Documentation / technical / pack-protocol.txton commit general improvements (43abf13)
   1Packfile transfer protocols
   2===========================
   3
   4Git supports transferring data in packfiles over the ssh://, git://, http:// and
   5file:// transports.  There exist two sets of protocols, one for pushing
   6data from a client to a server and another for fetching data from a
   7server to a client.  The three transports (ssh, git, file) use the same
   8protocol to transfer data. http is documented in http-protocol.txt.
   9
  10The processes invoked in the canonical Git implementation are 'upload-pack'
  11on the server side and 'fetch-pack' on the client side for fetching data;
  12then 'receive-pack' on the server and 'send-pack' on the client for pushing
  13data.  The protocol functions to have a server tell a client what is
  14currently on the server, then for the two to negotiate the smallest amount
  15of data to send in order to fully update one or the other.
  16
  17pkt-line Format
  18---------------
  19
  20The descriptions below build on the pkt-line format described in
  21protocol-common.txt. When the grammar indicate `PKT-LINE(...)`, unless
  22otherwise noted the usual pkt-line LF rules apply: the sender SHOULD
  23include a LF, but the receiver MUST NOT complain if it is not present.
  24
  25An error packet is a special pkt-line that contains an error string.
  26
  27----
  28  error-line     =  PKT-LINE("ERR" SP explanation-text)
  29----
  30
  31Throughout the protocol, where `PKT-LINE(...)` is expected, an error packet MAY
  32be sent. Once this packet is sent by a client or a server, the data transfer
  33process defined in this protocol is terminated.
  34
  35Transports
  36----------
  37There are three transports over which the packfile protocol is
  38initiated.  The Git transport is a simple, unauthenticated server that
  39takes the command (almost always 'upload-pack', though Git
  40servers can be configured to be globally writable, in which 'receive-
  41pack' initiation is also allowed) with which the client wishes to
  42communicate and executes it and connects it to the requesting
  43process.
  44
  45In the SSH transport, the client just runs the 'upload-pack'
  46or 'receive-pack' process on the server over the SSH protocol and then
  47communicates with that invoked process over the SSH connection.
  48
  49The file:// transport runs the 'upload-pack' or 'receive-pack'
  50process locally and communicates with it over a pipe.
  51
  52Extra Parameters
  53----------------
  54
  55The protocol provides a mechanism in which clients can send additional
  56information in its first message to the server. These are called "Extra
  57Parameters", and are supported by the Git, SSH, and HTTP protocols.
  58
  59Each Extra Parameter takes the form of `<key>=<value>` or `<key>`.
  60
  61Servers that receive any such Extra Parameters MUST ignore all
  62unrecognized keys. Currently, the only Extra Parameter recognized is
  63"version" with a value of '1' or '2'.  See protocol-v2.txt for more
  64information on protocol version 2.
  65
  66Git Transport
  67-------------
  68
  69The Git transport starts off by sending the command and repository
  70on the wire using the pkt-line format, followed by a NUL byte and a
  71hostname parameter, terminated by a NUL byte.
  72
  73   0033git-upload-pack /project.git\0host=myserver.com\0
  74
  75The transport may send Extra Parameters by adding an additional NUL
  76byte, and then adding one or more NUL-terminated strings:
  77
  78   003egit-upload-pack /project.git\0host=myserver.com\0\0version=1\0
  79
  80--
  81   git-proto-request = request-command SP pathname NUL
  82                       [ host-parameter NUL ] [ NUL extra-parameters ]
  83   request-command   = "git-upload-pack" / "git-receive-pack" /
  84                       "git-upload-archive"   ; case sensitive
  85   pathname          = *( %x01-ff ) ; exclude NUL
  86   host-parameter    = "host=" hostname [ ":" port ]
  87   extra-parameters  = 1*extra-parameter
  88   extra-parameter   = 1*( %x01-ff ) NUL
  89--
  90
  91host-parameter is used for the
  92git-daemon name based virtual hosting.  See --interpolated-path
  93option to git daemon, with the %H/%CH format characters.
