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6 commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
http://brohaveyouseenmysocks.wordpress.com/
b7f96cbd96 typo 2013-07-21 04:44:19 +00:00
Joey Hess
ef3457196a use SHA256 by default
To get old behavior, add a .gitattributes containing: * annex.backend=WORM

I feel that SHA256 is a better default for most people, as long as their
systems are fast enough that checksumming their files isn't a problem.
git-annex should default to preserving the integrity of data as well as git
does. Checksum backends also work better with editing files via
unlock/lock.

I considered just using SHA1, but since that hash is believed to be somewhat
near to being broken, and git-annex deals with large files which would be a
perfect exploit medium, I decided to go to a SHA-2 hash.

SHA512 is annoyingly long when displayed, and git-annex displays it in a
few places (and notably it is shown in ls -l), so I picked the shorter
hash. Considered SHA224 as it's even shorter, but feel it's a bit weird.

I expect git-annex will use SHA-3 at some point in the future, but
probably not soon!

Note that systems without a sha256sum (or sha256) program will fall back to
defaulting to SHA1.
2011-11-04 15:51:01 -04:00
Joey Hess
90dd245522 get --from is the same as copy --from
get not honoring --from has surprised me a few times, so least surprise
suggests it should just behave like copy --from. This leaves the difference
between get and copy being that copy always requires the remote to copy
from, while get will decide whether to get a file from a key/value store or
a remote.
2011-06-09 18:54:49 -04:00
Joey Hess
27472710c7 initial pass at doc update 2011-03-15 22:19:44 -04:00
http://m-f-k.myopenid.com/
232553af01 be more clear about the rsync usage 2011-03-06 16:32:16 +00:00
Joey Hess
98e246b49b split the walkthrough and inline back together 2011-02-27 12:45:48 -04:00