Updates to the lfs doc.
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@ -12,7 +12,7 @@ Git LFS makes this simpler for the end user by removing the requirement to learn
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## How it works
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Git LFS client talks with the GitLab server over HTTPS. It uses HTTP Basic Authentication to authorize client requests.
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Once the request is authorized, Git LFS client receives instructions from where to fetch/where to push the large file.
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Once the request is authorized, Git LFS client receives instructions from where to fetch or where to push the large file.
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## Requirements
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@ -23,7 +23,7 @@ Once the request is authorized, Git LFS client receives instructions from where
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### Configuration
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Git LFS objects can be large in size and they are stored on GitLab server storage.
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Git LFS objects can be large in size. By default, they are stored on the server GitLab is installed on.
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There are two configuration options to help GitLab server administrators:
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@ -49,7 +49,7 @@ In `config/gitlab.yml`:
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storage_path: /mnt/storage/lfs-objects
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```
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### Known limitations
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## Known limitations
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* Git LFS v1 original API is not supported since it was deprecated early in LFS development, starting with Git LFS version 0.6.0
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* When SSH is set as a remote, Git LFS objects still go through HTTPS
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@ -66,8 +66,13 @@ For example, if you want to upload a very large file and check it into your Git
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git clone git@gitlab.example.com:group/project.git
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git lfs init # initialize the Git LFS project project
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git lfs track "*.iso" # select the file extensions that you want to treat as large files
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```
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Once a certain file extension is marked for tracking as a LFS object you can use Git as usual without having to redo the command to track a file with the same extension:
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```bash
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cp ~/tmp/debian.iso ./ # copy a large file into the current directory
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git add . # add the large file to git annex
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git add . # add the large file to the project
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git commit -am "Added Debian iso" # commit the file meta data
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git push origin master # sync the git repo and large file to the GitLab server
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```
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@ -80,26 +85,32 @@ git lfs fetch debian.iso # download the large file
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```
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## Troubleshooting tips
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## Troubleshooting
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### error: Repository or object not found
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Few reasons why this error can occur:
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There are a couple of reasons why this error can occur:
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1. Check the version of Git LFS on the client machine, `git lfs version`. Only version 0.6.0 and up are supported.
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1. Check the Git config for traces of deprecated API, `git lfs -l`. If `batch = false` remove the line and try using Git LFS client > 0.6.0
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* Wrong version of LFS client used:
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Check the version of Git LFS on the client machine with `git lfs version`. Only version 0.6.0 and newer are supported.
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* Project is using deprecated LFS API
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Check the Git config of the project for traces of deprecated API with `git lfs -l`. If `batch = false` is set in the config, remove the line and try using Git LFS client newer than 0.6.0.
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### Invalid status for <url> : 501
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When attempting to push a LFS object to a GitLab server that doesn't have Git LFS support enabled, server will return status `error 501`. Check with your GitLab administrator why Git LFS is not enabled on the server
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When attempting to push a LFS object to a GitLab server that doesn't have Git LFS support enabled, server will return status `error 501`. Check with your GitLab administrator why Git LFS is not enabled on the server. See [Configuration section](#configuration) for instructions on how to enable LFS support.
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### getsockopt: connection refused
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When pushing a LFS object and you receive an error similar to: `Post <URL>/info/lfs/objects/batch: dial tcp IP: getsockopt: connection refused`,
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LFS client is trying to reach GitLab through HTTPS but your GitLab is being served on HTTP.
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This behaviour is caused by Git LFS using HTTPS connections by default when it doesn't have a `lfsurl` set in the Git config.
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If you push a LFS object to a project and you receive an error similar to: `Post <URL>/info/lfs/objects/batch: dial tcp IP: getsockopt: connection refused`,
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the LFS client is trying to reach GitLab through HTTPS. However, your GitLab instance is being served on HTTP.
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To go around this issue set the lfs url in git config:
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This behaviour is caused by Git LFS using HTTPS connections by default when a `lfsurl` is not set in the Git config.
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To prevent this from happening, set the lfs url in project Git config:
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```bash
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