  94
  95Basically what the Git client is doing to connect to an 'upload-pack'
  96process on the server side over the Git protocol is this:
  97
  98   $ echo -e -n \
  99     "0039git-upload-pack /schacon/gitbook.git\0host=example.com\0" |
 100     nc -v example.com 9418
 101
 102
 103SSH Transport
 104-------------
 105
 106Initiating the upload-pack or receive-pack processes over SSH is
 107executing the binary on the server via SSH remote execution.
 108It is basically equivalent to running this:
 109
 110   $ ssh git.example.com "git-upload-pack '/project.git'"
 111
 112For a server to support Git pushing and pulling for a given user over
 113SSH, that user needs to be able to execute one or both of those
 114commands via the SSH shell that they are provided on login.  On some
 115systems, that shell access is limited to only being able to run those
 116two commands, or even just one of them.
 117
 118In an ssh:// format URI, it's absolute in the URI, so the '/' after
 119the host name (or port number) is sent as an argument, which is then
 120read by the remote git-upload-pack exactly as is, so it's effectively
 121an absolute path in the remote filesystem.
 122
 123       git clone ssh://user@example.com/project.git
 124                    |
 125                    v
 126    ssh user@example.com "git-upload-pack '/project.git'"
 127
 128In a "user@host:path" format URI, its relative to the user's home
 129directory, because the Git client will run:
 130
 131     git clone user@example.com:project.git
 132                    |
 133                    v
 134  ssh user@example.com "git-upload-pack 'project.git'"
 135
 136The exception is if a '~' is used, in which case
 137we execute it without the leading '/'.
 138
 139      ssh://user@example.com/~alice/project.git,
 140                     |
 141                     v
 142   ssh user@example.com "git-upload-pack '~alice/project.git'"
 143
 144Depending on the value of the `protocol.version` configuration variable,
 145Git may attempt to send Extra Parameters as a colon-separated string in
 146the GIT_PROTOCOL environment variable. This is done only if
 147the `ssh.variant` configuration variable indicates that the ssh command
 148supports passing environment variables as an argument.
 149
 150A few things to remember here:
 151
 152- The "command name" is spelled with dash (e.g. git-upload-pack), but
 153  this can be overridden by the client;
 154
 155- The repository path is always quoted with single quotes.
 156
 157Fetching Data From a Server
 158---------------------------
 159
 160When one Git repository wants to get data that a second repository
 161has, the first can 'fetch' from the second.  This operation determines
 162what data the server has that the client does not then streams that
 163data down to the client in packfile format.
 164
 165
 166Reference Discovery
 167-------------------
 168
 169When the client initially connects the server will immediately respond
 170with a version number (if "version=1" is sent as an Extra Parameter),
 171and a listing of each reference it has (all branches and tags) along
 172with the object name that each reference currently points to.
 173
 174   $ echo -e -n "0044git-upload-pack /schacon/gitbook.git\0host=example.com\0\0version=1\0" |
 175      nc -v example.com 9418
 176   000aversion 1
 177   00887217a7c7e582c46cec22a130adf4b9d7d950fba0 HEAD\0multi_ack thin-pack
 178                side-band side-band-64k ofs-delta shallow no-progress include-tag
 179   00441d3fcd5ced445d1abc402225c0b8a1299641f497 refs/heads/integration
 180   003f7217a7c7e582c46cec22a130adf4b9d7d950fba0 refs/heads/master
 181   003cb88d2441cac0977faf98efc80305012112238d9d refs/tags/v0.9
 182   003c525128480b96c89e6418b1e40909bf6c5b2d580f refs/tags/v1.0
 183   003fe92df48743b7bc7d26bcaabfddde0a1e20cae47c refs/tags/v1.0^{}
 184   0000
 185
 186The returned response is a pkt-line stream describing each ref and
 187its current value.  The stream MUST be sorted by name according to
 188the C locale ordering.
 189
 190If HEAD is a valid ref, HEAD MUST appear as the first advertised
 191ref.  If HEAD is not a valid ref, HEAD MUST NOT appear in the
 192advertisement list at all, but other refs may still appear.
