|
| 1 | +gitdatamodel(7) |
| 2 | +=============== |
| 3 | + |
| 4 | +NAME |
| 5 | +---- |
| 6 | +gitdatamodel - Git's core data model |
| 7 | + |
| 8 | +SYNOPSIS |
| 9 | +-------- |
| 10 | +gitdatamodel |
| 11 | + |
| 12 | +DESCRIPTION |
| 13 | +----------- |
| 14 | + |
| 15 | +It's not necessary to understand Git's data model to use Git, but it's |
| 16 | +very helpful when reading Git's documentation so that you know what it |
| 17 | +means when the documentation says "object", "reference" or "index". |
| 18 | + |
| 19 | +Git's core operations use 4 kinds of data: |
| 20 | + |
| 21 | +1. <<objects,Objects>>: commits, trees, blobs, and tag objects |
| 22 | +2. <<references,References>>: branches, tags, |
| 23 | + remote-tracking branches, etc |
| 24 | +3. <<index,The index>>, also known as the staging area |
| 25 | +4. <<reflogs,Reflogs>>: logs of changes to references ("ref log") |
| 26 | +
|
| 27 | +[[objects]] |
| 28 | +OBJECTS |
| 29 | +------- |
| 30 | + |
| 31 | +All of the commits and files in a Git repository are stored as "Git objects". |
| 32 | +Git objects never change after they're created, and every object has an ID, |
| 33 | +like `1b61de420a21a2f1aaef93e38ecd0e45e8bc9f0a`. |
| 34 | + |
| 35 | +This means that if you have an object's ID, you can always recover its |
| 36 | +exact contents as long as the object hasn't been deleted. |
| 37 | + |
| 38 | +Every object has: |
| 39 | + |
| 40 | +[[object-id]] |
| 41 | +1. an *ID* (aka "object name"), which is a cryptographic hash of its |
| 42 | + type and contents. |
| 43 | + It's fast to look up a Git object using its ID. |
| 44 | + This is usually represented in hexadecimal, like |
| 45 | + `1b61de420a21a2f1aaef93e38ecd0e45e8bc9f0a`. |
| 46 | +2. a *type*. There are 4 types of objects: |
| 47 | + <<commit,commits>>, <<tree,trees>>, <<blob,blobs>>, |
| 48 | + and <<tag-object,tag objects>>. |
| 49 | +3. *contents*. The structure of the contents depends on the type. |
| 50 | +
|
| 51 | +Here's how each type of object is structured: |
| 52 | + |
| 53 | +[[commit]] |
| 54 | +commit:: |
| 55 | + A commit contains the full directory structure of every file |
| 56 | + in that version of the repository and each file's contents. |
| 57 | + It has these these required fields |
| 58 | + (though there are other optional fields): |
| 59 | ++ |
| 60 | +1. The *files* in the commit, stored as the *<<tree,tree>>* ID |
| 61 | + of the commit's base directory. |
| 62 | +2. Its *parent commit ID(s)*. The first commit in a repository has 0 parents, |
| 63 | + regular commits have 1 parent, merge commits have 2 or more parents |
| 64 | +3. An *author* and the time the commit was authored |
| 65 | +4. A *committer* and the time the commit was committed. |
| 66 | +5. A *commit message* |
| 67 | ++ |
| 68 | +Here's how an example commit is stored: |
| 69 | ++ |
| 70 | +---- |
| 71 | +tree 1b61de420a21a2f1aaef93e38ecd0e45e8bc9f0a |
| 72 | +parent 4ccb6d7b8869a86aae2e84c56523f8705b50c647 |
| 73 | +author Maya <maya@example.com> 1759173425 -0400 |
| 74 | +committer Maya <maya@example.com> 1759173425 -0400 |
| 75 | + |
| 76 | +Add README |
| 77 | +---- |
| 78 | ++ |
| 79 | +Like all other objects, commits can never be changed after they're created. |
| 80 | +For example, "amending" a commit with `git commit --amend` creates a new |
| 81 | +commit with the same parent. |
| 82 | ++ |
| 83 | +Git does not store the diff for a commit: when you ask Git to show |
| 84 | +the commit with linkgit:git-show[1], it calculates the diff from its |
| 85 | +parent on the fly. |
| 86 | + |
| 87 | +[[tree]] |
| 88 | +tree:: |
| 89 | + A tree is how Git represents a directory. |
| 90 | + It can contain files or other trees (which are subdirectories). |
| 91 | + It lists, for each item in the tree: |
| 92 | ++ |
| 93 | +1. The *filename*, for example `hello.py` |
| 94 | +2. The *type*: either <<blob,`blob`>> (a file), `tree` (a directory), |
| 95 | + or <<commit,`commit`>> (a Git submodule, which is a |
| 96 | + commit from a different Git repository) |
| 97 | +3. The *file mode*. Git has these file modes. which are only |
| 98 | + spiritually related to Unix permissions: |
| 99 | ++ |
| 100 | + - `100644`: regular file (with type `blob`) |
| 101 | + - `100755`: executable file (with type `blob`) |
