Junio C Hamano | 076ffcc | 2013-02-06 05:13:21 | [diff] [blame] | 1 | Git pack format |
Junio C Hamano | 3dac504 | 2007-12-15 08:40:54 | [diff] [blame] | 2 | =============== |
| 3 | |
Junio C Hamano | 779537c | 2020-08-19 23:48:51 | [diff] [blame] | 4 | == Checksums and object IDs |
| 5 | |
| 6 | In a repository using the traditional SHA-1, pack checksums, index checksums, |
| 7 | and object IDs (object names) mentioned below are all computed using SHA-1. |
| 8 | Similarly, in SHA-256 repositories, these values are computed using SHA-256. |
| 9 | |
Junio C Hamano | f2b7494 | 2012-11-20 21:06:26 | [diff] [blame] | 10 | == pack-*.pack files have the following format: |
Junio C Hamano | 3dac504 | 2007-12-15 08:40:54 | [diff] [blame] | 11 | |
| 12 | - A header appears at the beginning and consists of the following: |
| 13 | |
| 14 | 4-byte signature: |
| 15 | The signature is: {'P', 'A', 'C', 'K'} |
| 16 | |
| 17 | 4-byte version number (network byte order): |
Junio C Hamano | 076ffcc | 2013-02-06 05:13:21 | [diff] [blame] | 18 | Git currently accepts version number 2 or 3 but |
Junio C Hamano | 3dac504 | 2007-12-15 08:40:54 | [diff] [blame] | 19 | generates version 2 only. |
| 20 | |
| 21 | 4-byte number of objects contained in the pack (network byte order) |
| 22 | |
| 23 | Observation: we cannot have more than 4G versions ;-) and |
| 24 | more than 4G objects in a pack. |
| 25 | |
| 26 | - The header is followed by number of object entries, each of |
| 27 | which looks like this: |
| 28 | |
| 29 | (undeltified representation) |
| 30 | n-byte type and length (3-bit type, (n-1)*7+4-bit length) |
| 31 | compressed data |
| 32 | |
| 33 | (deltified representation) |
| 34 | n-byte type and length (3-bit type, (n-1)*7+4-bit length) |
Junio C Hamano | 779537c | 2020-08-19 23:48:51 | [diff] [blame] | 35 | base object name if OBJ_REF_DELTA or a negative relative |
Junio C Hamano | a080bc3 | 2013-04-12 21:33:01 | [diff] [blame] | 36 | offset from the delta object's position in the pack if this |
| 37 | is an OBJ_OFS_DELTA object |
Junio C Hamano | 3dac504 | 2007-12-15 08:40:54 | [diff] [blame] | 38 | compressed delta data |
| 39 | |
| 40 | Observation: length of each object is encoded in a variable |
| 41 | length format and is not constrained to 32-bit or anything. |
| 42 | |
Junio C Hamano | 779537c | 2020-08-19 23:48:51 | [diff] [blame] | 43 | - The trailer records a pack checksum of all of the above. |
Junio C Hamano | 3dac504 | 2007-12-15 08:40:54 | [diff] [blame] | 44 | |
Junio C Hamano | b9d9d90 | 2018-05-23 07:07:42 | [diff] [blame] | 45 | === Object types |
| 46 | |
| 47 | Valid object types are: |
| 48 | |
| 49 | - OBJ_COMMIT (1) |
| 50 | - OBJ_TREE (2) |
| 51 | - OBJ_BLOB (3) |
| 52 | - OBJ_TAG (4) |
| 53 | - OBJ_OFS_DELTA (6) |
| 54 | - OBJ_REF_DELTA (7) |
| 55 | |
| 56 | Type 5 is reserved for future expansion. Type 0 is invalid. |
| 57 | |
Junio C Hamano | d5cfc8f | 2021-01-16 00:14:51 | [diff] [blame] | 58 | === Size encoding |
| 59 | |
| 60 | This document uses the following "size encoding" of non-negative |
| 61 | integers: From each byte, the seven least significant bits are |
| 62 | used to form the resulting integer. As long as the most significant |
| 63 | bit is 1, this process continues; the byte with MSB 0 provides the |
| 64 | last seven bits. The seven-bit chunks are concatenated. Later |
| 65 | values are more significant. |
| 66 | |
| 67 | This size encoding should not be confused with the "offset encoding", |
| 68 | which is also used in this document. |
| 69 | |
