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GIT-SPARSE-CHECKOU(1)		  Git Manual		 GIT-SPARSE-CHECKOU(1)

NAME
       git-sparse-checkout - Initialize	and modify the sparse-checkout
       configuration, which reduces the	checkout to a set of paths given by a
       list of patterns.

SYNOPSIS
       git sparse-checkout _subcommand_	[options]

DESCRIPTION
       Initialize and modify the sparse-checkout configuration,	which reduces
       the checkout to a set of	paths given by a list of patterns.

       THIS COMMAND IS EXPERIMENTAL. ITS BEHAVIOR, AND THE BEHAVIOR OF OTHER
       COMMANDS	IN THE PRESENCE	OF SPARSE-CHECKOUTS, WILL LIKELY CHANGE	IN THE
       FUTURE.

COMMANDS
       list
	   Describe the	patterns in the	sparse-checkout	file.

       init
	   Enable the core.sparseCheckout setting. If the sparse-checkout file
	   does	not exist, then	populate it with patterns that match every
	   file	in the root directory and no other directories,	then will
	   remove all directories tracked by Git. Add patterns to the
	   sparse-checkout file	to repopulate the working directory.

	   To avoid interfering	with other worktrees, it first enables the
	   extensions.worktreeConfig setting and makes sure to set the
	   core.sparseCheckout setting in the worktree-specific	config file.

	   When	--cone is provided, the	core.sparseCheckoutCone	setting	is
	   also	set, allowing for better performance with a limited set	of
	   patterns (see CONE PATTERN SET below).

       set
	   Write a set of patterns to the sparse-checkout file,	as given as a
	   list	of arguments following the set subcommand. Update the working
	   directory to	match the new patterns.	Enable the core.sparseCheckout
	   config setting if it	is not already enabled.

	   When	the --stdin option is provided,	the patterns are read from
	   standard in as a newline-delimited list instead of from the
	   arguments.

	   When	core.sparseCheckoutCone	is enabled, the	input list is
	   considered a	list of	directories instead of sparse-checkout
	   patterns. The command writes	patterns to the	sparse-checkout	file
	   to include all files	contained in those directories (recursively)
	   as well as files that are siblings of ancestor directories. The
	   input format	matches	the output of git ls-tree --name-only. This
	   includes interpreting pathnames that	begin with a double quote (")
	   as C-style quoted strings.

       add
	   Update the sparse-checkout file to include additional patterns. By
	   default, these patterns are read from the command-line arguments,
	   but they can	be read	from stdin using the --stdin option. When
	   core.sparseCheckoutCone is enabled, the given patterns are
	   interpreted as directory names as in	the set	subcommand.

       reapply
	   Reapply the sparsity	pattern	rules to paths in the working tree.
	   Commands like merge or rebase can materialize paths to do their
	   work	(e.g. in order to show you a conflict),	and other
	   sparse-checkout commands might fail to sparsify an individual file
	   (e.g. because it has	unstaged changes or conflicts).	In such	cases,
	   it can make sense to	run git	sparse-checkout	reapply	later after
	   cleaning up affected	paths (e.g. resolving conflicts, undoing or
	   committing changes, etc.).

       disable
	   Disable the core.sparseCheckout config setting, and restore the
	   working directory to	include	all files. Leaves the sparse-checkout
	   file	intact so a later git sparse-checkout init command may return
	   the working directory to the	same state.

SPARSE CHECKOUT
       "Sparse checkout" allows	populating the working directory sparsely. It
       uses the	skip-worktree bit (see git-update-index(1)) to tell Git
       whether a file in the working directory is worth	looking	at. If the
       skip-worktree bit is set, then the file is ignored in the working
       directory. Git will not populate	the contents of	those files, which
       makes a sparse checkout helpful when working in a repository with many
       files, but only a few are important to the current user.

       The $GIT_DIR/info/sparse-checkout file is used to define	the
       skip-worktree reference bitmap. When Git	updates	the working directory,
       it updates the skip-worktree bits in the	index based on this file. The
       files matching the patterns in the file will appear in the working
       directory, and the rest will not.

       To enable the sparse-checkout feature, run git sparse-checkout init to
       initialize a simple sparse-checkout file	and enable the
       core.sparseCheckout config setting. Then, run git sparse-checkout set
       to modify the patterns in the sparse-checkout file.

