Spent today implementing the git pkt-line protocol. Git uses it for a bunch of internal stuff, but also to talk to long-running filter processes. This was my first time using attoparsec, which I quite enjoyed aside from some difficulty in parsing a 4 byte hex number. Even though parsing to a Word16 should naturally only consume 4 bytes, attoparsec will actually consume subsequent bytes that look like hex. And it may parse fewer than 4 bytes too. So my parser had to take 4 bytes and feed them back into a call to attoparsec. Which seemed weird, but works. I also used bytestring-builder, and between the two libraries, this should be quite a fast implementation of the protocol. With that 300 lines of code written, it should be easy to implement support for the rest of the long-running filter process protocol. Which will surely speed up v6 a bit, since at least git won't be running git-annex over and over again for each file in the worktree. I hope it will also avoid a memory leak in git. That'll be the rest of the low-hanging fruit, before v6 improvements get really interesting. This work is supported by the NSF-funded DataLad project.