Junio C Hamano | b9d9d90 | 2018-05-23 07:07:42 | [diff] [blame] | 70 | === Deltified representation |
| 71 | |
| 72 | Conceptually there are only four object types: commit, tree, tag and |
| 73 | blob. However to save space, an object could be stored as a "delta" of |
| 74 | another "base" object. These representations are assigned new types |
| 75 | ofs-delta and ref-delta, which is only valid in a pack file. |
| 76 | |
| 77 | Both ofs-delta and ref-delta store the "delta" to be applied to |
| 78 | another object (called 'base object') to reconstruct the object. The |
Junio C Hamano | 779537c | 2020-08-19 23:48:51 | [diff] [blame] | 79 | difference between them is, ref-delta directly encodes base object |
| 80 | name. If the base object is in the same pack, ofs-delta encodes |
Junio C Hamano | b9d9d90 | 2018-05-23 07:07:42 | [diff] [blame] | 81 | the offset of the base object in the pack instead. |
| 82 | |
| 83 | The base object could also be deltified if it's in the same pack. |
| 84 | Ref-delta can also refer to an object outside the pack (i.e. the |
| 85 | so-called "thin pack"). When stored on disk however, the pack should |
| 86 | be self contained to avoid cyclic dependency. |
| 87 | |
Junio C Hamano | d5cfc8f | 2021-01-16 00:14:51 | [diff] [blame] | 88 | The delta data starts with the size of the base object and the |
| 89 | size of the object to be reconstructed. These sizes are |
| 90 | encoded using the size encoding from above. The remainder of |
| 91 | the delta data is a sequence of instructions to reconstruct the object |
Junio C Hamano | b9d9d90 | 2018-05-23 07:07:42 | [diff] [blame] | 92 | from the base object. If the base object is deltified, it must be |
| 93 | converted to canonical form first. Each instruction appends more and |
| 94 | more data to the target object until it's complete. There are two |
| 95 | supported instructions so far: one for copy a byte range from the |
| 96 | source object and one for inserting new data embedded in the |
| 97 | instruction itself. |
| 98 | |
| 99 | Each instruction has variable length. Instruction type is determined |
| 100 | by the seventh bit of the first octet. The following diagrams follow |
| 101 | the convention in RFC 1951 (Deflate compressed data format). |
| 102 | |
| 103 | ==== Instruction to copy from base object |
| 104 | |
| 105 | +----------+---------+---------+---------+---------+-------+-------+-------+ |
| 106 | | 1xxxxxxx | offset1 | offset2 | offset3 | offset4 | size1 | size2 | size3 | |
| 107 | +----------+---------+---------+---------+---------+-------+-------+-------+ |
| 108 | |
| 109 | This is the instruction format to copy a byte range from the source |
| 110 | object. It encodes the offset to copy from and the number of bytes to |
| 111 | copy. Offset and size are in little-endian order. |
| 112 | |
| 113 | All offset and size bytes are optional. This is to reduce the |
| 114 | instruction size when encoding small offsets or sizes. The first seven |
| 115 | bits in the first octet determines which of the next seven octets is |
| 116 | present. If bit zero is set, offset1 is present. If bit one is set |
| 117 | offset2 is present and so on. |
| 118 | |
| 119 | Note that a more compact instruction does not change offset and size |
| 120 | encoding. For example, if only offset2 is omitted like below, offset3 |
| 121 | still contains bits 16-23. It does not become offset2 and contains |
| 122 | bits 8-15 even if it's right next to offset1. |
| 123 | |
| 124 | +----------+---------+---------+ |
| 125 | | 10000101 | offset1 | offset3 | |
