Provided by: git-annex_10.20240430-1_amd64 bug

NAME

       git-annex - manage files with git, without checking their contents in

SYNOPSIS

       git annex command [params ...]

DESCRIPTION

       git-annex  allows  managing  files  with git, without checking the file contents into git. While that may
       seem paradoxical, it is useful when dealing with files larger  than  git  can  currently  easily  handle,
       whether due to limitations in memory, checksumming time, or disk space.

       Even  without  file  content  tracking, being able to manage files with git, move files around and delete
       files with versioned directory trees, and use branches and distributed clones, are all very handy reasons
       to use git. And annexed files can co-exist in the same git repository  with  regularly  versioned  files,
       which  is convenient for maintaining documents, Makefiles, etc that are associated with annexed files but
       that benefit from full revision control.

       When a file is annexed, its content is moved into a key-value store, and a symlink is made that points to
       the content. These symlinks are checked into git and versioned like regular  files.  You  can  move  them
       around,  delete them, and so on. Pushing to another git repository will make git-annex there aware of the
       annexed file, and it can be used to retrieve its content from the key-value store.

EXAMPLES

        # git annex get video/hackity_hack_and_kaxxt.mov
        get video/hackity_hack_and_kaxxt.mov (not available)
          I was unable to access these remotes: server
          Try making some of these repositories available:
               5863d8c0-d9a9-11df-adb2-af51e6559a49  -- my home file server
                58d84e8a-d9ae-11df-a1aa-ab9aa8c00826  -- portable USB drive
                ca20064c-dbb5-11df-b2fe-002170d25c55  -- backup SATA drive
        failed
        # sudo mount /media/usb
        # git remote add usbdrive /media/usb
        # git annex get video/hackity_hack_and_kaxxt.mov
        get video/hackity_hack_and_kaxxt.mov (from usbdrive...) ok

        # git annex add iso
        add iso/Debian_5.0.iso ok

        # git annex drop iso/Debian_4.0.iso
        drop iso/Debian_4.0.iso ok

        # git annex move iso --to=usbdrive
        move iso/Debian_5.0.iso (moving to usbdrive...) ok

COMMONLY USED COMMANDS

       help

              Display built-in help.

              For help on a specific command, use git annex help command

       add [path ...]
              Adds files to the annex.

              See git-annex-add(1) for details.

       get [path ...]
              Makes the content of annexed files available in this repository.

              See git-annex-get(1) for details.

       drop [path ...]
              Drops the content of annexed files from this repository.

              See git-annex-drop(1) for details.

       move [path ...] [--from=remote|--to=remote]
              Moves the content of files from or to another remote.

              See git-annex-move(1) for details.

       copy [path ...] [--from=remote|--to=remote]
              Copies the content of files from or to another remote.

              See git-annex-copy(1) for details.

       status [path ...]
              Show the working tree status. (deprecated)

              See git-annex-status(1) for details.

       unlock [path ...]
              Unlock annexed files for modification.

              See git-annex-unlock(1) for details.

       edit [path ...]
              This is an alias for the unlock command. May be easier to  remember,  if  you  think  of  this  as
              allowing you to edit an annexed file.

       lock [path ...]
              Use  this  to  undo  an  unlock  command  if  you  don't  want  to  modify the files, or have made
              modifications you want to discard.

              See git-annex-lock(1) for details.

       pull [remote ...]
              Pull content from remotes.

              See git-annex-pull(1) for details.

       push [remote ...]
              Push content to remotes.

              See git-annex-push(1) for details.

       sync [remote ...]
              Synchronize local repository with remotes.

              See git-annex-sync(1) for details.

       assist [remote ...]
              Add files and sync changes with remotes.

              See git-annex-assist(1) for details.

       satisfy [remote ...]
              Satisfy preferred content settings by transferring and dropping content.

              See git-annex-satisfy(1) for details.

       mirror [path ...] [--to=remote|--from=remote]
              Mirror content of files to/from another repository.

              See git-annex-mirror(1) for details.

       addurl [url ...]
              Downloads each url to its own file, which is added to the annex.

              See git-annex-addurl(1) for details.

       rmurl file url
              Record that the file is no longer available at the url.

              See git-annex-rmurl(1) for details.

       import --from remote branch[:subdir] | [path ...]
              Add a tree of files to the repository.

              See git-annex-import(1) for details.

       importfeed [url ...]
              Imports the contents of podcast feeds into the annex.

              See git-annex-importfeed(1) for details.

       export treeish --to remote
              Export content to a remote.

              See git-annex-export(1) for details.

       undo [filename|directory] ...
              Undo last change to a file or directory.

              See git-annex-undo(1) for details.

       multicast
              Multicast file distribution.

              See git-annex-multicast(1) for details.

       watch  Daemon to watch for changes and autocommit.

              See git-annex-watch(1) for details.

       assistant
              Daemon to automatically sync changes.

              See git-annex-assistant(1) for details.

       webapp Opens a web app, that allows easy setup of a git-annex repository, and control  of  the  git-annex
              assistant. If the assistant is not already running, it will be started.

              See git-annex-webapp(1) for details.

       remotedaemon
              Persistant communication with remotes.

              See git-annex-remotedaemon(1) for details.

REPOSITORY SETUP COMMANDS

       init [description]

              Until  a repository (or one of its remotes) has been initialized, git-annex will refuse to operate
              on it, to avoid accidentally using it in a repository that was not intended to have an annex.

              See git-annex-init(1) for details.

       describe repository description
              Changes the description of a repository.

              See git-annex-describe(1) for details.

       initremote name type=value [param=value ...]
              Creates a new special remote, and adds it to .git/config.

              See git-annex-initremote(1) for details.

       enableremote name [param=value ...]
              Enables use of an existing special remote in the current repository.

              See git-annex-enableremote(1) for details.

       configremote name [param=value ...]
              Changes configuration of an existing special remote.

              See git-annex-configremote(1) for details.

       renameremote
              Renames a special remote.

              See git-annex-renameremote(1) for details.

       enable-tor
              Sets up tor hidden service.

              See git-annex-enable-tor(1) for details.

       numcopies [N]
              Configure desired number of copies.

              See git-annex-numcopies(1) for details.

       mincopies [N]
              Configure minimum number of copies.

              See git-annex-mincopies(1) for details.

       trust [repository ...]
              Records that a repository is trusted to not unexpectedly lose content. Use with care.

              See git-annex-trust(1) for details.

       untrust [repository ...]
              Records that a repository is not trusted and could lose content at any time.

              See git-annex-untrust(1) for details.

       semitrust [repository ...]
              Returns a repository to the default semi trusted state.

              See git-annex-semitrust(1) for details.

       group repository groupname
              Add a repository to a group.

              See git-annex-group(1) for details.

       ungroup repository groupname
              Removes a repository from a group.

              See git-annex-ungroup(1) for details.

       wanted repository [expression]
              Get or set preferred content expression.

              See git-annex-wanted(1) for details.

       groupwanted groupname [expression]
              Get or set groupwanted expression.

              See git-annex-groupwanted(1) for details.

       required repository [expression]
              Get or set required content expression.

              See git-annex-required(1) for details.

       schedule repository [expression]
              Get or set scheduled jobs.

              See git-annex-schedule(1) for details.

       config Get and set other configuration stored in git-annex branch.

              See git-annex-config(1) for details.

       vicfg  Opens EDITOR on a temp file containing most of the above configuration settings, as well as a  few
              others, and when it exits, stores any changes made back to the git-annex branch.

              See git-annex-vicfg(1) for details.

       adjust Switches a repository to use an adjusted branch, which can automatically unlock all files, etc.

              See git-annex-adjust(1) for details.

       direct Switches a repository to use direct mode. (deprecated)

              See git-annex-direct(1) for details.

       indirect
              Switches a repository to use indirect mode. (deprecated)

              See git-annex-indirect(1) for details.

REPOSITORY MAINTENANCE COMMANDS

       fsck [path ...]