       To repopulate the working directory with	all files, use the git
       sparse-checkout disable command.

FULL PATTERN SET
       By default, the sparse-checkout file uses the same syntax as .gitignore
       files.

       While $GIT_DIR/info/sparse-checkout is usually used to specify what
       files are included, you can also	specify	what files are not included,
       using negative patterns.	For example, to	remove the file	unwanted:

	   /*
	   !unwanted

CONE PATTERN SET
       The full	pattern	set allows for arbitrary pattern matches and
       complicated inclusion/exclusion rules. These can	result in O(N*M)
       pattern matches when updating the index,	where N	is the number of
       patterns	and M is the number of paths in	the index. To combat this
       performance issue, a more restricted pattern set	is allowed when
       core.sparseCheckoutCone is enabled.

       The accepted patterns in	the cone pattern set are:

	1. Recursive: All paths	inside a directory are included.

	2. Parent: All files immediately inside	a directory are	included.

       In addition to the above	two patterns, we also expect that all files in
       the root	directory are included.	If a recursive pattern is added, then
       all leading directories are added as parent patterns.

       By default, when	running	git sparse-checkout init, the root directory
       is added	as a parent pattern. At	this point, the	sparse-checkout	file
       contains	the following patterns:

	   /*
	   !/*/

       This says "include everything in	root, but nothing two levels below
       root."

       When in cone mode, the git sparse-checkout set subcommand takes a list
       of directories instead of a list	of sparse-checkout patterns. In	this
       mode, the command git sparse-checkout set A/B/C sets the	directory
       A/B/C as	a recursive pattern, the directories A and A/B are added as
       parent patterns.	The resulting sparse-checkout file is now

	   /*
	   !/*/
	   /A/
	   !/A/*/
	   /A/B/
	   !/A/B/*/
	   /A/B/C/

       Here, order matters, so the negative patterns are overridden by the
       positive	patterns that appear lower in the file.

       If core.sparseCheckoutCone=true,	then Git will parse the
       sparse-checkout file expecting patterns of these	types. Git will	warn
       if the patterns do not match. If	the patterns do	match the expected
       format, then Git	will use faster	hash- based algorithms to compute
       inclusion in the	sparse-checkout.

       In the cone mode	case, the git sparse-checkout list subcommand will
       list the	directories that define	the recursive patterns.	For the
       example sparse-checkout file above, the output is as follows:

	   $ git sparse-checkout list
	   A/B/C

       If core.ignoreCase=true,	then the pattern-matching algorithm will use a
       case-insensitive	check. This corrects for case mismatched filenames in
       the git sparse-checkout set command to reflect the expected cone	in the
       working directory.

SUBMODULES
       If your repository contains one or more submodules, then	submodules are
       populated based on interactions with the	git submodule command.
       Specifically, git submodule init	-- <path> will ensure the submodule at
       <path> is present, while	git submodule deinit [-f] -- <path> will
       remove the files	for the	submodule at <path> (including any untracked
       files, uncommitted changes, and unpushed	history). Similar to how
       sparse-checkout removes files from the working tree but still leaves
       entries in the index, deinitialized submodules are removed from the
       working directory but still have	an entry in the	index.

       Since submodules	may have unpushed changes or untracked files, removing
       them could result in data loss. Thus, changing sparse
       inclusion/exclusion rules will not cause	an already checked out
       submodule to be removed from the	working	copy. Said another way,	just
       as checkout will	not cause submodules to	be automatically removed or
       initialized even	when switching between branches	that remove or add
       submodules, using sparse-checkout to reduce or expand the scope of
       "interesting" files will	not cause submodules to	be automatically
       deinitialized or	initialized either.

       Further,	the above facts	mean that there	are multiple reasons that
       "tracked" files might not be present in the working copy: sparsity
       pattern application from	sparse-checkout, and submodule initialization
       state. Thus, commands like git grep that	work on	tracked	files in the
       working copy may	return results that are	limited	by either or both of
       these restrictions.

SEE ALSO
       git-read-tree(1)	gitignore(5)

GIT
       Part of the git(1) suite

Git 2.30.1			  02/08/2021		 GIT-SPARSE-CHECKOU(1)

NAME | SYNOPSIS | DESCRIPTION | COMMANDS | SPARSE CHECKOUT | FULL PATTERN SET | CONE PATTERN SET | SUBMODULES | SEE ALSO | GIT

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