| 126 | +----------+---------+---------+ |
| 127 | |
| 128 | In its most compact form, this instruction only takes up one byte |
| 129 | (0x80) with both offset and size omitted, which will have default |
| 130 | values zero. There is another exception: size zero is automatically |
| 131 | converted to 0x10000. |
| 132 | |
| 133 | ==== Instruction to add new data |
| 134 | |
| 135 | +----------+============+ |
| 136 | | 0xxxxxxx | data | |
| 137 | +----------+============+ |
| 138 | |
| 139 | This is the instruction to construct target object without the base |
| 140 | object. The following data is appended to the target object. The first |
| 141 | seven bits of the first octet determines the size of data in |
| 142 | bytes. The size must be non-zero. |
| 143 | |
| 144 | ==== Reserved instruction |
| 145 | |
| 146 | +----------+============ |
| 147 | | 00000000 | |
| 148 | +----------+============ |
| 149 | |
| 150 | This is the instruction reserved for future expansion. |
| 151 | |
Junio C Hamano | f2b7494 | 2012-11-20 21:06:26 | [diff] [blame] | 152 | == Original (version 1) pack-*.idx files have the following format: |
Junio C Hamano | 3dac504 | 2007-12-15 08:40:54 | [diff] [blame] | 153 | |
| 154 | - The header consists of 256 4-byte network byte order |
| 155 | integers. N-th entry of this table records the number of |
| 156 | objects in the corresponding pack, the first byte of whose |
| 157 | object name is less than or equal to N. This is called the |
| 158 | 'first-level fan-out' table. |
| 159 | |
| 160 | - The header is followed by sorted 24-byte entries, one entry |
| 161 | per object in the pack. Each entry is: |
| 162 | |
| 163 | 4-byte network byte order integer, recording where the |
| 164 | object is stored in the packfile as the offset from the |
| 165 | beginning. |
| 166 | |
Junio C Hamano | 779537c | 2020-08-19 23:48:51 | [diff] [blame] | 167 | one object name of the appropriate size. |
Junio C Hamano | 3dac504 | 2007-12-15 08:40:54 | [diff] [blame] | 168 | |
| 169 | - The file is concluded with a trailer: |
| 170 | |
Junio C Hamano | 779537c | 2020-08-19 23:48:51 | [diff] [blame] | 171 | A copy of the pack checksum at the end of the corresponding |
| 172 | packfile. |
Junio C Hamano | 3dac504 | 2007-12-15 08:40:54 | [diff] [blame] | 173 | |
Junio C Hamano | 779537c | 2020-08-19 23:48:51 | [diff] [blame] | 174 | Index checksum of all of the above. |
Junio C Hamano | 3dac504 | 2007-12-15 08:40:54 | [diff] [blame] | 175 | |
| 176 | Pack Idx file: |
| 177 | |
| 178 | -- +--------------------------------+ |
| 179 | fanout | fanout[0] = 2 (for example) |-. |
| 180 | table +--------------------------------+ | |
| 181 | | fanout[1] | | |
| 182 | +--------------------------------+ | |
| 183 | | fanout[2] | | |
| 184 | ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ | |
| 185 | | fanout[255] = total objects |---. |
| 186 | -- +--------------------------------+ | | |
| 187 | main | offset | | | |
| 188 | index | object name 00XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX | | | |
| 189 | table +--------------------------------+ | | |
| 190 | | offset | | | |
| 191 | | object name 00XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX | | | |
| 192 | +--------------------------------+<+ | |
| 193 | .-| offset | | |
| 194 | | | object name 01XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX | | |
| 195 | | +--------------------------------+ | |
| 196 | | | offset | | |
| 197 | | | object name 01XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX | | |
| 198 | | ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ | |
