Overall operation
-
Connects to the remote side and invokes git-receive-pack.
-
Learns what refs the remote has and what commit they point at. Matches them to the refspecs we are pushing.
-
Checks if there are non-fast-forwards. Unlike fetch-pack, the repository send-pack runs in is supposed to be a superset of the recipient in fast-forward cases, so there is no need for want/have exchanges, and fast-forward check can be done locally. Tell the result to the other end.
-
Calls pack_objects() which generates a packfile and sends it over to the other end.
-
If the remote side is new enough (v1.1.0 or later), wait for the unpack and hook status from the other end.
-
Exit with appropriate error codes.
Pack_objects pipeline
This function gets one file descriptor (fd
) which is either a
socket (over the network) or a pipe (local). What’s written to
this fd goes to git-receive-pack to be unpacked.
send-pack ---> fd ---> receive-pack
The function pack_objects creates a pipe and then forks. The forked child execs pack-objects with --revs to receive revision parameters from its standard input. This process will write the packfile to the other end.
send-pack
|
pack_objects() ---> fd ---> receive-pack
| ^ (pipe)
v |
(child)
The child dup2’s to arrange its standard output to go back to the other end, and read its standard input to come from the pipe. After that it exec’s pack-objects. On the other hand, the parent process, before starting to feed the child pipeline, closes the reading side of the pipe and fd to receive-pack.
send-pack
|
pack_objects(parent)
|
v [0]
pack-objects [0] ---> receive-pack
[jc: the pipeline was much more complex and needed documentation before I understood an earlier bug, but now it is trivial and straightforward.]