I'm using git
to manage files on a project, and keep running into this problem.
When I run git status
I get the message
fatal: unable to read tree e2d920161d41631066945a3cbcd1b043de919570
As I understand it, I should check the output of git fsck
, and I receive
broken link from tree e09a42f248afff64336fbbec2523df97c26451ac
to tree e2d920161d41631066945a3cbcd1b043de919570
broken link from tree e09a42f248afff64336fbbec2523df97c26451ac
to tree 9b0dd389bd7f9e8d257395d57e0881b7957f9698
broken link from tree e09a42f248afff64336fbbec2523df97c26451ac
to tree 9e288a4ad60d63f342dfd18237980674426aa725
broken link from tree e09a42f248afff64336fbbec2523df97c26451ac
to tree 2a04647337089f554fab8c49cfd37149e5f4fc9f
broken link from tree e09a42f248afff64336fbbec2523df97c26451ac
to tree ea16658b45ce961adc3c3f519b0e8d9672918ca8
together with a lot of missing blob
messages.
Following various resources (e.g Git - Broken Links, Missing & Dangling Trees) I have simply re-cloned the project from github
and started again.
Once I have re-cloned the project, all is good for a few commit
s, and then the problem arises again. Re-cloning every time doesn't seem to be optimal, and seems to go against the idea of using git
, and I'd like to try and understand what is going on. How can I diagnose and fix this problem?
Following my older recommendation, it boils down to being able to find a repo which actually contains the missing elements (here full trees).
This is what is shown in "How to fix corrupted git repository?".
But if a full clone doesn't solve the problem, then it may be:
Update July 2016, with Git 2.10 soon to be release, you now have:
See "How to fix git error broken link from tree to tree?" for more.
This may or may not be the problem originally raised here, but note that you will see a "fatal: unable to read tree" error from git if the user account the git command is being run under is no longer able to read all files checked out from your repository due to an ownership/permissions issue.
So in many case the first thing to check should be that you've got ownership and permissions set correctly on the files in your working tree, as that may well fix the problem. :)
I would start with a fresh clone, then run
git fsck
on the unchanged, untouched clone. I'm wondering (as above) if your initial clone is corrupt, but in a way allowing you to perform a few operations before orphaning the trees.Something that just worked for me was stashing my changes, doing a git pull, and then popping the changes back off the stash stack. My corruption might of been pretty shallow, so it probably won't work for everyone but it's worth a try.
Here's the output I got when I stashed:
After that I pulled and then popped and it cleaned itself up. Again, YMMV.