| 102 | + - `120000`: symbolic link (with type `blob`) |
| 103 | + - `040000`: directory (with type `tree`) |
| 104 | + - `160000`: gitlink, for use with submodules (with type `commit`) |
| 105 | + |
| 106 | +4. The <<object-id,*object ID*>> with the contents of the file or directory |
| 107 | ++ |
| 108 | +For example, this is how a tree containing one directory (`src`) and one file |
| 109 | +(`README.md`) is stored: |
| 110 | ++ |
| 111 | +---- |
| 112 | +100644 blob 8728a858d9d21a8c78488c8b4e70e531b659141f README.md |
| 113 | +040000 tree 89b1d2e0495f66d6929f4ff76ff1bb07fc41947d src |
| 114 | +---- |
| 115 | +
|
| 116 | +[[blob]] |
| 117 | +blob:: |
| 118 | + A blob object contains a file's contents. |
| 119 | ++ |
| 120 | +When you make a commit, Git stores the full contents of each file that |
| 121 | +you changed as a blob. |
| 122 | +For example, if you have a commit that changes 2 files in a repository |
| 123 | +with 1000 files, that commit will create 2 new blobs, and use the |
| 124 | +previous blob ID for the other 998 files. |
| 125 | +This means that commits can use relatively little disk space even in a |
| 126 | +very large repository. |
| 127 | + |
| 128 | +[[tag-object]] |
| 129 | +tag object:: |
| 130 | + Tag objects contain these required fields |
| 131 | + (though there are other optional fields): |
| 132 | ++ |
| 133 | +1. The *ID* and *type* of the object (often a commit) that they reference |
| 134 | +2. The *tagger* and tag date |
| 135 | +3. A *tag message*, similar to a commit message |
| 136 | + |
| 137 | +Here's how an example tag object is stored: |
| 138 | + |
| 139 | +---- |
| 140 | +object 750b4ead9c87ceb3ddb7a390e6c7074521797fb3 |
| 141 | +type commit |
| 142 | +tag v1.0.0 |
| 143 | +tagger Maya <maya@example.com> 1759927359 -0400 |
| 144 | +
|
| 145 | +Release version 1.0.0 |
| 146 | +---- |
| 147 | + |
| 148 | +NOTE: All of the examples in this section were generated with |
| 149 | +`git cat-file -p <object-id>`. |
| 150 | + |
| 151 | +[[references]] |
| 152 | +REFERENCES |
| 153 | +---------- |
| 154 | + |
| 155 | +References are a way to give a name to a commit. |
| 156 | +It's easier to remember "the changes I'm working on are on the `turtle` |
| 157 | +branch" than "the changes are in commit bb69721404348e". |
| 158 | +Git often uses "ref" as shorthand for "reference". |
| 159 | + |
| 160 | +References can either refer to: |
| 161 | + |
| 162 | +1. An object ID, usually a <<commit,commit>> ID |
| 163 | +2. Another reference. This is called a "symbolic reference". |
| 164 | +
|
| 165 | +References are stored in a hierarchy, and Git handles references |
| 166 | +differently based on where they are in the hierarchy. |
| 167 | +Most references are under `refs/`. Here are the main types: |
| 168 | + |
| 169 | +[[branch]] |
| 170 | +branches: `refs/heads/<name>`:: |
| 171 | + A branch refers to a commit ID. |
| 172 | + That commit is the latest commit on the branch. |
| 173 | ++ |
| 174 | +To get the history of commits on a branch, Git will start at the commit |
| 175 | +ID the branch references, and then look at the commit's parent(s), |
| 176 | +the parent's parent, etc. |
| 177 | + |
| 178 | +[[tag]] |
| 179 | +tags: `refs/tags/<name>`:: |
| 180 | + A tag refers to a commit ID, tag object ID, or other object ID. |
| 181 | + There are two types of tags: |
| 182 | + 1. "Annotated tags", which reference a <<tag-object,tag object>> ID |
| 183 | + which contains a tag message |
| 184 | + 2. "Lightweight tags", which reference a commit, blob, or tree ID |
| 185 | + directly |
| 186 | ++ |
| 187 | +Even though branches and tags both refer to a commit ID, Git |
| 188 | +treats them very differently. |
| 189 | +Branches are expected to change over time: when you make a commit, Git |
| 190 | +will update your <<HEAD,current branch>> to point to the new commit. |
| 191 | +Tags are usually not changed after they're created. |
| 192 | + |
| 193 | +[[HEAD]] |
| 194 | +HEAD: `HEAD`:: |
| 195 | + `HEAD` is where Git stores your current <<branch,branch>>, |
| 196 | + if there is a current branch. `HEAD` can either be: |
| 197 | ++ |
| 198 | +1. A symbolic reference to your current branch, for example `ref: |
| 199 | + refs/heads/main` if your current branch is `main`. |