| 199 | | | offset | | |
| 200 | | | object name FFXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX | | |
| 201 | --| +--------------------------------+<--+ |
| 202 | trailer | | packfile checksum | |
| 203 | | +--------------------------------+ |
| 204 | | | idxfile checksum | |
| 205 | | +--------------------------------+ |
| 206 | .-------. |
| 207 | | |
| 208 | Pack file entry: <+ |
| 209 | |
| 210 | packed object header: |
| 211 | 1-byte size extension bit (MSB) |
| 212 | type (next 3 bit) |
| 213 | size0 (lower 4-bit) |
| 214 | n-byte sizeN (as long as MSB is set, each 7-bit) |
| 215 | size0..sizeN form 4+7+7+..+7 bit integer, size0 |
| 216 | is the least significant part, and sizeN is the |
| 217 | most significant part. |
| 218 | packed object data: |
| 219 | If it is not DELTA, then deflated bytes (the size above |
| 220 | is the size before compression). |
Junio C Hamano | c41cdd1 | 2008-04-07 06:14:15 | [diff] [blame] | 221 | If it is REF_DELTA, then |
Junio C Hamano | 779537c | 2020-08-19 23:48:51 | [diff] [blame] | 222 | base object name (the size above is the |
Junio C Hamano | 3dac504 | 2007-12-15 08:40:54 | [diff] [blame] | 223 | size of the delta data that follows). |
| 224 | delta data, deflated. |
Junio C Hamano | c41cdd1 | 2008-04-07 06:14:15 | [diff] [blame] | 225 | If it is OFS_DELTA, then |
| 226 | n-byte offset (see below) interpreted as a negative |
| 227 | offset from the type-byte of the header of the |
| 228 | ofs-delta entry (the size above is the size of |
| 229 | the delta data that follows). |
| 230 | delta data, deflated. |
| 231 | |
| 232 | offset encoding: |
| 233 | n bytes with MSB set in all but the last one. |
| 234 | The offset is then the number constructed by |
| 235 | concatenating the lower 7 bit of each byte, and |
| 236 | for n >= 2 adding 2^7 + 2^14 + ... + 2^(7*(n-1)) |
| 237 | to the result. |
| 238 | |
Junio C Hamano | 3dac504 | 2007-12-15 08:40:54 | [diff] [blame] | 239 | |
| 240 | |
Junio C Hamano | f2b7494 | 2012-11-20 21:06:26 | [diff] [blame] | 241 | == Version 2 pack-*.idx files support packs larger than 4 GiB, and |
| 242 | have some other reorganizations. They have the format: |
Junio C Hamano | 3dac504 | 2007-12-15 08:40:54 | [diff] [blame] | 243 | |
| 244 | - A 4-byte magic number '\377tOc' which is an unreasonable |
| 245 | fanout[0] value. |
| 246 | |
| 247 | - A 4-byte version number (= 2) |
| 248 | |
| 249 | - A 256-entry fan-out table just like v1. |
| 250 | |
Junio C Hamano | 779537c | 2020-08-19 23:48:51 | [diff] [blame] | 251 | - A table of sorted object names. These are packed together |
| 252 | without offset values to reduce the cache footprint of the |
| 253 | binary search for a specific object name. |
Junio C Hamano | 3dac504 | 2007-12-15 08:40:54 | [diff] [blame] | 254 | |
| 255 | - A table of 4-byte CRC32 values of the packed object data. |
| 256 | This is new in v2 so compressed data can be copied directly |
Junio C Hamano | 4e27231 | 2008-01-08 09:13:21 | [diff] [blame] | 257 | from pack to pack during repacking without undetected |
Junio C Hamano | 3dac504 | 2007-12-15 08:40:54 | [diff] [blame] | 258 | data corruption. |
| 259 | |
| 260 | - A table of 4-byte offset values (in network byte order). |
| 261 | These are usually 31-bit pack file offsets, but large |
| 262 | offsets are encoded as an index into the next table with |
| 263 | the msbit set. |
| 264 | |
| 265 | - A table of 8-byte offset entries (empty for pack files less |
| 266 | than 2 GiB). Pack files are organized with heavily used |