              Checks  the  annex  consistency,  and  warns  about  or  fixes any problems found.  This is a good
              complement to git fsck.

              See git-annex-fsck(1) for details.

       expire [repository:]time ...
              Expires repositories that have not recently performed an activity (such as a fsck).

              See git-annex-expire(1) for details.

       unused Checks the annex for data that does not correspond to any files present in any tag or branch,  and
              prints a numbered list of the data.

              See git-annex-unused(1) for details.

       dropunused [number|range ...]
              Drops the data corresponding to the numbers, as listed by the last git annex unused

              See git-annex-dropunused(1) for details.

       addunused [number|range ...]
              Adds  back files for the content corresponding to the numbers or ranges, as listed by the last git
              annex unused.

              See git-annex-addunused(1) for details.

       fix [path ...]
              Fixes up symlinks that have become broken to again point to annexed content.

              See git-annex-fix(1) for details.

       merge  Automatically merge changes from remotes.

              See git-annex-merge(1) for details.

       upgrade
              Upgrades the repository.

              See git-annex-upgrade(1) for details.

       dead [repository ...] [--key key]
              Indicates that a repository or a single key has been irretrievably lost.

              See git-annex-dead(1) for details.

       forget Causes the git-annex branch to be rewritten, throwing away historical data about past locations of
              files.

              See git-annex-forget(1) for details.

       filter-branch
              Produces a filtered version of the git-annex branch.

              See git-annex-filter-branch(1) for details.

       repair This can repair many of the problems with git repositories that git fsck  detects,  but  does  not
              itself  fix. It's useful if a repository has become badly damaged. One way this can happen is if a
              repository used by git-annex is on a removable drive that gets unplugged at the wrong time.

              See git-annex-repair(1) for details.

       p2p    Configure peer-2-Peer links between repositories.

              See git-annex-p2p(1) for details.

QUERY COMMANDS

       find [path ...]

              Outputs a list of annexed files in the specified path. With no path, finds files  in  the  current
              directory and its subdirectories.

              See git-annex-find(1) for details.

       whereis [path ...]
              Displays information about where the contents of files are located.

              See git-annex-whereis(1) for details.

       list [path ...]
              Displays  a  table of remotes that contain the contents of the specified files. This is similar to
              whereis but a more compact display.

              See git-annex-list(1) for details.

       whereused
              Finds what files use or used a key.

       log [path ...]
              Displays the location log for the specified file or files, showing each repository they were added
              to ("+") and removed from ("-").

              See git-annex-log(1) for details.

       oldkeys [path ...]
              List keys used for old versions of files.

              See git-annex-oldkeys(1) for details.

       info [directory|file|remote|uuid ...]
              Displays statistics and other information for the specified item, which can be a directory,  or  a
              file, or a remote, or the uuid of a repository.

              When no item is specified, displays statistics and information for the repository as a whole.

              See git-annex-info(1) for details.

       version
              Shows the version of git-annex, as well as repository version information.

              See git-annex-version(1) for details.

       map    Generate map of repositories.

              See git-annex-map(1) for details.

       inprogress
              Access files while they're being downloaded.

              See git-annex-inprogress(1) for details.

       findkeys
              Similar to git-annex find, but operating on keys.

              See git-annex-findkeys(1) for details.

METADATA COMMANDS

       metadata [path ...]

              The  content  of an annexed file can have any number of metadata fields attached to it to describe
              it. Each metadata field can in turn have any number of values.

              This command can be used to set metadata, or show the currently set metadata.

              See git-annex-metadata(1) for details.

       view [tag ...] [field=value ...] [field=glob ...] [?tag ...] [field?=glob] [!tag ...] [field!=value ...]
              Uses metadata to build a view branch of the files in the current branch, and checks out  the  view
              branch. Only files in the current branch whose metadata matches all the specified field values and
              tags will be shown in the view.

              See git-annex-view(1) for details.

       vpop [N]
              Switches  from  the currently active view back to the previous view.  Or, from the first view back
              to original branch.

              See git-annex-vpop(1) for details.

       vfilter [tag ...] [field=value ...] [!tag ...] [field!=value ...]
              Filters the current view to only the files that have the specified field values and tags.

              See git-annex-vfilter(1) for details.

       vadd [field=glob ...] [field=value ...] [tag ...]
              Changes the current view, adding an additional level of directories to categorize the files.

              See git-annex-vfilter(1) for details.

       vcycle When a view involves nested subdirectories, this cycles the order.

              See git-annex-vcycle(1) for details.

UTILITY COMMANDS

       migrate [path ...]

              Changes the specified annexed files to use a different key-value backend.

              See git-annex-migrate(1) for details.

       reinject src dest
              Moves the src file into the annex as the content of the dest file.  This can be useful if you have
              obtained the content of a file from elsewhere and want to put it in the local annex.

              See git-annex-reinject(1) for details.

       unannex [path ...]
              Use this to undo an accidental git annex add command. It puts the file back how it was before  the
              add.

              See git-annex-unannex(1) for details.

       uninit De-initialize git-annex and clean out repository.

              See git-annex-uninit(1) for details.

       reinit uuid|description
              Initialize repository, reusing old UUID.

              See git-annex-reinit(1) for details.

PLUMBING COMMANDS

       pre-commit [path ...]

              This  is  meant  to  be  called from git's pre-commit hook. git annex init automatically creates a
              pre-commit hook using this.

              See git-annex-pre-commit(1) for details.

       post-receive
              This is meant to be called from git's post-receive hook. git annex init  automatically  creates  a
              post-receive hook using this.

              See git-annex-post-receive(1) for details.

       lookupkey [file ...]
              Looks up key used for file.

              See git-annex-lookupkey(1) for details.

       calckey [file ...]
              Calculates the key that would be used to refer to a file.

              See git-annex-calckey(1) for details.

       contentlocation [key ..]
              Looks up location of annexed content for a key.

              See git-annex-contentlocation(1) for details.

       examinekey [key ...]
              Print information that can be determined purely by looking at the key.

              See git-annex-examinekey(1) for details.

       matchexpression
              Checks if a preferred content expression matches provided data.

              See git-annex-matchexpression(1) for details.

       fromkey [key file]
              Manually set up a file in the git repository to link to a specified key.

              See git-annex-fromkey(1) for details.

       registerurl [key url]
              Registers an url for a key.

              See git-annex-registerurl(1) for details.

       unregisterurl [key url]
              Unregisters an url for a key.

              See git-annex-unregisterurl(1) for details.

       reregisterurl [key url]
              Updates url registration information.

              See git-annex-reregisterurl(1) for details.

       setkey key file
              Moves a file into the annex as the content of a key.

              See git-annex-setkey(1) for details.

       dropkey [key ...]
              Drops annexed content for specified keys.

              See git-annex-dropkey(1) for details.

       transferkey key [--from=remote|--to=remote]
              Transfers a key from or to a remote.

              See git-annex-transferkey(1) for details.

       transferrer
              Used internally by git-annex to transfer content.

              See git-annex-transferrer(1) for details.

       transferkeys
              Used internally by old versions of the assistant.

              See git-annex-transferkey(1) for details.

       setpresentkey key uuid [1|0]
              This  plumbing-level command changes git-annex's records about whether the specified key's content
              is present in a remote with the specified uuid.

              See git-annex-setpresentkey(1) for details.

       readpresentkey key uuid
              Read records of where key is present.

              See git-annex-readpresentkey(1) for details.

       checkpresentkey key remote
              Check if key is present in remote.

              See git-annex-checkpresentkey(1) for details.

       rekey [file key ...]
              Change keys used for files.

              See git-annex-rekey(1) for details.

       resolvemerge
              Resolves a conflicted merge, by adding both conflicting versions of the file to  the  tree,  using
              variants of their filename. This is done automatically when using git annex sync or git-annex pull
              or git annex merge.

