheckoutCone` is enabled. |
| |
| The sparse-checkout file uses the same syntax as `.gitignore` files; |
| see linkgit:gitignore[5] for details. Here, though, the patterns are |
| usually being used to select which files to include rather than which |
| files to exclude. (However, it can get a bit confusing since |
| gitignore-style patterns have negations defined by patterns which |
| begin with a '!', so you can also select files to _not_ include.) |
| |
| For example, to select everything, and then to remove the file |
| `unwanted` (so that every file will appear in your working tree except |
| the file named `unwanted`): |
| |
| git sparse-checkout set --no-cone '/*' '!unwanted' |
| |
| These patterns are just placed into the |
| `$GIT_DIR/info/sparse-checkout` as-is, so the contents of that file |
| at this point would be |
| |
| ---------------- |
| /* |
| !unwanted |
| ---------------- |
| |
| See also the "Sparse Checkout" section of linkgit:git-read-tree[1] to |
| learn more about the gitignore-style patterns used in sparse |
| checkouts. |
| |
| |
| INTERNALS -- CONE PATTERN SET |
| ----------------------------- |
| |
| In cone mode, only directories are accepted, but they are translated into |
| the same gitignore-style patterns used in the full pattern set. We refer |
| to the particular patterns used in those mode as being of one of two types: |
| |
| 1. *Recursive:* All paths inside a directory are included. |
| |
| 2. *Parent:* All files immediately inside a directory are included. |
| |
| Since cone mode always includes files at the toplevel, when running |
| `git sparse-checkout set` with no directories specified, the toplevel |
| directory is added as a parent pattern. At this point, the |
| sparse-checkout file contains the following patterns: |
| |
| ---------------- |
| /* |
| !/*/ |
| ---------------- |
| |
| This says "include everything immediately under the toplevel |
| directory, but nothing at any level below that." |
| |
| When in cone mode, the `git sparse-checkout set` subcommand takes a |
| list of directories. The command `git sparse-checkout set A/B/C` sets |
| the directory `A/B/C` as a recursive pattern, the directories `A` and |
| `A/B` are added as parent patterns. The resulting sparse-checkout file |
| is now |
| |
| ---------------- |
| /* |
| !/*/ |
| /A/ |
| !/A/*/ |
| /A/B/ |
| !/A/B/*/ |
| /A/B/C/ |
| ---------------- |
| |
| Here, order matters, so the negative patterns are overridden by the positive |
| patterns that appear lower in the file. |
| |
| Unless `core.sparseCheckoutCone` is explicitly set to `false`, Git will |
| parse the sparse-checkout file expecting patterns of these types. Git will |
| warn if the patterns do not match. If the patterns do match the expected |
| format, then Git will use faster hash-based algorithms to compute inclusion |
| in the sparse-checkout. If they do not match, git will behave as though |
| `core.sparseCheckoutCone` was false, regardless of its setting. |
| |
| In the cone mode case, despite the fact that full patterns are written |
| to the $GIT_DIR/info/sparse-checkout file, the `git sparse-checkout |
| list` subcommand will list the directories that define the recursive |
| patterns. For the example sparse-checkout file above, the output is as |
| follows: |
| |
| -------------------------- |
| $ git sparse-checkout list |
| A/B/C |
| -------------------------- |
| |
| If `core.ignoreCase=true`, then the pattern-matching algorithm will use a |
| case-insensitive check. This corrects for case mismatched filenames in the |
| 'git sparse-checkout set' command to reflect the expected cone in the working |
| directory. |
| |
| |
| INTERNALS -- SUBMODULES |
| ----------------------- |
| |
| If your repository contains one or more submodules, then submodules |
| are populated based on interactions with the `git submodule` command. |
| Specifically, `git submodule init -- <path>` will ensure the submodule |
| at `<path>` is present, while `git submodule deinit [-f] -- <path>` |
| will remove the files for the submodule at `<path>` (including any |
| untracked files, uncommitted changes, and unpushed history). Similar |
| to how sparse-checkout removes files from the working tree but still |
| leaves entries in the index, deinitialized submodules are removed from |
| the working directory but still have an entry in the index. |
| |
| Since submodules may have unpushed changes or untracked files, |
| removing them could result in data loss. Thus, changing sparse |
| inclusion/exclusion rules will not cause an already checked out |
| submodule to be removed from the working copy. Said another way, just |
| as `checkout` will not cause submodules to be automatically removed or |
| initialized even when switching between branches that remove or add |
| submodules, using `sparse-checkout` to reduce or expand the scope of |
| "interesting" files will not cause submodules to be automatically |
| deinitialized or initialized either. |
| |
| Further, the above facts mean that there are multiple reasons that |
| "tracked" files might not be present in the working copy: sparsity |
| pattern application from sparse-checkout, and submodule initialization |
| state. Thus, commands like `git grep` that work on tracked files in |
| the working copy may return results that are limited by either or both |
| of these restrictions. |
| |
| |
| SEE ALSO |
| -------- |
| |
| linkgit:git-read-tree[1] |
| linkgit:gitignore[5] |
| |
| GIT |
| --- |
| Part of the linkgit:git[1] suite |