jammy (5) git-lfs-config.5.gz

Provided by: git-lfs_3.0.2-1ubuntu0.3_amd64 bug

NAME

       git-lfs-config - Configuration options for git-lfs

CONFIGURATION FILES

       git-lfs  reads  its configuration from any file supported by git config -l, including all per-repository,
       per-user, and per-system Git configuration files.

       Additionally, a small number of settings can be specified in a file called .lfsconfig at the root of  the
       repository;  see  the "LFSCONFIG" section for more details. This configuration file is useful for setting
       options such as the LFS URL or access type for all users of a repository, especially  when  these  differ
       from the default. The .lfsconfig file uses the same format as .gitconfig.

       If  the  .lfsconfig  file  is  missing,  the index is checked for a version of the file, and that is used
       instead. If both are missing, HEAD is checked for the file. If the  repository  is  bare,  only  HEAD  is
       checked. This order may change for checkouts in the future to better match Git's behavior.

       Settings  from Git configuration files override the .lfsconfig file. This allows you to override settings
       like lfs.url in your local environment without having to modify the .lfsconfig file.

       Most options regarding git-lfs are contained in the [lfs] section, meaning they are all named lfs.foo  or
       similar, although occasionally an lfs option can be scoped inside the configuration for a remote.

LIST OF OPTIONS

   General settingslfs.url / remote.<remote>.lfsurl

           The url used to call the Git LFS remote API. Default blank (derive from clone URL).

       ○   lfs.pushurl / remote.<remote>.lfspushurl

           The  url  used  to  call  the  Git LFS remote API when pushing. Default blank (derive from either LFS
           non-push urls or clone url).

       ○   remote.lfsdefault

           The remote used to find the Git LFS remote API. lfs.url and branch.*.remote for  the  current  branch
           override  this setting. If this setting is not specified and there is exactly one remote, that remote
           is picked; otherwise, the default is origin.

       ○   remote.lfspushdefault

           The remote used to find the Git LFS remote API when pushing. lfs.url and branch.*.pushremote for  the
           current  branch  override this setting. If this setting is not set, remote.pushdefault is used, or if
           that is not set, the order of selection is used as specified in the remote.lfsdefault above.

       ○   lfs.dialtimeout

           Sets the maximum time, in seconds, that the HTTP client will wait to initiate a connection. This does
           not include the time to send a request and wait for a response. Default: 30 seconds

       ○   lfs.tlstimeout

           Sets  the  maximum  time, in seconds, that the HTTP client will wait for a TLS handshake. Default: 30
           seconds.

       ○   lfs.activitytimeout / lfs.https://<host>.activitytimeout

           Sets the maximum time, in seconds, that the HTTP client will wait for the next tcp read or write.  If
           < 1, no activity timeout is used at all. Default: 30 seconds

       ○   lfs.keepalive

           Sets the maximum time, in seconds, for the HTTP client to maintain keepalive connections. Default: 30
           minutes.

       ○   lfs.ssh.automultiplex

           When using the pure SSH-based protocol, whether to multiplex requests over a single  connection  when
           possible. This option requires the use of OpenSSH or a compatible SSH client. Default: true.

       ○   lfs.ssh.retries

           Specifies  the  number of times Git LFS will attempt to obtain authorization via SSH before aborting.
           Default: 5.

       ○   core.askpass, GIT_ASKPASS

           Given as a program and its arguments, this is invoked when authentication is needed against  the  LFS
           API. The contents of stdout are interpreted as the password.

       ○   lfs.cachecredentials

           Enables in-memory SSH and Git Credential caching for a single 'git lfs' command. Default: enabled.

       ○   lfs.storage

           Allow  override  LFS  storage directory. Non-absolute path is relativized to inside of Git repository
           directory (usually .git).

           Note: you should not run git lfs prune if you have different repositories sharing  the  same  storage
           directory.

           Default: lfs in Git repository directory (usually .git/lfs).

       ○   lfs.largefilewarning

           Warn when a file is 4 GiB or larger. Such files will be corrupted when using Windows (unless smudging
           is disabled) due to a limitation in Git. Default: true.