              See git-annex-resolvemerge(1) for details.

       diffdriver
              This can be used to make git diff diff the content of annexed files.

              See git-annex-diffdriver(1) for details.

       smudge This  command  lets  git-annex  be  used as a git filter driver, allowing annexed files in the git
              repository to be unlocked regular files instead of symlinks.

              See git-annex-smudge(1) for details.

       filter-process
              An alternative implementation of a git filter driver, that is faster in some situations and slower
              in others than git-annex smudge.

              See git-annex-filter-process(1) for details.

       restage
              Restages unlocked files in the git index.

              See git-annex-restage(1) for details.

       findref [ref]
              Lists files in a git ref. (deprecated)

              See git-annex-findref(1) for details.

       proxy -- git cmd [options]
              Bypass direct mode guard. (deprecated)

              See git-annex-proxy(1) for details.

TESTING COMMANDS

       test

              This runs git-annex's built-in test suite.

              See git-annex-test(1) for details.

       testremote remote
              This tests a remote by generating some random  objects  and  sending  them  to  the  remote,  then
              redownloading them, removing them from the remote, etc.

              It's  safe to run in an existing repository (the repository contents are not altered), although it
              may perform expensive data transfers.

              See git-annex-testremote(1) for details.

       fuzztest
              Generates random changes to files in the current repository, for use in testing the assistant.

              See git-annex-fuzztest(1) for details.

       benchmark
              This runs git-annex's built-in benchmarks, if it was built with benchmarking support.

              See git-annex-benchmark(1) for details.

ADDON COMMANDS

       In addition to all the commands listed above, more  commands  can  be  added  to  git-annex  by  dropping
       commands named like "git-annex-foo" into a directory in the PATH.

CONFIGURATION

       Like  other  git  commands, git-annex is configured via .git/config.  These settings, as well as relevant
       git config settings, are the ones git-annex uses.

       (Some of these settings can also be set, across all clones of the repository, using git-annex-config. See
       its man page for a list.)

       annex.uuid
              A unique UUID for this repository (automatically set).

       annex.backend
              Name of the default key-value backend to use when adding new files to  the  repository.  See  git-
              annex-backends(1) for information about available backends.

              This  is  overridden  by annex annex.backend configuration in the .gitattributes files, and by the
              --backend option.

              (This used to be named annex.backends, and that will still be used if set.)

       annex.securehashesonly
              Set to true to indicate that the repository should only use cryptographically secure hashes (SHA2,
              SHA3) and not insecure hashes (MD5, SHA1) for content.

              When this is set, the contents of files  using  cryptographically  insecure  hashes  will  not  be
              allowed to be added to the repository.

              Also,  git-annex  fsck  will  complain about any files present in the repository that use insecure
              hashes. And, git-annex import --no-content will refuse to import files from special remotes  using
              insecure hashes.

              To configure the behavior in new clones of the repository, this can be set using git-annex-config.

       annex.maxextensionlength
              Maximum  length, in bytes, of what is considered a filename extension.  This is used when adding a
              file to a backend that preserves filename extensions, and also when generating a view branch.

              The default length is 4, which allows extensions like "jpeg". The dot before the extension is  not
              counted part of its length.

       annex.maxextensions
              Maximum  number  of  filename  extensions to preserve when using a backend that preserves filename
              extensions, and also when generating a view branch.

              The default is 2, which allows for compound extensions like ".tar.gz".  When set  to  1,  it  will
              only preserve the last extension, eg ".gz".

       annex.diskreserve
              Amount  of disk space to reserve. Disk space is checked when transferring annexed content to avoid
              running out, and additional free space can be reserved via this option, to make  space  for  other
              data  (such  as git commit logs). Can be specified with any commonly used units, for example, "0.5
              gb", "500M", or "100 KiloBytes"

              The default reserve is 100 megabytes.

       annex.skipunknown
              Set to true to make commands like "git-annex get" silently skip over items that are listed in  the
              command line, but are not checked into git.

              Set to false to make it an error for commands like "git-annex get" to be asked to operate on files
              that are not checked into git.  (This is the default in recent versions of git-annex.)

              Note that, when annex.skipunknown is false, a command like "git-annex get ." will fail if no files
              in the current directory are checked into git.  Commands like "git-annex get foo/" will fail if no
              files  in  the  directory  are checked into git, but if at least one file is, it will ignore other
              files that are not. This is all the same as the behavior of "git-ls files --error-unmatch".

              Also note that git-annex skips files that are checked into git, but are not  annexed  files;  this
              setting does not affect that.

       annex.largefiles
              Used to configure which files are large enough to be added to the annex.  It is an expression that
              matches    the    large    files,    eg    "include=*.mp3    or    largerthan=500kb"    See   git-
              annex-matching-expression(1) for details on the syntax.

              Overrides any annex.largefiles attributes in .gitattributes files.

              To configure a default annex.largefiles for all clones of the repository, this can be set in  git-
              annex-config(1).

              This  configures  the  behavior  of both git-annex and git when adding files to the repository. By
              default, git-annex add adds all files to the annex (except dotfiles), and git add  adds  files  to
              git  (unless  they were added to the annex previously).  When annex.largefiles is configured, both
              git annex add and git add will add matching large files to the annex, and the other files to git.

              Other git-annex commands also honor  annex.largefiles,  including  git  annex  import,  git  annex
              addurl, git annex importfeed, git-annex assist, and the git-annex assistant.

       annex.dotfiles
              Normally, dotfiles are assumed to be files like .gitignore, whose content should always be part of
              the  git  repository, so they will not be added to the annex. Setting annex.dotfiles to true makes
              dotfiles be added to the annex the same as any other file.

              To annex only some dotfiles, set this and configure annex.largefiles to match the ones  you  want.
              For example, to match only dotfiles ending in ".big"

               git   config   annex.largefiles   "(include=.*.big   or   include=*/.*.big)  or  (exclude=.*  and
              exclude=*/.*)"
               git config annex.dotfiles true

              To configure a default annex.dotfiles for all clones of the repository, this can be  set  in  git-
              annex-config(1).

       annex.gitaddtoannex
              Setting  this  to  false  will  prevent  git  add  from  adding  files  to  the annex, despite the
              annex.largefiles configuration.

       annex.addsmallfiles
              Controls whether small files (not matching annex.largefiles) should be checked  into  git  by  git
              annex add. Defaults to true; set to false to instead make small files be skipped.

       annex.addunlocked
              Commands  like  git-annex  add  default to adding files to the repository in locked form. This can
              make them add the files in unlocked form, the same as  if  git-annex-unlock(1)  were  run  on  the
              files.

              This  can  be set to "true" to add everything unlocked, or it can be a more complicated expression
              that matches files by name, size, or content. See git-annex-matching-expression(1) for details.

              To configure a default annex.addunlocked for all clones of the repository, this can be set in git-
              annex-config(1).

              (Using git add always adds files in unlocked form and it is not affected by this setting.)

              When a repository has core.symlinks set to false, or has an adjusted unlocked branch checked  out,
              this setting is ignored, and files are always added to the repository in unlocked form.

       annex.numcopies
              This  is a deprecated setting. You should instead use the git annex numcopies command to configure
              how many copies of files are kept across all repositories, or the  annex.numcopies  .gitattributes
              setting.

              This config setting is only looked at when git annex numcopies has never been configured, and when
              there's no annex.numcopies setting in the .gitattributes file.

       annex.genmetadata
              Set  this  to true to make git-annex automatically generate some metadata when adding files to the
              repository.

              In particular, it stores year, month, and day metadata, from the file's modification date.

              When importfeed is used, it stores additional metadata from the feed, such as the  author,  title,
              etc.

       annex.used-refspec
              This  controls  which  refs  git-annex  unused  considers  to be used.  See REFSPEC FORMAT in git-
              annex-unused(1) for details.

       annex.jobs
              Configure the number of concurrent jobs to run. Default is 1.

              Only git-annex commands that support the --jobs option will use this.