 193
 194The stream MUST include capability declarations behind a NUL on the
 195first ref. The peeled value of a ref (that is "ref^{}") MUST be
 196immediately after the ref itself, if presented. A conforming server
 197MUST peel the ref if it's an annotated tag.
 198
 199----
 200  advertised-refs  =  *1("version 1")
 201                      (no-refs / list-of-refs)
 202                      *shallow
 203                      flush-pkt
 204
 205  no-refs          =  PKT-LINE(zero-id SP "capabilities^{}"
 206                      NUL capability-list)
 207
 208  list-of-refs     =  first-ref *other-ref
 209  first-ref        =  PKT-LINE(obj-id SP refname
 210                      NUL capability-list)
 211
 212  other-ref        =  PKT-LINE(other-tip / other-peeled)
 213  other-tip        =  obj-id SP refname
 214  other-peeled     =  obj-id SP refname "^{}"
 215
 216  shallow          =  PKT-LINE("shallow" SP obj-id)
 217
 218  capability-list  =  capability *(SP capability)
 219  capability       =  1*(LC_ALPHA / DIGIT / "-" / "_")
 220  LC_ALPHA         =  %x61-7A
 221----
 222
 223Server and client MUST use lowercase for obj-id, both MUST treat obj-id
 224as case-insensitive.
 225
 226See protocol-capabilities.txt for a list of allowed server capabilities
 227and descriptions.
 228
 229Packfile Negotiation
 230--------------------
 231After reference and capabilities discovery, the client can decide to
 232terminate the connection by sending a flush-pkt, telling the server it can
 233now gracefully terminate, and disconnect, when it does not need any pack
 234data. This can happen with the ls-remote command, and also can happen when
 235the client already is up to date.
 236
 237Otherwise, it enters the negotiation phase, where the client and
 238server determine what the minimal packfile necessary for transport is,
 239by telling the server what objects it wants, its shallow objects
 240(if any), and the maximum commit depth it wants (if any).  The client
 241will also send a list of the capabilities it wants to be in effect,
 242out of what the server said it could do with the first 'want' line.
 243
 244----
 245  upload-request    =  want-list
 246                       *shallow-line
 247                       *1depth-request
 248                       [filter-request]
 249                       flush-pkt
 250
 251  want-list         =  first-want
 252                       *additional-want
 253
 254  shallow-line      =  PKT-LINE("shallow" SP obj-id)
 255
 256  depth-request     =  PKT-LINE("deepen" SP depth) /
 257                       PKT-LINE("deepen-since" SP timestamp) /
 258                       PKT-LINE("deepen-not" SP ref)
 259
 260  first-want        =  PKT-LINE("want" SP obj-id SP capability-list)
 261  additional-want   =  PKT-LINE("want" SP obj-id)
 262
 263  depth             =  1*DIGIT
 264
 265  filter-request    =  PKT-LINE("filter" SP filter-spec)
 266----
 267
 268Clients MUST send all the obj-ids it wants from the reference
 269discovery phase as 'want' lines. Clients MUST send at least one
 270'want' command in the request body. Clients MUST NOT mention an
 271obj-id in a 'want' command which did not appear in the response
 272obtained through ref discovery.
 273
 274The client MUST write all obj-ids which it only has shallow copies
 275of (meaning that it does not have the parents of a commit) as
 276'shallow' lines so that the server is aware of the limitations of
 277the client's history.
 278
 279The client now sends the maximum commit history depth it wants for
 280this transaction, which is the number of commits it wants from the
 281tip of the history, if any, as a 'deepen' line.  A depth of 0 is the
 282same as not making a depth request. The client does not want to receive
 283any commits beyond this depth, nor does it want objects needed only to
 284complete those commits. Commits whose parents are not received as a
 285result are defined as shallow and marked as such in the server. This
 286information is sent back to the client in the next step.
 287
 288The client can optionally request that pack-objects omit various
 289objects from the packfile using one of several filtering techniques.