   Transfer (upload / download) settings
       These settings control how the upload and download of LFS content occurs.

       ○   lfs.concurrenttransfers

           The number of concurrent uploads/downloads. Default 8.

       ○   lfs.basictransfersonly

           If set to true, only basic HTTP upload/download transfers will be used, ignoring  any  more  advanced
           transfers   that   the  client/server  may  support.  This  is  primarily  to  work  around  bugs  or
           incompatibilities.

           The git-lfs client supports basic HTTP downloads, resumable HTTP downloads (using Range headers), and
           resumable  uploads  via  tus.io protocol. Custom transfer methods can be added via lfs.customtransfer
           (see next section). However setting this value to true limits the client to simple HTTP.

       ○   lfs.tustransfers

           If set to true, this enables resumable uploads of LFS objects  through  the  tus.io  API.  Once  this
           feature  is  finalized,  this  setting  will be removed, and tus.io uploads will be available for all
           clients.

       ○   lfs.standalonetransferagent

           Allows the specified custom transfer agent to be used directly for transferring files, without asking
           the  server  how  the  transfers  should  be  made.  The custom transfer agent has to be defined in a
           lfs.customtransfer.<name> settings group.

       ○   lfs.customtransfer.<name>.path

           lfs.customtransfer.<name> is a settings group which defines a custom transfer hook which  allows  you
           to upload/download via an intermediate process, using any mechanism you like (rather than just HTTP).
           path should point to the process you wish to invoke. The protocol between the git-lfs client and  the
           custom              transfer             process             is             documented             at
           https://github.com/git-lfs/git-lfs/blob/main/docs/custom-transfers.md

           name must be a unique identifier that the LFS server understands. When calling the LFS API the client
           will  include  a  list  of  supported transfer types. If the server also supports this named transfer
           type, it will select it and actions returned from the API will be in relation to that  transfer  type
           (may  not be traditional URLs for example). Only if the server accepts name as a transfer it supports
           will this custom transfer process be invoked.

       ○   lfs.customtransfer.<name>.args

           If the custom transfer process requires any arguments, these can be provided here. This  string  will
           be expanded by the shell.

       ○   lfs.customtransfer.<name>.concurrent

           If  true  (the  default), git-lfs will invoke the custom transfer process multiple times in parallel,
           according to lfs.concurrenttransfers, splitting the transfer workload between the processes.

       ○   lfs.customtransfer.<name>.direction

           Specifies which direction the custom transfer  process  supports,  either  "download",  "upload",  or
           "both". The default if unspecified is "both".

       ○   lfs.transfer.maxretries

           Specifies how many retries LFS will attempt per OID before marking the transfer as failed. Must be an
           integer which is at least one. If the value is not an integer, is less than one, or is not  given,  a
           value of eight will be used instead.

       ○   lfs.transfer.maxretrydelay

           Specifies  the maximum time in seconds LFS will wait between each retry attempt. LFS uses exponential
           backoff for retries, doubling the time between each retry until reaching  this  limit.  If  a  server
           requests  a  delay using the Retry-After header, the header value overrides the exponential delay for
           that attempt and is not limited by this option.

           Must be an integer which is not negative. Use zero to disable delays between retries unless requested
           by  a  server.  If  the value is not an integer, is negative, or is not given, a value of ten will be
           used instead.

       ○   lfs.transfer.maxverifies

           Specifies how many verification requests LFS will attempt per OID  before  marking  the  transfer  as
           failed,  if  the  object has a verification action associated with it. Must be an integer which is at
           least one. If the value is not an integer, is less than one, or is not  given,  a  default  value  of
           three will be used instead.

       ○   lfs.transfer.enablehrefrewrite

           If  set  to  true,  this  enables  rewriting  href of LFS objects using url.*.insteadof/pushinsteadof
           config. pushinsteadof is used only for uploading, and insteadof  is  used  for  downloading  and  for
           uploading when pushinsteadof is not set.

   Push settingslfs.allowincompletepush

           When  pushing,  allow objects to be missing from the local cache without halting a Git push. Default:
           false.