              Setting this to "cpus" will run one job per CPU core.

              When the --batch option is used, this configuration is ignored.

       annex.adjustedbranchrefresh
              When git-annex-adjust(1) is used to set up an adjusted branch that needs  to  be  refreshed  after
              getting or dropping files, this config controls how frequently the branch is refreshed.

              Refreshing  the branch takes some time, so doing it after every file can be too slow. (It also can
              generate a lot of dangling git objects.)  The default value  is  0  (or  false),  which  does  not
              refresh  the  branch.  Setting  1 (or true) will refresh only once, after git-annex has made other
              changes. Setting 2 refreshes after every file, 3 after every other file, and so  on;  setting  100
              refreshes after every 99 files.

              (If  git-annex  gets  faster  in the future, refresh rates will increase proportional to the speed
              improvements.)

       annex.queuesize
              git-annex builds a queue of git commands, in order to  combine  similar  commands  for  speed.  By
              default  the  size of the queue is limited to 10240 commands; this can be used to change the size.
              If you have plenty of memory and are working with very large  numbers  of  files,  increasing  the
              queue size can speed it up.

       annex.bloomcapacity
              The  git  annex  unused and git annex sync --content commands use a bloom filter to determine what
              files are present in eg, the work tree.  The default bloom filter is sized to handle up to  500000
              files.  If your repository is larger than that, you should increase this value. Larger values will
              make git-annex unused and git annex sync --content consume more memory; run  git  annex  info  for
              memory usage numbers.

       annex.bloomaccuracy
              Adjusts  the  accuracy  of the bloom filter used by git annex unused and git annex sync --content.
              The default accuracy is 10000000 -- 1 unused file out of 10000000 will  be  missed  by  git  annex
              unused. Increasing the accuracy will make git annex unused consume more memory; run git annex info
              for memory usage numbers.

       annex.sshcaching
              By default, git-annex caches ssh connections using ssh's ControlMaster and ControlPersist settings
              (if built using a new enough ssh). To disable this, set to false.

       annex.adviceNoSshCaching
              When  git-annex  is  unable  to  use  ssh  connection  caching, or has been configured not to, and
              concurrency is enabled, it will warn that this might result in multiple  ssh  processes  prompting
              for  passwords at the same time. To disable that warning, eg if you have configured ssh connection
              caching yourself, or have ssh agent caching passwords, set this to false.

       annex.alwayscommit
              By default, git-annex automatically commits data to the git-annex branch  after  each  command  is
              run.  If  you  have  a  series  of commands that you want to make a single commit, you can run the
              commands with -c annex.alwayscommit=false. You can later commit the  data  by  running  git  annex
              merge (or by automatic merges) or git annex sync.

       annex.commitmessage
              When  git-annex  updates  the  git-annex  branch,  it  usually makes up its own commit message (eg
              "update"), since users rarely look at or care about changes to that branch. If you  do  care,  you
              can specify this setting by running commands with -c annex.commitmessage=whatever

              This  works  well  in combination with annex.alwayscommit=false, to gather up a set of changes and
              commit them with a message you specify.

       annex.commitmessage-command
              This command is run and its output is used as the commit message to the git-annex branch.

       annex.alwayscompact
              By default, git-annex compacts data it records in the git-annex branch.   Setting  this  to  false
              avoids  doing  that compaction in some cases, which can speed up operations that populate the git-
              annex branch with a lot of data. However, when used with operations that overwrite old  values  in
              the git-annex branch, that may cause the git-annex branch to use more disk space, and so slow down
              reading data from it.

              An  example  of  a  command that can be sped up by using -c annex.alwayscompact=false is git-annex
              registerurl --batch, when adding a large number of urls to the same key.

              This option was first supported by git-annex version 10.20220724.  It is not entirely safe to  set
              this  option  in  a  repository that may also be used by an older version of git-annex at the same
              time as a version that supports this option.

       annex.allowsign
              By default git-annex avoids gpg signing commits that it makes when they're not the  purpose  of  a
              command,  but  only  a  side  effect.   That  default  avoids  lots  of  gpg password prompts when
              commit.gpgSign is set. A command like git annex sync or git annex merge will gpg sign its  commit,
              but  a command like git annex get, that updates the git-annex branch, will not. The assistant also
              avoids signing commits.

              Setting annex.allowsign to true lets all commits be signed, as controlled  by  commit.gpgSign  and
              other git configuration.

       annex.merge-annex-branches
              By  default,  git-annex  branches that have been pulled from remotes are automatically merged into
              the local git-annex branch, so that git-annex has the most up-to-date possible knowledge.

              To avoid that merging, set this to "false".

              This can be useful particularly when you don't have write permission to the repository. While git-
              annex is mostly able to work in a read-only repository  with  unmerged  git-annex  branches,  some
              things  do not work, and when it does work it will be slower due to needing to look at each of the
              unmerged branches.

       annex.private
              When this is set to true, no information about the repository will be recorded  in  the  git-annex
              branch.

              For  example,  to  make  a  repository  without  any mention of it ever appearing in the git-annex
              branch:

               git init myprivate
               cd myprivaterepo
               git config annex.private true
               git annex init

       annex.hardlink
              Set this to true to make file contents be hard linked between the repository and its remotes  when
              possible, instead of a more expensive copy.

              Use with caution -- This can invalidate numcopies counting, since with hard links, fewer copies of
              a file can exist. So, it is a good idea to mark a repository using this setting as untrusted.

              When  a  repository  is  set  up  using  git clone --shared, git-annex init will automatically set
              annex.hardlink and mark the repository as untrusted.

              When annex.thin is also set, setting annex.hardlink has no effect.

       annex.thin
              Set this to true to make unlocked files be a hard link to their content in the annex, rather  than
              a  second  copy. This can save considerable disk space, but when a modification is made to a file,
              you will lose the local (and possibly only) copy of the old version. Any other,  locked  files  in
              the  repository  that  pointed to that content will get broken as well (git-annex fsck will detect
              and clean up after that).  So, enable this with care.

              After setting (or unsetting) this, you should run git annex fix to fix up the annexed files in the
              work tree to be hard links (or copies).

              Note that this has no effect when the filesystem does not support hard links.  And  when  multiple
              files in the work tree have the same content, only one of them gets hard linked to the annex.

       annex.supportunlocked
              By default git-annex supports unlocked files as well as locked files, so this defaults to true. If
              set  to  false, git-annex will only support locked files. That will avoid doing the work needed to
              support unlocked files.

              Note that setting this to false does not prevent a repository from having unlocked files added  to
              it, and in that case the content of the files will not be accessible until they are locked.

              After changing this config, you need to re-run git-annex init for it to take effect.

       annex.resolvemerge
              Set  to false to prevent merge conflicts in the checked out branch being automatically resolved by
              the git-annex assitant, git-annex assist, git-annex sync, git-annex pull, git-annex merge, and the
              git-annex post-receive hook.

              To configure the behavior in all clones of the repository, this can be set in git-annex-config(1).

       annex.synccontent
              Set to true to make git-annex sync default to transferring annexed content.

              Set to false to prevent git-annex assist, git-annex pull  and  git-annex  push  from  transferring
              annexed content.

              To configure the behavior in all clones of the repository, this can be set in git-annex-config(1).

       annex.synconlyannex
              Set  to  true to make git-annex assist, git-annex sync, git-annex pull, and git-annex push default
              to only operating on the git-annex branch and annexed content.

              To configure the behavior in all clones of the repository, this can be set in git-annex-config(1).

       annex.syncmigrations
              Set to false to prevent git-annex sync  and  git-annex  pull  from  scanning  for  migrations  and
              updating the local repository for those migrations.

       annex.viewunsetdirectory
              This  configures  the name of a directory that is used in a view to contain files that do not have
              metadata set. The default name for the directory is "_". See git-annex-view(1) for details.

       annex.debug
              Set to true to enable debug logging by default.

       annex.debugfilter
              Set to configure which debug messages to display (when debug message display has been  enabled  by
              annex.debug or --debug). The value is one or more module names, separated by commas.

       annex.version
              The  current version of the git-annex repository. This is maintained by git-annex and should never
              be manually changed.

       annex.autoupgraderepository
              When an old  git-annex  repository  version  is  no  longer  supported,  git-annex  will  normally
              automatically upgrade the repository to the new version. It may also sometimes upgrade from an old
              repository version that is still supported but that is not as good as a later version.