 290These are intended for use with partial clone and partial fetch
 291operations. An object that does not meet a filter-spec value is
 292omitted unless explicitly requested in a 'want' line. See `rev-list`
 293for possible filter-spec values.
 294
 295Once all the 'want's and 'shallow's (and optional 'deepen') are
 296transferred, clients MUST send a flush-pkt, to tell the server side
 297that it is done sending the list.
 298
 299Otherwise, if the client sent a positive depth request, the server
 300will determine which commits will and will not be shallow and
 301send this information to the client. If the client did not request
 302a positive depth, this step is skipped.
 303
 304----
 305  shallow-update   =  *shallow-line
 306                      *unshallow-line
 307                      flush-pkt
 308
 309  shallow-line     =  PKT-LINE("shallow" SP obj-id)
 310
 311  unshallow-line   =  PKT-LINE("unshallow" SP obj-id)
 312----
 313
 314If the client has requested a positive depth, the server will compute
 315the set of commits which are no deeper than the desired depth. The set
 316of commits start at the client's wants.
 317
 318The server writes 'shallow' lines for each
 319commit whose parents will not be sent as a result. The server writes
 320an 'unshallow' line for each commit which the client has indicated is
 321shallow, but is no longer shallow at the currently requested depth
 322(that is, its parents will now be sent). The server MUST NOT mark
 323as unshallow anything which the client has not indicated was shallow.
 324
 325Now the client will send a list of the obj-ids it has using 'have'
 326lines, so the server can make a packfile that only contains the objects
 327that the client needs. In multi_ack mode, the canonical implementation
 328will send up to 32 of these at a time, then will send a flush-pkt. The
 329canonical implementation will skip ahead and send the next 32 immediately,
 330so that there is always a block of 32 "in-flight on the wire" at a time.
 331
 332----
 333  upload-haves      =  have-list
 334                       compute-end
 335
 336  have-list         =  *have-line
 337  have-line         =  PKT-LINE("have" SP obj-id)
 338  compute-end       =  flush-pkt / PKT-LINE("done")
 339----
 340
 341If the server reads 'have' lines, it then will respond by ACKing any
 342of the obj-ids the client said it had that the server also has. The
 343server will ACK obj-ids differently depending on which ack mode is
 344chosen by the client.
 345
 346In multi_ack mode:
 347
 348  * the server will respond with 'ACK obj-id continue' for any common
 349    commits.
 350
 351  * once the server has found an acceptable common base commit and is
 352    ready to make a packfile, it will blindly ACK all 'have' obj-ids
 353    back to the client.
 354
 355  * the server will then send a 'NAK' and then wait for another response
 356    from the client - either a 'done' or another list of 'have' lines.
 357
 358In multi_ack_detailed mode:
 359
 360  * the server will differentiate the ACKs where it is signaling
 361    that it is ready to send data with 'ACK obj-id ready' lines, and
 362    signals the identified common commits with 'ACK obj-id common' lines.
 363
 364Without either multi_ack or multi_ack_detailed:
 365
 366 * upload-pack sends "ACK obj-id" on the first common object it finds.
 367   After that it says nothing until the client gives it a "done".
 368
 369 * upload-pack sends "NAK" on a flush-pkt if no common object
 370   has been found yet.  If one has been found, and thus an ACK
 371   was already sent, it's silent on the flush-pkt.
 372
 373After the client has gotten enough ACK responses that it can determine
 374that the server has enough information to send an efficient packfile
 375(in the canonical implementation, this is determined when it has received
 376enough ACKs that it can color everything left in the --date-order queue
 377as common with the server, or the --date-order queue is empty), or the
 378client determines that it wants to give up (in the canonical implementation,
 379this is determined when the client sends 256 'have' lines without getting
 380any of them ACKed by the server - meaning there is nothing in common and
 381the server should just send all of its objects), then the client will send
 382a 'done' command.  The 'done' command signals to the server that the client
 383is ready to receive its packfile data.