   Fetch settingslfs.fetchinclude

           When fetching, only  download  objects  which  match  any  entry  on  this  comma-separated  list  of
           paths/filenames. Wildcard matching is as per git-ignore(1). See git-lfs-fetch(1) for examples.

       ○   lfs.fetchexclude

           When  fetching,  do  not  download  objects  which  match  any  item  on this comma-separated list of
           paths/filenames. Wildcard matching is as per git-ignore(1). See git-lfs-fetch(1) for examples.

       ○   lfs.fetchrecentrefsdays

           If non-zero, fetches refs which have commits within N days of the current date. Only local  refs  are
           included  unless  lfs.fetchrecentremoterefs  is true. Also used as a basis for pruning old files. The
           default is 7 days.

       ○   lfs.fetchrecentremoterefs

           If true, fetches remote refs (for the remote you're fetching) as well as local  refs  in  the  recent
           window.  This  is  useful to fetch objects for remote branches you might want to check out later. The
           default is true; if you set this to false, fetching for those  branches  will  only  occur  when  you
           either  check  them  out  (losing the advantage of fetch --recent), or create a tracking local branch
           separately then fetch again.

       ○   lfs.fetchrecentcommitsdays

           In addition to fetching at refs, also fetches previous changes made  within  N  days  of  the  latest
           commit  on the ref. This is useful if you're often reviewing recent changes. Also used as a basis for
           pruning old files. The default is 0 (no previous changes).

       ○   lfs.fetchrecentalways

           Always operate as if --recent was included in a git lfs fetch call. Default false.

   Prune settingslfs.pruneoffsetdays

           The number of days added to the lfs.fetchrecent* settings to determine what can be pruned. Default is
           3  days,  i.e.  that  anything fetched at the very oldest edge of the 'recent window' is eligible for
           pruning 3 days later.

       ○   lfs.pruneremotetocheck

           Set the remote that LFS files must have been pushed to in order for them to  be  considered  eligible
           for local pruning. Also the remote which is called if --verify-remote is enabled.

       ○   lfs.pruneverifyremotealways

           Always run git lfs prune as if --verify-remote was provided.

   Extensionslfs.extension.<name>.<setting>

           Git  LFS extensions enable the manipulation of files streams during smudge and clean. name groups the
           settings for a single extension, and the settings are: * clean The command which runs when files  are
           added  to  the  index  *  smudge  The command which runs when files are written to the working copy *
           priority The order of this extension compared to others

   Other settingslfs.<url>.access

           Note: this setting is normally set  by  LFS  itself  on  receiving  a  401  response  (authentication
           required), you don't normally need to set it manually.

           If  set  to  "basic"  then  credentials  will  be requested before making batch requests to this url,
           otherwise a public request will initially be attempted.

       ○   lfs.<url>.locksverify

           Determines whether locks are checked before Git pushes. This prevents you  from  pushing  changes  to
           files  that other users have locked. The Git LFS pre-push hook varies its behavior based on the value
           of this config key.

       ○   null - In the absence of a value, Git LFS will attempt the call, and warn if it returns an error.  If
           the  response  is  valid,  Git  LFS  will  set  the value to true, and will halt the push if the user
           attempts to update a file locked by another user.  If  the  server  returns  a  501  Not  Implemented
           response, Git LFS will set the value to false.true  - Git LFS will attempt to verify locks, halting the Git push if there are any server issues, or
           if the user attempts to update a file locked by another user.

       ○   false - Git LFS will completely skip the lock check in the pre-push hook.  You  should  set  this  if
           you're not using File Locking, or your Git server verifies locked files on pushes automatically.

       Supports  URL  config lookup as described in: https://git-scm.com/docs/git-config#git-config-httplturlgt.
       To set this value per-host: git config --global lfs.https://github.com/.locksverify [true|false].

       ○   lfs.<url>.contenttype

           Determines whether Git LFS should attempt to detect an  appropriate  HTTP  Content-Type  header  when
           uploading  using  the  'basic'  upload  adapter. If set to false, the default header of Content-Type:
           application/octet-stream is chosen instead. Default: 'true'.

       ○   lfs.skipdownloaderrors

           Causes Git LFS not to abort the smudge filter when a download  error  is  encountered,  which  allows
           actions  such  as  checkout  to work when you are unable to download the LFS content. LFS files which
           could not download will contain pointer content instead.