              If  this  is set to false, git-annex won't automatically upgrade the repository. If the repository
              version is not supported, git-annex will instead exit with  an  error  message.  If  it  is  still
              supported, git-annex will continue to work.

              You can run git annex upgrade yourself when you are ready to upgrade the repository.

       annex.crippledfilesystem
              Set  to  true  if  the repository is on a crippled filesystem, such as FAT, which does not support
              symbolic links, or hard links, or unix permissions.  This is automatically probed  by  "git  annex
              init".

       annex.pidlock
              Normally,  git-annex  uses fine-grained lock files to allow multiple processes to run concurrently
              without getting in each others' way.  That works great,  unless  you  are  using  git-annex  on  a
              filesystem  that  does not support POSIX fcntl locks. This is sometimes the case when using NFS or
              Lustre filesystems.

              To support such situations, you can set annex.pidlock to true, and it will fall back to  a  single
              top-level pid file lock.

              Although,  often,  you'd  really  be  better off fixing your networked filesystem configuration to
              support POSIX locks.. And, some networked filesystems are so  inconsistent  that  one  node  can't
              reliably tell when the other node is holding a pid lock. Caveat emptor.

       annex.pidlocktimeout
              git-annex  will wait up to this many seconds for the pid lock file to go away, and will then abort
              if it cannot continue. Default: 300

              When using pid lock files, it's possible for a stale lock file to get left behind by previous  run
              of  git-annex  that  crashed or was interrupted.  This is mostly avoided, but can occur especially
              when using a network file system. This timeout  prevents  git-annex  waiting  forever  in  such  a
              situation.

       annex.dbdir
              The  directory  where git-annex should store its sqlite databases.  The default location is inside
              .git/annex/.

              Certian filesystems, such as cifs, may not support  locking  operations  that  sqlite  needs,  and
              setting this to a directory on another filesystem can work around such a problem.

              This  can  safely be set to the same directory in the configuration of multiple repositories; each
              repository will use a subdirectory for its sqlite database.

       annex.cachecreds
              When "true" (the default), git-annex will cache credentials used  to  access  special  remotes  in
              files  in  .git/annex/creds/  that only you can read. To disable that caching, set to "false", and
              credentials will only be read from the environment, or if they have  been  embedded  in  encrypted
              form  in  the  git repository, will be extracted and decrypted each time git-annex needs to access
              the remote.

       annex.secure-erase-command
              This can be set to a command that should be run whenever git-annex removes the content of  a  file
              from the repository.

              In the command line, %file is replaced with the file that should be erased.

              For example, to use the wipe command, set it to wipe -f %file.

       annex.freezecontent-command, annex.thawcontent-command
              Usually  the  write  permission  bits  are unset to protect annexed objects from being modified or
              deleted. The freezecontent-command is run after git-annex has removed (or attempted to remove) the
              write bit, and can be used to prevent writing in some other way.  The  thawcontent-command  should
              undo its effect, and is run before git-annex restores the write bit.

              In the command line, %path is replaced with the file or directory to operate on.

              (When annex.crippledfilesystem is set, git-annex will not try to remove/restore the write bit, but
              it will still run these hooks.)

       annex.tune.objecthash1, annex.tune.objecthashlower, annex.tune.branchhash1
              These  can be passed to git annex init to tune the repository.  They cannot be safely changed in a
              running repository and should never  be  set  in  global  git  configuration.   For  details,  see
              <https://git-annex.branchable.com/tuning/>.

CONFIGURATION OF REMOTES

       Remotes are configured using these settings in .git/config.

       remote.<name>.annex-cost
              When  determining which repository to transfer annexed files from or to, ones with lower costs are
              preferred.  The default cost is 100 for local repositories, and 200 for remote repositories.

       remote.<name>.annex-cost-command
              If set, the command is run, and the number it outputs is used as the cost.   This  allows  varying
              the cost based on e.g., the current network.

       remote.<name>.annex-start-command
              A  command to run when git-annex begins to use the remote. This can be used to, for example, mount
              the directory containing the remote.

              The command may be run repeatedly when multiple git-annex processes are running concurrently.

       remote.<name>.annex-stop-command
              A command to run when git-annex is done using the remote.

              The command will only be run once *all* running git-annex processes are finished using the remote.

       remote.<name>.annex-shell
              Specify an alternative git-annex-shell executable on the  remote  instead  of  looking  for  "git-
              annex-shell" on the PATH.

              This is useful if the git-annex-shell program is outside the PATH or has a non-standard name.

       remote.<name>.annex-ignore
              If set to true, prevents git-annex from storing or retrieving annexed file contents on this remote
              by default.  (You can still request it be used with the --from and --to options.)

              This  is,  for  example,  useful  if the remote is located somewhere without git-annex-shell. (For
              example, if it's on GitHub).  Or,  it  could  be  used  if  the  network  connection  between  two
              repositories is too slow to be used normally.

              This does not prevent git-annex sync, git-annex pull, git-annex push, git-annex assist or the git-
              annex assistant from operating on the git repository. It only affects annexed content.

       remote.<name>.annex-ignore-command
              If  set,  the  command is run, and if it exits nonzero, that's the same as setting annex-ignore to
              true. This allows controlling behavior based on e.g., the current network.

       remote.<name>.annex-sync
              If set to false, prevents git-annex sync (and git-annex pull, git-annex  push,  git-annex  assist,
              and the git-annex assistant) from operating on this remote by default.

       remote.<name>.annex-sync-command
              If  set,  the  command  is  run, and if it exits nonzero, that's the same as setting annex-sync to
              false. This allows controlling behavior based on e.g., the current network.

       remote.<name>.annex-pull
              If set to false, prevents git-annex pull, git-annex  sync,  git-annex  assist  and  the  git-annex
              assistant from ever pulling (or fetching) from the remote.

       remote.<name>.annex-push
              If  set  to  false,  prevents  git-annex  push, git-annex sync, git-annex assist and the git-annex
              assistant from ever pushing to the remote.

       remote.<name>.annex-readonly
              If set to true, prevents git-annex from making changes to a remote.  This prevents git-annex  sync
              and git-annex assist from pushing changes to a git repository. And it prevents storing or removing
              files from read-only remote.

       remote.<name>.annex-verify, annex.verify
              By default, git-annex will verify the checksums of objects downloaded from remotes. If you trust a
              remote and don't want the overhead of these checksums, you can set this to false.

              Note  that  even  when this is set to false, git-annex does verification in some edge cases, where
              it's likely the case than an object was downloaded incorrectly, or when needed for security.

       remote.<name>.annex-tracking-branch
              This is for use with special remotes that support exports and imports.

              When set to eg, "master", this tells git-annex that you want the  special  remote  to  track  that
              branch.

              When set to eg, "master:subdir", the special remote tracks only the subdirectory of that branch.