 384
 385However, the 256 limit *only* turns on in the canonical client
 386implementation if we have received at least one "ACK %s continue"
 387during a prior round.  This helps to ensure that at least one common
 388ancestor is found before we give up entirely.
 389
 390Once the 'done' line is read from the client, the server will either
 391send a final 'ACK obj-id' or it will send a 'NAK'. 'obj-id' is the object
 392name of the last commit determined to be common. The server only sends
 393ACK after 'done' if there is at least one common base and multi_ack or
 394multi_ack_detailed is enabled. The server always sends NAK after 'done'
 395if there is no common base found.
 396
 397Instead of 'ACK' or 'NAK', the server may send an error message (for
 398example, if it does not recognize an object in a 'want' line received
 399from the client).
 400
 401Then the server will start sending its packfile data.
 402
 403----
 404  server-response = *ack_multi ack / nak
 405  ack_multi       = PKT-LINE("ACK" SP obj-id ack_status)
 406  ack_status      = "continue" / "common" / "ready"
 407  ack             = PKT-LINE("ACK" SP obj-id)
 408  nak             = PKT-LINE("NAK")
 409----
 410
 411A simple clone may look like this (with no 'have' lines):
 412
 413----
 414   C: 0054want 74730d410fcb6603ace96f1dc55ea6196122532d multi_ack \
 415     side-band-64k ofs-delta\n
 416   C: 0032want 7d1665144a3a975c05f1f43902ddaf084e784dbe\n
 417   C: 0032want 5a3f6be755bbb7deae50065988cbfa1ffa9ab68a\n
 418   C: 0032want 7e47fe2bd8d01d481f44d7af0531bd93d3b21c01\n
 419   C: 0032want 74730d410fcb6603ace96f1dc55ea6196122532d\n
 420   C: 0000
 421   C: 0009done\n
 422
 423   S: 0008NAK\n
 424   S: [PACKFILE]
 425----
 426
 427An incremental update (fetch) response might look like this:
 428
 429----
 430   C: 0054want 74730d410fcb6603ace96f1dc55ea6196122532d multi_ack \
 431     side-band-64k ofs-delta\n
 432   C: 0032want 7d1665144a3a975c05f1f43902ddaf084e784dbe\n
 433   C: 0032want 5a3f6be755bbb7deae50065988cbfa1ffa9ab68a\n
 434   C: 0000
 435   C: 0032have 7e47fe2bd8d01d481f44d7af0531bd93d3b21c01\n
 436   C: [30 more have lines]
 437   C: 0032have 74730d410fcb6603ace96f1dc55ea6196122532d\n
 438   C: 0000
 439
 440   S: 003aACK 7e47fe2bd8d01d481f44d7af0531bd93d3b21c01 continue\n
 441   S: 003aACK 74730d410fcb6603ace96f1dc55ea6196122532d continue\n
 442   S: 0008NAK\n
 443
 444   C: 0009done\n
 445
 446   S: 0031ACK 74730d410fcb6603ace96f1dc55ea6196122532d\n
 447   S: [PACKFILE]
 448----
 449
 450
 451Packfile Data
 452-------------
 453
 454Now that the client and server have finished negotiation about what
 455the minimal amount of data that needs to be sent to the client is, the server
 456will construct and send the required data in packfile format.
 457
 458See pack-format.txt for what the packfile itself actually looks like.
 459
 460If 'side-band' or 'side-band-64k' capabilities have been specified by
 461the client, the server will send the packfile data multiplexed.
 462
 463Each packet starting with the packet-line length of the amount of data
 464that follows, followed by a single byte specifying the sideband the
 465following data is coming in on.
 466
 467In 'side-band' mode, it will send up to 999 data bytes plus 1 control
 468code, for a total of up to 1000 bytes in a pkt-line.  In 'side-band-64k'
 469mode it will send up to 65519 data bytes plus 1 control code, for a
 470total of up to 65520 bytes in a pkt-line.
 471
 472The sideband byte will be a '1', '2' or a '3'. Sideband '1' will contain
 473packfile data, sideband '2' will be used for progress information that the
 474client will generally print to stderr and sideband '3' is used for error
 475information.
