175 lines
5.9 KiB
Markdown
175 lines
5.9 KiB
Markdown
# NAME
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git-annex export - export a tree of files to a special remote
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# SYNOPSIS
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git annex export `treeish --to remote`
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# DESCRIPTION
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Use this command to export a tree of files from a git-annex repository.
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Normally files are stored on a git-annex special remote named by their
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keys. That is great for reliable data storage, but your filenames are
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obscured. Exporting replicates the tree to the special remote as-is.
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Mixing key/value storage and exports in the same remote would be a mess and
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so is not allowed. You have to configure a special remote with
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`exporttree=yes` when initially setting it up with
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[[git-annex-initremote]](1).
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The treeish to export can be the name of a git branch, or a tag, or any
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other treeish accepted by git, including eg master:subdir to only export a
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subdirectory from a branch.
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When the remote has a preferred content expression set by
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[[git-annex-wanted]](1), the treeish is
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filtered through it, excluding annexed files it does not want from
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being exported to it. (Note that things in the expression like
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"include=" match relative to the top of the treeish being exported.)
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Any files in the treeish that are stored on git will also be exported to
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the special remote.
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Repeated exports are done efficiently, by diffing the old and new tree,
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and transferring only the changed files, and renaming files as necessary.
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Exports can be interrupted and resumed. However, partially uploaded files
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will be re-started from the beginning in most cases.
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Once content has been exported to a remote, commands like `git annex get`
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can download content from there the same as from other remotes. However,
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since an export is not a key/value store, git-annex has to do more
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verification of content downloaded from an export. Some types of keys,
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that are not based on checksums, cannot be downloaded from an export.
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And, git-annex will never trust an export to retain the content of a key.
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However, some special remotes, notably S3, support keeping track of old
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versions of files stored in them. If a special remote is set up to do
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that, it can be used as a key/value store and the limitations in the above
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paragraph do not apply. Note that dropping content from such a remote is
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not supported. See individual special remotes' documentation for
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details of how to enable such versioning.
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The `git annex sync --content` command (and the git-annex assistant)
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can also be used to export a branch to a special remote,
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updating the special remote whenever the branch is changed.
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To do this, you need to configure "remote.<name>.annex-tracking-branch"
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to tell it what branch to track.
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For example:
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git config remote.myremote.annex-tracking-branch master
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git annex sync --content
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You can combine using `git annex export` to send changes to a special
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remote with `git annex import` to fetch changes from a special remote.
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When a file on a special remote has been modified by software other than
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git-annex, exporting to it will not overwrite the modified file, and the
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export will not succeed. You can resolve this conflict by using
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`git annex import`.
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(Some types of special remotes such as S3 with versioning may instead
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let an export overwrite the modified file; then `git annex import`
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will create a sequence of commits that includes the modified file,
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so the overwritten modification is not lost.)
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# OPTIONS
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* `--to=remote`
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Specify the special remote to export to.
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* `--tracking`
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This is a deprecated way to set "remote.<name>.annex-tracking-branch".
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Instead of using this option, you should just set the git configuration
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yourself.
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* `--fast`
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This sets up an export of a tree, but avoids any expensive file uploads to
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the remote. You can later run `git annex sync --content` to upload
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the files to the export.
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* `--jobs=N` `-JN`
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Exports multiple files in parallel. This may be faster.
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For example: `-J4`
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Setting this to "cpus" will run one job per CPU core.
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* `--json`
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Enable JSON output. This is intended to be parsed by programs that use
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git-annex. Each line of output is a JSON object.
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* `--json-progress`
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Include progress objects in JSON output.
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* `--json-error-messages`
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Messages that would normally be output to standard error are included in
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the json instead.
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# EXAMPLE
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git annex initremote myremote type=directory directory=/mnt/myremote \
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exporttree=yes encryption=none
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git annex export master --to myremote
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After that, /mnt/myremote will contain the same tree of files as the master
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branch does.
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git mv myfile subdir/myfile
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git commit -m renamed
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git annex export master --to myremote
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That updates /mnt/myremote to reflect the renamed file.
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git annex export master:subdir --to myremote
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That updates /mnt/myremote, to contain only the files in the "subdir"
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directory of the master branch.
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# EXPORT CONFLICTS
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If two different git-annex repositories are both exporting different trees
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to the same special remote, it's possible for an export conflict to occur.
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This leaves the special remote with some files from one tree, and some
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files from the other. Files in the special remote may have entirely the
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wrong content as well.
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It's not possible for git-annex to detect when making an export will result
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in an export conflict. The best way to avoid export conflicts is to either
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only ever export to a special remote from a single repository, or to have a
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rule about the tree that you export to the special remote. For example, if
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you always export origin/master after pushing to origin, then an export
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conflict can't happen.
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An export conflict can only be detected after the two git repositories
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that produced it get back in sync. Then the next time you run `git annex
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export`, it will detect the export conflict, and resolve it.
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# SEE ALSO
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[[git-annex]](1)
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[[git-annex-initremote]](1)
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[[git-annex-import]](1)
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[[git-annex-sync]](1)
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[[git-annex-preferred-content]](1)
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# HISTORY
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The `export` command was introduced in git-annex version 6.20170925.
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# AUTHOR
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Joey Hess <id@joeyh.name>
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Warning: Automatically converted into a man page by mdwn2man. Edit with care.
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