              Setting  this  enables some other commands to work with these special remotes: git-annex pull will
              import changes from the remote and merge them into the annex-tracking-branch. And  git-annex  push
              will  export  changes  to the remote. Higher-level commands git-annex sync --content and git-annex
              assist both import and export.

       remote.<name>.annex-export-tracking
              Deprecated name for remote.<name>.annex-tracking-branch. Will still be used if it's configured and
              remote.<name>.annex-tracking-branch is not.

       remote.<name>.annexUrl
              Can be used to specify a different url than the regular remote.<name>.url  for  git-annex  to  use
              when talking with the remote. Similar to the pushUrl used by git-push.

       remote.<name>.annex-uuid
              git-annex caches UUIDs of remote repositories here.

       remote.<name>.annex-config-uuid
              Used for some special remotes, points to a different special remote configuration to use.

       remote.<name>.annex-retry, annex.retry
              Number of times a transfer that fails can be retried. (default 0)

       remote.<name>.annex-forward-retry, annex.forward-retry
              If  a  transfer  made some forward progress before failing, this allows it to be retried even when
              annex.retry does not.  The value is the maximum number of times to do that. (default 5)

              When both annex.retry and this are set, the maximum number of retries is the larger of the two.

       remote.<name>.annex-retry-delay, annex.retry-delay
              Number of seconds to delay before the first retry of a transfer.  When making multiple retries  of
              the same transfer, the delay doubles after each retry. (default 1)

       remote.<name>.annex-bwlimit, annex.bwlimit
              This can be used to limit how much bandwidth is used for a transfer from or to a remote.

              For example, to limit transfers to 1 mebibyte per second: git config annex.bwlimit "1MiB"

              This will work with many remotes, including git remotes, but not for remotes where the transfer is
              run by a separate program than git-annex.

       remote.<name>.annex-bwlimit-download, annex.bwlimit-download
              Limit bandwith for downloads from a remote.

              Overrides remote.<name>.annex-bwlimit and annex.bwlimit

       remote.<name>.annex-bwlimit-upload, annex.bwlimit-upload
              Limit bandwith for uploads to a remote.

              Overrides remote.<name>.annex-bwlimit and annex.bwlimit

       remote.<name>.annex-stalldetection, annex.stalldetection
              Configuring  this  lets  stalled or too-slow transfers be detected, and dealt with, so rather than
              getting stuck, git-annex will cancel the stalled operation. The transfer  will  be  considered  to
              have failed, so settings like annex.retry will control what it does next.

              The  default  is  to  automatically  detect when transfers that have probably stalled, and suggest
              configuring this, but not cancel the stalled operations. For this  to  work,  a  remote  needs  to
              update  its  progress  consistently.  Remotes  that do not will not have automatic stall detection
              done. And it may take a while for git-annex to decide  a  remote  is  really  stalled  when  using
              automatic stall detection, since it needs to be conservative about what looks like a stall.

              Set to "false" to avoid all attempts at stall detection.

              To  detect  and  cancel  stalled  transfers, set this to a value in the form "$amount/$timeperiod"
              which specifies how much data git-annex should expect to see flowing, minimum, over a given period
              of time.

              For example, to detect outright stalls where no data has been transferred after  30  seconds:  git
              config annex.stalldetection "1KB/30s"

              Or,  if you have a remote on a USB drive that is normally capable of several megabytes per second,
              but  has  bad  sectors  where  it  gets  stuck  for  a  long  time,  you  could  use:  git  config
              remote.usbdrive.annex-stalldetection "1MB/1m"

              Some remotes don't report transfer progress, and stalls cannot be detected when using those.

              Some  remotes  only  report  transfer  progress  occasionally, eg after each chunk. To avoid false
              timeouts in such a situation, if the first  progress  update  takes  longer  to  arrive  than  the
              configured  time  period,  the  stall  detection will be automically adjusted to use a longer time
              period. For example, if the first progress update comes after 10 minutes, but annex.stalldetection
              is "1MB/1m", it will be treated as eg "30MB/30m".

              Configuring stall detection can make git-annex use more resources. To be able  to  cancel  stalls,
              git-annex  has  to run transfers in separate processes (one per concurrent job). So it may need to
              open more connections to a remote than usual, or the communication with those processes  may  make
              it a bit slower.

       remote.<name>.annex-stalldetection-download, annex.stalldetection-download
              Stall detection for downloads from a remote.

              For  example,  if  a remote is often fast, but sometimes is very slow, and there is another remote
              that is consistently medium speed and that contains the same data, this could be set to treat  the
              fast  remote  as  stalled  when  it's  slow.  Then  a command like git-annex get will fall back to
              downloading from the medium speed remote.

              Overrides remote.<name>.annex-stalldetection, annex.stalldetection

       remote.<name>.annex-stalldetection-upload, annex.stalldetection-upload
              Stall detection for uploads to a remote.

              Overrides remote.<name>.annex-stalldetection, annex.stalldetection

       remote.<name>.annex-checkuuid
              This only affects remotes that have their url pointing to a directory on  the  same  system.  git-
              annex  normally  checks  the  uuid of such remotes each time it's run, which lets it transparently
              deal with different drives being mounted to the location at different times.

              Setting annex-checkuuid to false will prevent it from checking the uuid at startup  (although  the
              uuid  is still verified before making any changes to the remote repository). This may be useful to
              set to prevent unnecessary spin-up or automounting of a drive.

       remote.<name>.annex-trustlevel
              Configures a local trust level for the remote. This overrides the value configured  by  the  trust
              and untrust commands. The value can be any of "trusted", "semitrusted" or "untrusted".

       remote.<name>.annex-availability
              This configuration setting is no longer used.

       remote.<name>.annex-speculate-present
              Set  to  "true"  to make git-annex speculate that this remote may contain the content of any file,
              even though its normal location tracking does not indicate that it does. This will cause git-annex
              to try to get all file contents from the remote. Can be useful in setting up a caching remote.

       remote.<name>.annex-private
              When this is set to true, no information about the  remote  will  be  recorded  in  the  git-annex
              branch.  This  is mostly useful for special remotes, and is set when using git-annex-initremote(1)
              with the --private option.

       remote.<name>.annex-bare
              Can be used to tell git-annex if a remote  is  a  bare  repository  or  not.  Normally,  git-annex
              determines this automatically.

       remote.<name>.annex-ssh-options
              Options to use when using ssh to talk to this remote.

       remote.<name>.annex-rsync-options
              Options  to use when using rsync to or from this remote. For example, to force IPv6, and limit the
              bandwidth to 100Kbyte/s, set it to -6 --bwlimit 100

              Note that git-annex-shell has a whitelist of allowed rsync options, and  others  will  not  be  be
              passed  to  the  remote rsync. So using some options may break the communication between the local
              and remote rsyncs.

       remote.<name>.annex-rsync-upload-options
              Options to use when using rsync to upload a file to a remote.

              These options are passed after other applicable rsync options, so can be used  to  override  them.
              For example, to limit upload bandwidth to 10Kbyte/s, set --bwlimit 10.

       remote.<name>.annex-rsync-download-options
              Options to use when using rsync to download a file from a remote.

              These options are passed after other applicable rsync options, so can be used to override them.

       remote.<name>.annex-rsync-transport
              The  remote shell to use to connect to the rsync remote. Possible values are ssh (the default) and
              rsh, together with their arguments, for instance ssh -p 2222 -c blowfish;  Note  that  the  remote
              hostname  should  not  appear  there,  see  rsync(1) for details.  When the transport used is ssh,
              connections are automatically cached unless annex.sshcaching is unset.

       remote.<name>.annex-bup-split-options
              Options to pass to bup split when storing content in this  remote.   For  example,  to  limit  the
              bandwidth to 100Kbyte/s, set it to --bwlimit 100k (There is no corresponding option for bup join.)

       remote.<name>.annex-gnupg-options
              Options to pass to GnuPG when it's encrypting data. For instance, to use the AES cipher with a 256
              bits  key  and  disable  compression,  set it to --cipher-algo AES256 --compress-algo none. (These
              options take precedence over the default GnuPG configuration, which is otherwise used.)

       remote.<name>.annex-gnupg-decrypt-options
              Options to pass to GnuPG when it's decrypting  data.  (These  options  take  precedence  over  the
              default GnuPG configuration, which is otherwise used.)

       remote.<name>.annex-shared-sop-command
              Use  this  command,  which  is  an implementation of the Stateless OpenPGP command line interface,
              rather than GnuPG for encrypting and decrypting data. This is only used when a special  remote  is
              configured with encryption=shared.

