dcc2957d9c
I noticed that, using just the man pages, there is no real description of what backends are, or what ones are available. Except for some examples. Added a git-annex-backends man page, that is just a stub, but at least describes what they basically are, and tells how to find the supported ons, and links to the backends web page. Sponsored-by: Brett Eisenberg on Patreon
111 lines
5.1 KiB
Markdown
111 lines
5.1 KiB
Markdown
The "backend" in git-annex specifies how a key is generated from a file's
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content and/or filesystem metadata. Most backends are different kinds of
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hashes. A single repository can use different backends for different files.
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The [[key|internals/key_format]] includes the backend that is used for that
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key.
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## configuring which backend to use
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The `annex.backend` git-config setting can be used to configure the
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default backend to use when adding new files.
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For finer control of what backend is used when adding different types of
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files, the `.gitattributes` file can be used. The `annex.backend`
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attribute can be set to the name of the backend to use for matching files.
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For example, to use the SHA256E backend for sound files, which tend to be
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smallish and might be modified or copied over time,
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while using the WORM backend for everything else, you could set
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in `.gitattributes`:
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* annex.backend=WORM
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*.mp3 annex.backend=SHA256E
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*.ogg annex.backend=SHA256E
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## recommended backends to use
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* `SHA256E` -- The default backend for new files, combines a 256 bit SHA-2
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hash of the file's content with the file's extension. This allows
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verifying that the file content is right, and can avoid duplicates of
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files with the same content. Its need to generate checksums
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can make it slower for large files.
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* `SHA256` -- SHA-2 hash that does not include the file extension in the
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key, which can lead to better deduplication but can confuse some programs.
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* `SHA512`, `SHA512E` -- Best SHA-2 hash, for the very paranoid.
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* `SHA384`, `SHA384E`, `SHA224`, `SHA224E` -- SHA-2 hashes for
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people who like unusual sizes.
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* `SHA3_512`, `SHA3_512E`, `SHA3_384`, `SHA3_384E`, `SHA3_256`, `SHA3_256E`, `SHA3_224`, `SHA3_224E`
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-- SHA-3 hashes, for bleeding edge fun.
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* `SKEIN512`, `SKEIN512E`, `SKEIN256`, `SKEIN256E`
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-- [Skein hash](http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Skein_hash),
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a well-regarded SHA3 hash competition finalist.
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* `BLAKE2B160`, `BLAKE2B224`, `BLAKE2B256`, `BLAKE2B384`, `BLAKE2B512`
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`BLAKE2B160E`, `BLAKE2B224E`, `BLAKE2B256E`, `BLAKE2B384E`, `BLAKE2B512E`
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-- Fast [Blake2 hash](https://blake2.net/) variants optimised for 64 bit
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platforms.
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* `BLAKE2S160`, `BLAKE2S224`, `BLAKE2S256`
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`BLAKE2S160E`, `BLAKE2S224E`, `BLAKE2S256E`
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-- Fas:w
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t [Blake2 hash](https://blake2.net/) variants optimised for 32 bit
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platforms.
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* `BLAKE2BP512`, `BLAKE2BP512E`
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-- Fast [Blake2 hash](https://blake2.net/) variants optimised for
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4-way CPUs.
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* `BLAKE2SP224`, `BLAKE2SP256`
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`BLAKE2SP224E`, `BLAKE2SP256E`
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-- Fast [Blake2 hash](https://blake2.net/) variants optimised for
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8-way CPUs.
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## non-cryptograpgically secure backends
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The backends below do not guarantee cryptographically that the
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content of an annexed file remains unchanged.
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* `SHA1`, `SHA1E`, `MD5`, `MD5E` -- Smaller hashes than `SHA256`
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for those who want a checksum but are not concerned about security.
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* `WORM` ("Write Once, Read Many") -- This assumes that any file with
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the same filename, size, and modification time has the same content.
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This is the least expensive backend, recommended for really large
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files or slow systems.
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* `URL` -- This is a key that is generated from the url to a file.
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It's generated when using eg, `git annex addurl --fast`, when the file
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content is not available for hashing. The key may not contain the full
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URL; for long URLs, part of the URL may be represented by a checksum.
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The URL key may contain `&` characters; be sure to quote the key if
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passing it to a shell script. The URL-backend key is distinct from URLs/URIs
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that may be attached to a key (using any backend) indicating the key's location
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on the web or in one of [[special_remotes]].
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* `GIT` -- This is used internally by git-annex when exporting trees
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containing files stored in git, rather than git-annex. It represents a
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git sha. This is never used for git-annex links, but information about
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keys of this type is stored in the git-annex branch.
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## external backends
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While most backends are built into git-annex, it also supports external
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backends. These are programs with names like `git-annex-backend-XFOO`,
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which can be provided by others. See [[design/external_backend_protocol]]
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for details about how to write them.
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Here's a list of external backends. Edit this page to add yours to the list.
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* [[design/external_backend_protocol/git-annex-backend-XFOO]]
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is a demo program implementing the protocol with a shell script.
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Like with git-annex's builtin backends, you can add "E" to the end of the
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name of an external backend, to get a version that includes the file
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extension in the key.
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## notes
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If you want to be able to prove that you're working with the same file
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contents that were checked into a repository earlier, you should avoid
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using non-cryptographically-secure backends, and will need to use
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signed git commits. See [[tips/using_signed_git_commits]] for details.
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Retrieval of WORM and URL from many [[special_remotes]] is prohibited
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for [[security_reasons|security/CVE-2018-10857_and_CVE-2018-10859]].
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Note that the various 512 and 384 length hashes result in long paths,
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which are known to not work on Windows. If interoperability on Windows is a
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concern, avoid those.
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