| 267 | objects toward the front, so most object references should |
| 268 | not need to refer to this table. |
| 269 | |
| 270 | - The same trailer as a v1 pack file: |
| 271 | |
Junio C Hamano | 779537c | 2020-08-19 23:48:51 | [diff] [blame] | 272 | A copy of the pack checksum at the end of |
Junio C Hamano | 3dac504 | 2007-12-15 08:40:54 | [diff] [blame] | 273 | corresponding packfile. |
| 274 | |
Junio C Hamano | 779537c | 2020-08-19 23:48:51 | [diff] [blame] | 275 | Index checksum of all of the above. |
Junio C Hamano | 980e61e | 2018-09-17 22:45:52 | [diff] [blame] | 276 | |
Junio C Hamano | b4fc8e8 | 2021-02-12 22:46:42 | [diff] [blame] | 277 | == pack-*.rev files have the format: |
| 278 | |
| 279 | - A 4-byte magic number '0x52494458' ('RIDX'). |
| 280 | |
| 281 | - A 4-byte version identifier (= 1). |
| 282 | |
| 283 | - A 4-byte hash function identifier (= 1 for SHA-1, 2 for SHA-256). |
| 284 | |
| 285 | - A table of index positions (one per packed object, num_objects in |
| 286 | total, each a 4-byte unsigned integer in network order), sorted by |
| 287 | their corresponding offsets in the packfile. |
| 288 | |
| 289 | - A trailer, containing a: |
| 290 | |
| 291 | checksum of the corresponding packfile, and |
| 292 | |
| 293 | a checksum of all of the above. |
| 294 | |
| 295 | All 4-byte numbers are in network order. |
| 296 | |
Junio C Hamano | 980e61e | 2018-09-17 22:45:52 | [diff] [blame] | 297 | == multi-pack-index (MIDX) files have the following format: |
| 298 | |
| 299 | The multi-pack-index files refer to multiple pack-files and loose objects. |
| 300 | |
| 301 | In order to allow extensions that add extra data to the MIDX, we organize |
| 302 | the body into "chunks" and provide a lookup table at the beginning of the |
| 303 | body. The header includes certain length values, such as the number of packs, |
| 304 | the number of base MIDX files, hash lengths and types. |
| 305 | |
| 306 | All 4-byte numbers are in network order. |
| 307 | |
| 308 | HEADER: |
| 309 | |
| 310 | 4-byte signature: |
| 311 | The signature is: {'M', 'I', 'D', 'X'} |
| 312 | |
| 313 | 1-byte version number: |
| 314 | Git only writes or recognizes version 1. |
| 315 | |
| 316 | 1-byte Object Id Version |
Junio C Hamano | 779537c | 2020-08-19 23:48:51 | [diff] [blame] | 317 | We infer the length of object IDs (OIDs) from this value: |
| 318 | 1 => SHA-1 |
| 319 | 2 => SHA-256 |
| 320 | If the hash type does not match the repository's hash algorithm, |
| 321 | the multi-pack-index file should be ignored with a warning |
| 322 | presented to the user. |
Junio C Hamano | 980e61e | 2018-09-17 22:45:52 | [diff] [blame] | 323 | |
| 324 | 1-byte number of "chunks" |
| 325 | |
| 326 | 1-byte number of base multi-pack-index files: |
| 327 | This value is currently always zero. |
| 328 | |
| 329 | 4-byte number of pack files |
| 330 | |
| 331 | CHUNK LOOKUP: |
| 332 | |
| 333 | (C + 1) * 12 bytes providing the chunk offsets: |
| 334 | First 4 bytes describe chunk id. Value 0 is a terminating label. |
| 335 | Other 8 bytes provide offset in current file for chunk to start. |
| 336 | (Chunks are provided in file-order, so you can infer the length |
| 337 | using the next chunk position if necessary.) |
| 338 | |
Junio C Hamano | b66f8a5 | 2021-03-03 07:07:49 | [diff] [blame] | 339 | The CHUNK LOOKUP matches the table of contents from |
| 340 | link:technical/chunk-format.html[the chunk-based file format]. |
| 341 | |
Junio C Hamano | 980e61e | 2018-09-17 22:45:52 | [diff] [blame] | 342 | The remaining data in the body is described one chunk at a time, and |