              For example, to use Sequoia PGP's sqop command, set this to "sqop".

       remote.<name>.annex-shared-sop-profile
              When  encrypting with a Stateless OpenPGP command, this can be used to specify the profile to use,
              such as "rfc4880".

              For a list of available profiles, run eg "sqop list-profiles encrypt"

              sqop list-profiles encrypt

       annex.ssh-options, annex.rsync-options,
              annex.rsync-upload-options,         annex.rsync-download-options,         annex.bup-split-options,
              annex.gnupg-options,             annex.gnupg-decrypt-options,            annex.shared-sop-command,
              annex.shared-sop-profile

              Default options to use if a remote does not have more specific options as described above.

       remote.<name>.annex-rsyncurl
              Used by rsync special remotes, this configures the  location  of  the  rsync  repository  to  use.
              Normally this is automatically set up by git annex initremote, but you can change it if needed.

       remote.<name>.annex-buprepo
              Used  by  bup special remotes, this configures the location of the bup repository to use. Normally
              this is automatically set up by git annex initremote, but you can change it if needed.

       remote.<name>.annex-borgrepo
              Used by borg special remotes, this configures the location of the borg repository to use. Normally
              this is automatically set up by git annex initremote, but you can change it if needed.

       remote.<name>.annex-ddarrepo
              Used by ddar special remotes, this configures the location of the ddar repository to use. Normally
              this is automatically set up by git annex initremote, but you can change it if needed.

       remote.<name>.annex-directory
              Used by directory special remotes, this configures the location of  the  directory  where  annexed
              files  are  stored for this remote. Normally this is automatically set up by git annex initremote,
              but you can change it if needed.

       remote.<name>.annex-adb
              Used to identify remotes on Android devices accessed via adb.  Normally this is automatically  set
              up by git annex initremote.

       remote.<name>.annex-androiddirectory
              Used  by  adb  special remotes, this is the directory on the Android device where files are stored
              for this remote. Normally this is automatically set up by git annex initremote, but you can change
              it if needed.

       remote.<name>.annex-androidserial
              Used by adb special remotes, this is the serial number of the Android device used by  the  remote.
              Normally this is automatically set up by git annex initremote, but you can change it if needed, eg
              when upgrading to a new Android device.

       remote.<name>.annex-s3
              Used  to  identify  Amazon S3 special remotes.  Normally this is automatically set up by git annex
              initremote.

       remote.<name>.annex-glacier
              Used to identify Amazon Glacier special remotes.  Normally this is automatically  set  up  by  git
              annex initremote.

       remote.<name>.annex-rclone
              Used  to  identify  rclone  special  remotes.   Normally this is automatically set up by git annex
              initremote.

       remote.<name>.annex-web
              Used to identify web special remotes.   Normally  this  is  automatically  set  up  by  git  annex
              initremote.

       remote.<name>.annex-webdav
              Used  to  identify  webdav  special  remotes.   Normally this is automatically set up by git annex
              initremote.

       remote.<name>.annex-tahoe
              Used to identify tahoe special remotes.  Points to the configuration directory for tahoe.

       remote.<name>.annex-gcrypt
              Used to identify gcrypt special remotes.  Normally this is  automatically  set  up  by  git  annex
              initremote.

              It  is  set to "true" if this is a gcrypt remote.  If the gcrypt remote is accessible over ssh and
              has git-annex-shell available to manage it, it's set to "shell".

       remote.<name>.annex-git-lfs
              Used to identify git-lfs special remotes.  Normally this is automatically  set  up  by  git  annex
              initremote.

              It is set to "true" if this is a git-lfs remote.

       remote.<name>.annex-httpalso
              Used  to  identify  httpalso  special remotes.  Normally this is automatically set up by git annex
              initremote.

       remote.<name>.annex-externaltype
              Used by external special remotes to record the type of the remote.

              Eg, if this is set to "foo", git-annex will run a "git-annex-remote-foo"  program  to  communicate
              with the external special remote.

              If this is set to "readonly", then git-annex will not run any external special remote program, but
              will  try  to  access  things  stored  in the remote using http. That only works for some external
              special remotes, so consult the documentation of the one you are using.

       remote.<name>.annex-hooktype
              Used by hook special remotes to record the type of the remote.

       annex.web-options
              Options to pass to curl when git-annex uses it to download urls (rather than the default  built-in
              url downloader).

              For example, to force IPv4 only, set it to "-4".

              Setting this option makes git-annex use curl, but only when annex.security.allowed-ip-addresses is
              configured in a specific way. See its documentation.

              Setting this option prevents git-annex from using git-credential for prompting for http passwords.
              Instead,  you  can  include "--netrc" to make curl use your ~/.netrc file and record the passwords
              there.

       annex.youtube-dl-options
              Options to pass to yt-dlp (or deprecated youtube-dl) when using it to find the url to download for
              a video.

              Some options may break git-annex's integration with yt-dlp. For example, the --output option could
              cause it to store files somewhere git-annex won't find them. Avoid setting here or in  the  yt-dlp
              config  file  any  options  that  cause  it  to  download more than one file, or to store the file
              anywhere other than the current working directory.

       annex.youtube-dl-command
              Default is to use "yt-dlp" or if that is not available in the PATH, to use "youtube-dl".

       annex.aria-torrent-options
              Options to pass to aria2c when using it to download a torrent.

       annex.http-headers
              HTTP headers to send when downloading from the web. Multiple lines of this option can be set,  one
              per header.

       annex.http-headers-command
              If  set,  the  command is run and each line of its output is used as a HTTP header. This overrides
              annex.http-headers.

       annex.security.allowed-url-schemes
              List of URL schemes that git-annex is allowed to download content  from.   The  default  is  "http
              https ftp".

              Think  very  carefully before changing this; there are security implications. For example, if it's
              changed to allow "file" URLs, then anyone who can get a  commit  into  your  git-annex  repository
              could  git-annex  addurl  a  pointer  to  a private file located outside that repository, possibly
              causing it to be copied into your repository and transferred on to  other  remotes,  exposing  its
              content.

              Any  url  schemes  supported  by  curl  can  be  listed  here, but you will also need to configure
              annex.security.allowed-ip-addresses to allow using curl.

              Some special remotes support their own domain-specific URL schemes; those are not affected by this
              configuration setting.

       annex.security.allowed-ip-addresses
              By default, git-annex only makes connections to public IP addresses; it will refuse  to  use  HTTP
              and other servers on localhost or on a private network.

              This  setting  can  override  that behavior, allowing access to particular IP addresses that would
              normally be blocked. For example "127.0.0.1 ::1" allows access to localhost (both IPV4 and  IPV6).
              To allow access to all IP addresses, use "all"

              Think  very  carefully before changing this; there are security implications. Anyone who can get a
              commit into your git-annex repository could git annex addurl an url on a private server,  possibly
              causing  it  to  be downloaded into your repository and transferred to other remotes, exposing its
              content.

              Note that, since the interfaces of curl and yt-dlp do not allow these IP address  restrictions  to
              be enforced, curl and yt-dlp will never be used unless annex.security.allowed-ip-addresses=all.

              To  allow  accessing  local  or  private  IP  addresses  on  only  specific  ports, use the syntax
              "[addr]:port". For example, "[127.0.0.1]:80 [127.0.0.1]:443 [::1]:80 [::1]:443"  allows  localhost
              on the http ports only.

       annex.security.allowed-http-addresses
              Old  name  for  annex.security.allowed-ip-addresses.   If  set, this is treated the same as having
              annex.security.allowed-ip-addresses set.

       annex.security.allow-unverified-downloads
              For security reasons, git-annex refuses to download content from  most  special  remotes  when  it
              cannot  check  a hash to verify that the correct content was downloaded. This particularly impacts
              downloading the content of URL or WORM keys, which lack hashes.

              The best way to avoid problems due to this is to migrate files away from such keys,  before  their
              content reaches a special remote.  See git-annex-migrate(1).