 476
 477If no 'side-band' capability was specified, the server will stream the
 478entire packfile without multiplexing.
 479
 480
 481Pushing Data To a Server
 482------------------------
 483
 484Pushing data to a server will invoke the 'receive-pack' process on the
 485server, which will allow the client to tell it which references it should
 486update and then send all the data the server will need for those new
 487references to be complete.  Once all the data is received and validated,
 488the server will then update its references to what the client specified.
 489
 490Authentication
 491--------------
 492
 493The protocol itself contains no authentication mechanisms.  That is to be
 494handled by the transport, such as SSH, before the 'receive-pack' process is
 495invoked.  If 'receive-pack' is configured over the Git transport, those
 496repositories will be writable by anyone who can access that port (9418) as
 497that transport is unauthenticated.
 498
 499Reference Discovery
 500-------------------
 501
 502The reference discovery phase is done nearly the same way as it is in the
 503fetching protocol. Each reference obj-id and name on the server is sent
 504in packet-line format to the client, followed by a flush-pkt.  The only
 505real difference is that the capability listing is different - the only
 506possible values are 'report-status', 'delete-refs', 'ofs-delta' and
 507'push-options'.
 508
 509Reference Update Request and Packfile Transfer
 510----------------------------------------------
 511
 512Once the client knows what references the server is at, it can send a
 513list of reference update requests.  For each reference on the server
 514that it wants to update, it sends a line listing the obj-id currently on
 515the server, the obj-id the client would like to update it to and the name
 516of the reference.
 517
 518This list is followed by a flush-pkt.
 519
 520----
 521  update-requests   =  *shallow ( command-list | push-cert )
 522
 523  shallow           =  PKT-LINE("shallow" SP obj-id)
 524
 525  command-list      =  PKT-LINE(command NUL capability-list)
 526                       *PKT-LINE(command)
 527                       flush-pkt
 528
 529  command           =  create / delete / update
 530  create            =  zero-id SP new-id  SP name
 531  delete            =  old-id  SP zero-id SP name
 532  update            =  old-id  SP new-id  SP name
 533
 534  old-id            =  obj-id
 535  new-id            =  obj-id
 536
 537  push-cert         = PKT-LINE("push-cert" NUL capability-list LF)
 538                      PKT-LINE("certificate version 0.1" LF)
 539                      PKT-LINE("pusher" SP ident LF)
 540                      PKT-LINE("pushee" SP url LF)
 541                      PKT-LINE("nonce" SP nonce LF)
 542                      *PKT-LINE("push-option" SP push-option LF)
 543                      PKT-LINE(LF)
 544                      *PKT-LINE(command LF)
 545                      *PKT-LINE(gpg-signature-lines LF)
 546                      PKT-LINE("push-cert-end" LF)
 547
 548  push-option       =  1*( VCHAR | SP )
 549----
 550
 551If the server has advertised the 'push-options' capability and the client has
 552specified 'push-options' as part of the capability list above, the client then
 553sends its push options followed by a flush-pkt.
 554
 555----
 556  push-options      =  *PKT-LINE(push-option) flush-pkt
 557----
 558
 559For backwards compatibility with older Git servers, if the client sends a push
 560cert and push options, it MUST send its push options both embedded within the
 561push cert and after the push cert. (Note that the push options within the cert
 562are prefixed, but the push options after the cert are not.) Both these lists
 563MUST be the same, modulo the prefix.
 564
 565After that the packfile that
 566should contain all the objects that the server will need to complete the new
 567references will be sent.
 568
 569----
 570  packfile          =  "PACK" 28*(OCTET)
 571----
 572
 573If the receiving end does not support delete-refs, the sending end MUST
 574NOT ask for delete command.
 575
 576If the receiving end does not support push-cert, the sending end
 577MUST NOT send a push-cert command.  When a push-cert command is
 578sent, command-list MUST NOT be sent; the commands recorded in the
 579push certificate is used instead.
 580
 581The packfile MUST NOT be sent if the only command used is 'delete'.
