diff options
Diffstat (limited to 'third_party/git/Documentation/technical/protocol-common.txt')
-rw-r--r-- | third_party/git/Documentation/technical/protocol-common.txt | 99 |
1 files changed, 0 insertions, 99 deletions
diff --git a/third_party/git/Documentation/technical/protocol-common.txt b/third_party/git/Documentation/technical/protocol-common.txt deleted file mode 100644 index ecedb34bba54..000000000000 --- a/third_party/git/Documentation/technical/protocol-common.txt +++ /dev/null @@ -1,99 +0,0 @@ -Documentation Common to Pack and Http Protocols -=============================================== - -ABNF Notation -------------- - -ABNF notation as described by RFC 5234 is used within the protocol documents, -except the following replacement core rules are used: ----- - HEXDIG = DIGIT / "a" / "b" / "c" / "d" / "e" / "f" ----- - -We also define the following common rules: ----- - NUL = %x00 - zero-id = 40*"0" - obj-id = 40*(HEXDIGIT) - - refname = "HEAD" - refname /= "refs/" <see discussion below> ----- - -A refname is a hierarchical octet string beginning with "refs/" and -not violating the 'git-check-ref-format' command's validation rules. -More specifically, they: - -. They can include slash `/` for hierarchical (directory) - grouping, but no slash-separated component can begin with a - dot `.`. - -. They must contain at least one `/`. This enforces the presence of a - category like `heads/`, `tags/` etc. but the actual names are not - restricted. - -. They cannot have two consecutive dots `..` anywhere. - -. They cannot have ASCII control characters (i.e. bytes whose - values are lower than \040, or \177 `DEL`), space, tilde `~`, - caret `^`, colon `:`, question-mark `?`, asterisk `*`, - or open bracket `[` anywhere. - -. They cannot end with a slash `/` or a dot `.`. - -. They cannot end with the sequence `.lock`. - -. They cannot contain a sequence `@{`. - -. They cannot contain a `\\`. - - -pkt-line Format ---------------- - -Much (but not all) of the payload is described around pkt-lines. - -A pkt-line is a variable length binary string. The first four bytes -of the line, the pkt-len, indicates the total length of the line, -in hexadecimal. The pkt-len includes the 4 bytes used to contain -the length's hexadecimal representation. - -A pkt-line MAY contain binary data, so implementors MUST ensure -pkt-line parsing/formatting routines are 8-bit clean. - -A non-binary line SHOULD BE terminated by an LF, which if present -MUST be included in the total length. Receivers MUST treat pkt-lines -with non-binary data the same whether or not they contain the trailing -LF (stripping the LF if present, and not complaining when it is -missing). - -The maximum length of a pkt-line's data component is 65516 bytes. -Implementations MUST NOT send pkt-line whose length exceeds 65520 -(65516 bytes of payload + 4 bytes of length data). - -Implementations SHOULD NOT send an empty pkt-line ("0004"). - -A pkt-line with a length field of 0 ("0000"), called a flush-pkt, -is a special case and MUST be handled differently than an empty -pkt-line ("0004"). - ----- - pkt-line = data-pkt / flush-pkt - - data-pkt = pkt-len pkt-payload - pkt-len = 4*(HEXDIG) - pkt-payload = (pkt-len - 4)*(OCTET) - - flush-pkt = "0000" ----- - -Examples (as C-style strings): - ----- - pkt-line actual value - --------------------------------- - "0006a\n" "a\n" - "0005a" "a" - "000bfoobar\n" "foobar\n" - "0004" "" ----- |