Normally, git-annex stores annexed files in the repository, locked down, which prevents the content of the file from being modified. That's a good thing, because it might be the only copy, you wouldn't want to lose it in a fumblefingered mistake. # git annex add some_file add some_file # echo oops > some_file bash: some_file: Permission denied Sometimes though you want to modify a file. Maybe once, or maybe repeatedly. To support this, git-annex also supports unlocked files. They are stored in the git repository differently, and they appear as regular files in the working tree, instead of the symbolic links used for locked files. ## using unlocked files You can unlock any annexed file: # git annex unlock my_cool_big_file That changes what's stored in git between a git-annex symlink (locked) and a git-annex pointer file (unlocked). You can commit the change, if you want that file to be unlocked in other clones of the repository. To lock the file again, use `git annex lock`. The nice thing about an unlocked file is that you can modify it in place -- it's a regular file. And you can commit your changes. # echo more stuff >> my_cool_big_file # git commit -a -m "some changes" [master 196c0e2] some changes 1 files changed, 1 insertion(+), 1 deletion(-) Notice that `git commit -a` added the new content of the file to the annex, and only committed a change to the pointer. That happened because git-annex knows this was an annexed file before. Git leaves the file unlocked, so you can continue to make modifications to it. By default, using git to add a file that has not been annexed before will still add its contents to git, not to the annex. If you tell git-annex what files are large, it will arrange for the large files to be added to the annex, and the small ones to be added to git. This is done by configuring annex.largefiles. See [[largefiles]] for full documentation of that. All the regular git-annex commands (find, get, drop, etc) can be used on unlocked files as well as locked files. When you drop the content of an unlocked file, it will be replaced by a pointer file, which looks like "/annex/objects/...". So if you open a file and see that, you'll need to use `git annex get`. Under the hood, unlocked files use git's [[todo/smudge]] filter interface, and git-annex converts between the content of the big file and a pointer file, which is what gets committed to git. [[!template id=note text=""" By default, git-annex commands will add files in locked mode, unless used on a filesystem that does not support symlinks, when unlocked mode is used. To make them always use unlocked mode, run: `git config annex.addunlocked true` """]] ## adjusted branches If you want to mostly keep files locked, but be able to locally switch to having them all unlocked, you can do so using `git annex adjust --unlock`. See [[git-annex-adjust]] for details. This is particularly useful when using filesystems like FAT, and OS's like Windows that don't support symlinks. Indeed, `git-annex init` detects such filesystems and automatically sets up a repository to use all unlocked files. ## finding unlocked files While it's easy to see when a file is a git-annex symlink, unlocked files look the same as files stored in git. To see what files are unlocked or locked, many git-annex commands support `--unlocked` and `--locked` options. git annex find --unlocked ## imperfections Unlocked files mostly work very well, but there are a few imperfections which you should be aware of when using them. 1. `git stash`, `git cherry-pick` and `git reset --hard` don't update the working tree with the content of unlocked files. The files will contain pointers, the same as if the content was not in the repository. So after running these commands, you will need to manually run `git annex smudge --update`. 2. When git-annex is running a command that gets or drops the content of an unlocked file, git's index will briefly be locked, which might prevent you from running a `git commit` at the same time. 3. Conversely, if you have a git commit in progress, running git-annex may complain that the index is locked, though this will not prevent it from working. 4. When an operation such as a checkout or merge needs to update a large number of unlocked files, it can become slow. So can be `git add` of a large number of files (`git annex add` is faster). (The technical reasons behind these imperfections are explained in detail in [[todo/git_smudge_clean_interface_suboptiomal]].) ## using less disk space Unlocked files are handy, but they have one significant disadvantage compared with locked files: They use more disk space. While only one copy of a locked file has to be stored, often two copies of an unlocked file are stored on disk. One copy is in the git work tree, where you can use and modify it, and the other is stashed away in `.git/annex/objects` (see [[internals]]). The reason for that second copy is to preserve the old version of the file, when you modify the unlocked file in the work tree. Being able to access old versions of files is an important part of git after all! That's a good safe default. But there are ways to use git-annex that make the second copy not be worth keeping: * When you're using git-annex to sync the current version of files across devices, and don't care much about previous versions. * When you have set up a backup repository, and use git-annex to copy your files to the backup. In situations like these, you may want to avoid the overhead of the second local copy of unlocked files. There's a config setting for that. [[!template id=note text=""" Note that setting annex.thin only has any effect on systems that support hard links. It is supported on Windows, but not on FAT filesystems. """]] git config annex.thin true After changing annex.thin, you'll want to fix up the work tree to match the new setting: git annex fix [[!template id=note text=""" When a [[direct_mode]] repository is upgraded, annex.thin is automatically set, because direct mode made the same single-copy tradeoff. """]] Setting annex.thin can save a lot of disk space, but it's a tradeoff between disk usage and safety. Keeping files locked is safer and also avoids using unnecessary disk space, but trades off easy modification of files. Pick the tradeoff that's right for you.