| 343 | these chunks may be given in any order. Chunks are required unless |
| 344 | otherwise specified. |
| 345 | |
| 346 | CHUNK DATA: |
| 347 | |
| 348 | Packfile Names (ID: {'P', 'N', 'A', 'M'}) |
| 349 | Stores the packfile names as concatenated, null-terminated strings. |
| 350 | Packfiles must be listed in lexicographic order for fast lookups by |
| 351 | name. This is the only chunk not guaranteed to be a multiple of four |
| 352 | bytes in length, so should be the last chunk for alignment reasons. |
| 353 | |
| 354 | OID Fanout (ID: {'O', 'I', 'D', 'F'}) |
| 355 | The ith entry, F[i], stores the number of OIDs with first |
| 356 | byte at most i. Thus F[255] stores the total |
| 357 | number of objects. |
| 358 | |
| 359 | OID Lookup (ID: {'O', 'I', 'D', 'L'}) |
| 360 | The OIDs for all objects in the MIDX are stored in lexicographic |
| 361 | order in this chunk. |
| 362 | |
| 363 | Object Offsets (ID: {'O', 'O', 'F', 'F'}) |
| 364 | Stores two 4-byte values for every object. |
| 365 | 1: The pack-int-id for the pack storing this object. |
| 366 | 2: The offset within the pack. |
Junio C Hamano | b7e497f | 2020-02-12 21:41:37 | [diff] [blame] | 367 | If all offsets are less than 2^32, then the large offset chunk |
Junio C Hamano | 980e61e | 2018-09-17 22:45:52 | [diff] [blame] | 368 | will not exist and offsets are stored as in IDX v1. |
| 369 | If there is at least one offset value larger than 2^32-1, then |
Junio C Hamano | b7e497f | 2020-02-12 21:41:37 | [diff] [blame] | 370 | the large offset chunk must exist, and offsets larger than |
| 371 | 2^31-1 must be stored in it instead. If the large offset chunk |
Junio C Hamano | 980e61e | 2018-09-17 22:45:52 | [diff] [blame] | 372 | exists and the 31st bit is on, then removing that bit reveals |
| 373 | the row in the large offsets containing the 8-byte offset of |
| 374 | this object. |
| 375 | |
| 376 | [Optional] Object Large Offsets (ID: {'L', 'O', 'F', 'F'}) |
| 377 | 8-byte offsets into large packfiles. |
| 378 | |
| 379 | TRAILER: |
| 380 | |
Junio C Hamano | 779537c | 2020-08-19 23:48:51 | [diff] [blame] | 381 | Index checksum of the above contents. |
Junio C Hamano | ddc69f1 | 2021-04-08 21:50:11 | [diff] [blame] | 382 | |
| 383 | == multi-pack-index reverse indexes |
| 384 | |
| 385 | Similar to the pack-based reverse index, the multi-pack index can also |
| 386 | be used to generate a reverse index. |
| 387 | |
| 388 | Instead of mapping between offset, pack-, and index position, this |
| 389 | reverse index maps between an object's position within the MIDX, and |
| 390 | that object's position within a pseudo-pack that the MIDX describes |
| 391 | (i.e., the ith entry of the multi-pack reverse index holds the MIDX |
| 392 | position of ith object in pseudo-pack order). |
| 393 | |
| 394 | To clarify the difference between these orderings, consider a multi-pack |
| 395 | reachability bitmap (which does not yet exist, but is what we are |
| 396 | building towards here). Each bit needs to correspond to an object in the |
| 397 | MIDX, and so we need an efficient mapping from bit position to MIDX |
| 398 | position. |
| 399 | |
| 400 | One solution is to let bits occupy the same position in the oid-sorted |
| 401 | index stored by the MIDX. But because oids are effectively random, their |
| 402 | resulting reachability bitmaps would have no locality, and thus compress |
| 403 | poorly. (This is the reason that single-pack bitmaps use the pack |
| 404 | ordering, and not the .idx ordering, for the same purpose.) |