           Note that this will result in git commands which call the smudge filter to  report  success  even  in
           cases when LFS downloads fail, which may affect scripts.

           You can also set the environment variable GIT_LFS_SKIP_DOWNLOAD_ERRORS=1 to get the same effect.

       ○   GIT_LFS_PROGRESS

           This  environment  variable  causes Git LFS to emit progress updates to an absolute file-path on disk
           when cleaning, smudging, or fetching.

           Progress is reported periodically in the form of a new line being appended to the end  of  the  file.
           Each new line will take the following format:

           <direction> <current>/<total files> <downloaded>/<total> <name>

           Each field is described below: * direction: The direction of transfer, either "checkout", "download",
           or "upload". * current The index of the currently transferring file.  *  total  files  The  estimated
           count  of  all  files to be transferred. * downloaded The number of bytes already downloaded. * total
           The entire size of the file, in bytes. * name The name of the file.

       ○   GIT_LFS_FORCE_PROGRESS lfs.forceprogress

           Controls whether Git LFS will suppress progress  status  when  the  standard  output  stream  is  not
           attached  to a terminal. The default is false which makes Git LFS detect whether stdout is a terminal
           and suppress progress when it's not; you can disable this behaviour and force  progress  status  even
           when standard output stream is not a terminal by setting either variable to 1, 'yes' or 'true'.

       ○   GIT_LFS_SKIP_SMUDGE

           Sets  whether  or  not  Git  LFS will skip attempting to convert pointers of files tracked into their
           corresponding objects when checked out into a working copy. If 'true', '1', 'on', or similar, Git LFS
           will  skip  the smudge process in both git lfs smudge and git lfs filter-process. If unset, or set to
           'false', '0', 'off', or similar, Git LFS will smudge files as normal.

       ○   GIT_LFS_SKIP_PUSH

           Sets whether or not Git LFS will attempt to upload new Git LFS object in a pre-push hook. If  'true',
           '1',  'on',  or  similar,  Git  LFS  will  skip  the pre-push hook, so no new Git LFS objects will be
           uploaded. If unset, or set to 'false', '0', 'off', or similar, Git LFS will proceed as normal.

       ○   GIT_LFS_SET_LOCKABLE_READONLY lfs.setlockablereadonly

           These settings, the first an environment variable and the second a gitconfig setting, control whether
           files marked as 'lockable' in git lfs track are made read-only in the working copy when not locked by
           the current user. The default is true; you can disable this behaviour and have all files writeable by
           setting either variable to 0, 'no' or 'false'.

       ○   lfs.lockignoredfiles

           This  setting  controls  whether  Git LFS will set ignored files that match the lockable pattern read
           only as well as tracked files. The default is false; you can enable  this  behavior  by  setting  the
           variable to 1, 'yes', or 'true'.

       ○   lfs.defaulttokenttl

           This  setting sets a default token TTL when git-lfs-authenticate does not include the TTL in the JSON
           response but still enforces it.

           Note that this is only necessary for larger repositories hosted on LFS servers that don't include the
           TTL.

LFSCONFIG

       The  .lfsconfig  file  in  a  repository is read and interpreted in the same format as the file stored in
       .git/config. It allows a subset of keys to be used, including and limited to:

       ○   lfs.allowincompletepush

       ○   lfs.fetchexclude

       ○   lfs.fetchinclude

       ○   lfs.gitprotocol

       ○   lfs.locksverify

       ○   lfs.pushurl

       ○   lfs.skipdownloaderrors

       ○   lfs.url

       ○   lfs.{*}.access

       ○   remote.{name}.lfsurl

       The set of keys allowed in this file is restricted for security reasons.

EXAMPLES

       Configure a custom LFS endpoint for your repository:

       git config -f .lfsconfig lfs.url https://lfs.example.com/foo/bar/info/lfs

SEE ALSO

       git-config(1), git-lfs-install(1), gitattributes(5)

       Part of the git-lfs(1) suite.

                                                  November 2024                                GIT-LFS-CONFIG(5)