| 200 | +2. A direct reference to a commit ID. In this case there is no current branch. |
| 201 | + This is called "detached HEAD state", see the DETACHED HEAD section |
| 202 | + of linkgit:git-checkout[1] for more. |
| 203 | + |
| 204 | +[[remote-tracking-branch]] |
| 205 | +remote-tracking branches: `refs/remotes/<remote>/<branch>`:: |
| 206 | + A remote-tracking branch refers to a commit ID. |
| 207 | + It's how Git stores the last-known state of a branch in a remote |
| 208 | + repository. `git fetch` updates remote-tracking branches. When |
| 209 | + `git status` says "you're up to date with origin/main", it's looking at |
| 210 | + this. |
| 211 | ++ |
| 212 | +`refs/remotes/<remote>/HEAD` is a symbolic reference to the remote's |
| 213 | +default branch. This is the branch that `git clone` checks out by default. |
| 214 | + |
| 215 | +[[other-refs]] |
| 216 | +Other references:: |
| 217 | + Git tools may create references anywhere under `refs/`. |
| 218 | + For example, linkgit:git-stash[1], linkgit:git-bisect[1], |
| 219 | + and linkgit:git-notes[1] all create their own references |
| 220 | + in `refs/stash`, `refs/bisect`, etc. |
| 221 | + Third-party Git tools may also create their own references. |
| 222 | ++ |
| 223 | +Git may also create references other than `HEAD` at the base of the |
| 224 | +hierarchy, like `ORIG_HEAD`. |
| 225 | + |
| 226 | +[[index]] |
| 227 | +THE INDEX |
| 228 | +--------- |
| 229 | +The index, also known as the "staging area", is a list of files and |
| 230 | +the contents of each file, stored as a <<blob,blob>>. |
| 231 | +You can add files to the index or update the contents of a file in the |
| 232 | +index with linkgit:git-add[1]. This is called "staging" the file for commit. |
| 233 | + |
| 234 | +Unlike a <<tree,tree>>, the index is a flat list of files. |
| 235 | +When you commit, Git converts the list of files in the index to a |
| 236 | +directory <<tree,tree>> and uses that tree in the new <<commit,commit>>. |
| 237 | + |
| 238 | +Each index entry has 4 fields: |
| 239 | + |
| 240 | +1. The *<<tree,file mode>>* |
| 241 | +2. The *<<blob,blob>> ID* of the file |
| 242 | +3. The *file path*, for example `src/hello.py` |
| 243 | +4. The *stage number*, either 0, 1, 2, or 3. This is normally 0, but if |
| 244 | + there's a merge conflict there can be multiple versions of the same |
| 245 | + filename in the index. |
| 246 | +
|
| 247 | +It's extremely uncommon to look at the index directly: normally you'd |
| 248 | +run `git status` to see a list of changes between the index and <<HEAD,HEAD>>. |
| 249 | +But you can use `git ls-files --stage` to see the index. |
| 250 | +Here's the output of `git ls-files --stage` in a repository with 2 files: |
| 251 | + |
| 252 | +---- |
| 253 | +100644 8728a858d9d21a8c78488c8b4e70e531b659141f 0 README.md |
| 254 | +100644 665c637a360874ce43bf74018768a96d2d4d219a 0 src/hello.py |
| 255 | +---- |
| 256 | + |
| 257 | +[[reflogs]] |
| 258 | +REFLOGS |
| 259 | +------- |
| 260 | + |
| 261 | +Every time a branch, remote-tracking branch, or HEAD is updated, Git |
| 262 | +updates a log called a "reflog" for that <<references,reference>>. |
| 263 | +This means that if you make a mistake and "lose" a commit, you can |
| 264 | +generally recover the commit ID by running `git reflog <reference>`. |
| 265 | + |
| 266 | +A reflog is a list of log entries. Each entry has: |
| 267 | + |
| 268 | +1. The *commit ID* |
| 269 | +2. *Timestamp* when the change was made |
| 270 | +3. *Log message*, for example `pull: Fast-forward` |
| 271 | +
|
| 272 | +Reflogs only log changes made in your local repository. |
| 273 | +They are not shared with remotes. |
| 274 | + |
| 275 | +You can view a reflog with `git reflog <reference>`. |
| 276 | +For example, here's the reflog for a `main` branch which has changed twice: |
| 277 | + |
| 278 | +---- |
| 279 | +$ git reflog main --date=iso --no-decorate |
| 280 | +750b4ea main@{2025-09-29 15:17:05 -0400}: commit: Add README |
| 281 | +4ccb6d7 main@{2025-09-29 15:16:48 -0400}: commit (initial): Initial commit |
| 282 | +---- |
| 283 | + |
| 284 | +GIT |
| 285 | +--- |
| 286 | +Part of the linkgit:git[1] suite |
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