| 405 | |
| 406 | So we'd like to define an ordering for the whole MIDX based around |
| 407 | pack ordering, which has far better locality (and thus compresses more |
| 408 | efficiently). We can think of a pseudo-pack created by the concatenation |
| 409 | of all of the packs in the MIDX. E.g., if we had a MIDX with three packs |
| 410 | (a, b, c), with 10, 15, and 20 objects respectively, we can imagine an |
| 411 | ordering of the objects like: |
| 412 | |
| 413 | |a,0|a,1|...|a,9|b,0|b,1|...|b,14|c,0|c,1|...|c,19| |
| 414 | |
| 415 | where the ordering of the packs is defined by the MIDX's pack list, |
| 416 | and then the ordering of objects within each pack is the same as the |
| 417 | order in the actual packfile. |
| 418 | |
| 419 | Given the list of packs and their counts of objects, you can |
| 420 | naïvely reconstruct that pseudo-pack ordering (e.g., the object at |
| 421 | position 27 must be (c,1) because packs "a" and "b" consumed 25 of the |
| 422 | slots). But there's a catch. Objects may be duplicated between packs, in |
| 423 | which case the MIDX only stores one pointer to the object (and thus we'd |
| 424 | want only one slot in the bitmap). |
| 425 | |
| 426 | Callers could handle duplicates themselves by reading objects in order |
| 427 | of their bit-position, but that's linear in the number of objects, and |
| 428 | much too expensive for ordinary bitmap lookups. Building a reverse index |
| 429 | solves this, since it is the logical inverse of the index, and that |
| 430 | index has already removed duplicates. But, building a reverse index on |
| 431 | the fly can be expensive. Since we already have an on-disk format for |
| 432 | pack-based reverse indexes, let's reuse it for the MIDX's pseudo-pack, |
| 433 | too. |
| 434 | |
| 435 | Objects from the MIDX are ordered as follows to string together the |
| 436 | pseudo-pack. Let `pack(o)` return the pack from which `o` was selected |
| 437 | by the MIDX, and define an ordering of packs based on their numeric ID |
| 438 | (as stored by the MIDX). Let `offset(o)` return the object offset of `o` |
| 439 | within `pack(o)`. Then, compare `o1` and `o2` as follows: |
| 440 | |
| 441 | - If one of `pack(o1)` and `pack(o2)` is preferred and the other |
| 442 | is not, then the preferred one sorts first. |
| 443 | + |
| 444 | (This is a detail that allows the MIDX bitmap to determine which |
| 445 | pack should be used by the pack-reuse mechanism, since it can ask |
| 446 | the MIDX for the pack containing the object at bit position 0). |
| 447 | |
| 448 | - If `pack(o1) ≠ pack(o2)`, then sort the two objects in descending |
| 449 | order based on the pack ID. |
| 450 | |
| 451 | - Otherwise, `pack(o1) = pack(o2)`, and the objects are sorted in |
| 452 | pack-order (i.e., `o1` sorts ahead of `o2` exactly when `offset(o1) |
| 453 | < offset(o2)`). |
| 454 | |
| 455 | In short, a MIDX's pseudo-pack is the de-duplicated concatenation of |
| 456 | objects in packs stored by the MIDX, laid out in pack order, and the |
| 457 | packs arranged in MIDX order (with the preferred pack coming first). |
| 458 | |
| 459 | Finally, note that the MIDX's reverse index is not stored as a chunk in |
| 460 | the multi-pack-index itself. This is done because the reverse index |
| 461 | includes the checksum of the pack or MIDX to which it belongs, which |
| 462 | makes it impossible to write in the MIDX. To avoid races when rewriting |
| 463 | the MIDX, a MIDX reverse index includes the MIDX's checksum in its |
| 464 | filename (e.g., `multi-pack-index-xyz.rev`). |