 582
 583A packfile MUST be sent if either create or update command is used,
 584even if the server already has all the necessary objects.  In this
 585case the client MUST send an empty packfile.   The only time this
 586is likely to happen is if the client is creating
 587a new branch or a tag that points to an existing obj-id.
 588
 589The server will receive the packfile, unpack it, then validate each
 590reference that is being updated that it hasn't changed while the request
 591was being processed (the obj-id is still the same as the old-id), and
 592it will run any update hooks to make sure that the update is acceptable.
 593If all of that is fine, the server will then update the references.
 594
 595Push Certificate
 596----------------
 597
 598A push certificate begins with a set of header lines.  After the
 599header and an empty line, the protocol commands follow, one per
 600line. Note that the trailing LF in push-cert PKT-LINEs is _not_
 601optional; it must be present.
 602
 603Currently, the following header fields are defined:
 604
 605`pusher` ident::
 606        Identify the GPG key in "Human Readable Name <email@address>"
 607        format.
 608
 609`pushee` url::
 610        The repository URL (anonymized, if the URL contains
 611        authentication material) the user who ran `git push`
 612        intended to push into.
 613
 614`nonce` nonce::
 615        The 'nonce' string the receiving repository asked the
 616        pushing user to include in the certificate, to prevent
 617        replay attacks.
 618
 619The GPG signature lines are a detached signature for the contents
 620recorded in the push certificate before the signature block begins.
 621The detached signature is used to certify that the commands were
 622given by the pusher, who must be the signer.
 623
 624Report Status
 625-------------
 626
 627After receiving the pack data from the sender, the receiver sends a
 628report if 'report-status' capability is in effect.
 629It is a short listing of what happened in that update.  It will first
 630list the status of the packfile unpacking as either 'unpack ok' or
 631'unpack [error]'.  Then it will list the status for each of the references
 632that it tried to update.  Each line is either 'ok [refname]' if the
 633update was successful, or 'ng [refname] [error]' if the update was not.
 634
 635----
 636  report-status     = unpack-status
 637                      1*(command-status)
 638                      flush-pkt
 639
 640  unpack-status     = PKT-LINE("unpack" SP unpack-result)
 641  unpack-result     = "ok" / error-msg
 642
 643  command-status    = command-ok / command-fail
 644  command-ok        = PKT-LINE("ok" SP refname)
 645  command-fail      = PKT-LINE("ng" SP refname SP error-msg)
 646
 647  error-msg         = 1*(OCTECT) ; where not "ok"
 648----
 649
 650Updates can be unsuccessful for a number of reasons.  The reference can have
 651changed since the reference discovery phase was originally sent, meaning
 652someone pushed in the meantime.  The reference being pushed could be a
 653non-fast-forward reference and the update hooks or configuration could be
 654set to not allow that, etc.  Also, some references can be updated while others
 655can be rejected.
 656
 657An example client/server communication might look like this:
 658
 659----
 660   S: 006274730d410fcb6603ace96f1dc55ea6196122532d refs/heads/local\0report-status delete-refs ofs-delta\n
 661   S: 003e7d1665144a3a975c05f1f43902ddaf084e784dbe refs/heads/debug\n
 662   S: 003f74730d410fcb6603ace96f1dc55ea6196122532d refs/heads/master\n
 663   S: 003d74730d410fcb6603ace96f1dc55ea6196122532d refs/heads/team\n
 664   S: 0000
 665
 666   C: 00677d1665144a3a975c05f1f43902ddaf084e784dbe 74730d410fcb6603ace96f1dc55ea6196122532d refs/heads/debug\n
 667   C: 006874730d410fcb6603ace96f1dc55ea6196122532d 5a3f6be755bbb7deae50065988cbfa1ffa9ab68a refs/heads/master\n
 668   C: 0000
 669   C: [PACKDATA]
 670
 671   S: 000eunpack ok\n
 672   S: 0018ok refs/heads/debug\n
 673   S: 002ang refs/heads/master non-fast-forward\n
 674----