              When  the content is only available from a special remote, you can use this configuration to force
              git-annex to download it.  But you do so at your own risk, and it's very important  you  read  and
              understand the information below first!

              Downloading  unverified  content  from encrypted special remotes is prevented, because the special
              remote could send some other encrypted content than what you expect, causing git-annex to  decrypt
              data  that  you  never  checked  into  git-annex,  and  risking exposing the decrypted data to any
              non-encrypted remotes you send content to.

              Downloading unverified content from (non-encrypted) external special remotes is prevented, because
              they could follow http redirects to web servers on localhost or on a private network, or  in  some
              cases to a file:/// url.

              If  you  decide  to bypass this security check, the best thing to do is to only set it temporarily
              while running the command that gets the file.  The value to set the config to is "ACKTHPPT".   For
              example:

               git -c annex.security.allow-unverified-downloads=ACKTHPPT annex get myfile

              It would be a good idea to check that it downloaded the file you expected, too.

       remote.<name>.annex-security-allow-unverified-downloads
              Per-remote configuration of annex.security.allow-unverified-downloads.

CONFIGURATION OF ASSISTANT

       annex.delayadd

              Makes  the  watch and assistant commands delay for the specified number of seconds before adding a
              newly created file to the annex. Normally this is not needed, because they already  wait  for  all
              writers of the file to close it.

              Note  that this only delays adding files created while the daemon is running. Changes made when it
              is not running will be added immediately the next time it is started up.

       annex.expireunused
              Controls what the assistant does about unused file contents that are stored in the repository.

              The default is false, which causes all old and unused file contents to  be  retained,  unless  the
              assistant is able to move them to some other repository (such as a backup repository).

              Can be set to a time specification, like "7d" or "1m", and then file contents that have been known
              to be unused for a week or a month will be deleted.

       annex.fscknudge
              When  set  to  false,  prevents  the  webapp  from reminding you when using repositories that lack
              consistency checks.

       annex.autoupgrade
              When set to ask (the default), the webapp will check for new versions and prompt if they should be
              upgraded to. When set to  true,  automatically  upgrades  without  prompting  (on  some  supported
              platforms). When set to false, disables any upgrade checking.

              Note  that  upgrade  checking  is  only  done when git-annex is installed from one of the prebuilt
              images from its website. This does not bypass e.g., a Linux distribution's  own  upgrade  handling
              code.

              This setting also controls whether to restart the git-annex assistant when the git-annex binary is
              detected to have changed. That is useful no matter how you installed git-annex.

       annex.autocommit
              Set  to  false  to  prevent  the  git-annex  assistant,  git-annex assist, and git-annex sync from
              automatically committing changes to files in the repository.

              To configure the behavior in all clones of the repository, this can be set in git-annex-config(1).

       annex.startupscan
              Set to false to prevent the git-annex assistant from scanning the repository for new  and  changed
              files  on  startup.  This  will  prevent  it from noticing changes that were made while it was not
              running, but can be a useful performance tweak for a large repository.

       annex.listen
              Configures which IP address the webapp listens on.  The default is localhost. Can be either an  IP
              address, or a hostname that resolves to the desired address.

       annex.port
              Configures which port address the webapp listens on.  The default is to pick an unused port.

CONFIGURATION VIA .gitattributes

       The key-value backend used when adding a new file to the annex can be configured on a per-file-type basis
       via  .gitattributes files. In the file, the annex.backend attribute can be set to the name of the backend
       to use. (See git-annex-backends(1) for information about available backends.)  For example,  this  here's
       how to use the WORM backend by default, but the SHA256E backend for ogg files:

        * annex.backend=WORM
        *.ogg annex.backend=SHA256E

       There  is  a  annex.largefiles  attribute,  which is used to configure which files are large enough to be
       added to the annex. Since attributes cannot contain spaces, it is  difficult  to  use  for  more  complex
       annex.largefiles  settings. Setting annex.largefiles in git-annex-config(1) is an easier way to configure
       it across all clones of the repository.  See git-annex-matching-expression(1) for details on the syntax.

       The numcopies  and  mincopies  settings  can  also  be  configured  on  a  per-file-type  basis  via  the
       annex.numcopies  and  annex.mincopies  attributes in .gitattributes files. This overrides other settings.
       For example, this makes two copies be needed for wav files and 3 copies for flac files:

        *.wav annex.numcopies=2
        *.flac annex.numcopies=3

       These settings are honored by git-annex whenever it's operating on a matching file. However,  when  using
       --all, --unused, or --key to specify keys to operate on, git-annex is operating on keys and not files, so
       will  not  honor the settings from .gitattributes. For this reason, the git annex numcopies and git annex
       mincopies commands are useful to configure a global default.

       Also note that when using views, only the toplevel .gitattributes file is preserved in the view, so other
       settings in other files won't have any effect.

EXIT STATUS

       git-annex itself will exit 0 on success and 1 on failure, unless the --size-limit or --time-limit  option
       is hit, in which case it exits 101.

       A  few  git-annex  subcommands  have  other  exit  statuses used to indicate specific problems, which are
       documented on their individual man pages.

ENVIRONMENT

       These environment variables are used by git-annex when set:

       GIT_WORK_TREE, GIT_DIR
              Handled the same as they are by git, see git(1)

       GIT_SSH, GIT_SSH_COMMAND
              Handled similarly to the same as described in git(1).  The one difference is that  git-annex  will
              sometimes  pass an additional "-n" parameter to these, as the first parameter, to prevent ssh from
              reading from stdin. Since that can break existing uses of these environment variables  that  don't
              expect the extra parameter, you will need to set GIT_ANNEX_USE_GIT_SSH=1 to make git-annex support
              these.

              Note  that  setting  either  of  these environment variables prevents git-annex from automatically
              enabling ssh connection caching (see annex.sshcaching), so it will slow down some operations  with
              remotes  over  ssh.  It's  up  to  you  to enable ssh connection caching if you need it; see ssh's
              documentation.

              Also, annex.ssh-options and remote.<name>.annex-ssh-options  won't  have  any  effect  when  these
              envionment variables are set.

              Usually  it's  better  to  configure  any  desired  options through your ~/.ssh/config file, or by
              setting annex.ssh-options.

       GIT_ANNEX_VECTOR_CLOCK
              Normally git-annex timestamps lines in the log files committed to the  git-annex  branch.  Setting
              this  environment  variable  to  a number will make git-annex use that (or a larger number) rather
              than the current number of seconds since the UNIX epoch.  Note that decimal seconds are supported.

              This is only provided for advanced users who either have a better way  to  tell  which  commit  is
              current than the local clock, or who need to avoid embedding timestamps for policy reasons.

       Some special remotes use additional environment variables
              for  authentication  etc.  For example, AWS_ACCESS_KEY_ID and GIT_ANNEX_P2P_AUTHTOKEN. See special
              remote documentation.

FILES

       These files are used by git-annex:

       .git/annex/objects/ in your git  repository  contains  the  annexed  file  contents  that  are  currently
       available. Annexed files in your git repository symlink to that content.

       .git/annex/ in your git repository contains other run-time information used by git-annex.

       ~/.config/git-annex/autostart is a list of git repositories to start the git-annex assistant in.

       .git/hooks/pre-commit-annex  in  your  git  repository  will be run whenever a commit is made to the HEAD
       branch, either by git commit, git-annex sync, or the git-annex assistant.

       .git/hooks/post-update-annex in your git repository will be run whenever the git-annex branch is updated.
       You can make this hook run git update-server-info when publishing a git-annex repository by http.

SEE ALSO

       More git-annex documentation is available on its web site, <https://git-annex.branchable.com/>

       If git-annex is installed from a package, a copy  of  its  documentation  should  be  included,  in,  for
       example, /usr/share/doc/git-annex/.

AUTHOR

       Joey Hess <id@joeyh.name>

       <https://git-annex.branchable.com/>

                                                                                                    git-annex(1)