510

I have googled and found many solutions but none work for me.

I am trying to clone from one machine by connecting to the remote server which is in the LAN network.
Running this command from another machine cause error.
But running the SAME clone command using git://192.168.8.5 ... at the server it's okay and successful.

Any ideas ?

user@USER ~
$ git clone  -v git://192.168.8.5/butterfly025.git
Cloning into 'butterfly025'...
remote: Counting objects: 4846, done.
remote: Compressing objects: 100% (3256/3256), done.
fatal: read error: Invalid argument, 255.05 MiB | 1.35 MiB/s
fatal: early EOF
fatal: index-pack failed

I have added this config in .gitconfig but no help also.
Using the git version 1.8.5.2.msysgit.0

[core]
    compression = -1
10
  • 16
    I faced this issue for 2-3 day when i was trying to clone from VPN. in my case issue was network bandwidth. i fixed by cloning in high speed network. Feb 1, 2017 at 8:54
  • 3
    I got this error because my friends not know git so well and push a lot of images into the repository! =)) Nov 19, 2017 at 13:01
  • 7
    I also got the same error. I am using a fiber optic connection (40Mbps download speed). And no large files (like images/videos) in my repository too. Nevertheless still getting the same error. Mar 7, 2021 at 3:31
  • Seems like a memory issue my workaround was to clone via http instead which doesn't seems to suffer those issues. Example : git clone 192.168.8.5/butterfly025.git
    – Benpaper
    Jun 22, 2021 at 15:07
  • 1
    For what it's worth, I finally got it to work on Windows by using git clone from a Linux VM, in a shared folder. May 22, 2023 at 14:00

47 Answers 47

851

First, turn off compression:

git config --global core.compression 0

Next, let's do a partial clone to truncate the amount of info coming down:

git clone --depth 1 <repo_URI>

When that works, go into the new directory and retrieve the rest of the clone:

git fetch --unshallow 

or, alternately,

git fetch --depth=2147483647

Now, do a regular pull:

git pull --all

I think there is a glitch with msysgit in the 1.8.x versions that exacerbates these symptoms, so another option is to try with an earlier version of git (<= 1.8.3, I think).

28
  • 12
    Thank you, this worked great. I had tried changing the http.postbuffer which didn't work, but after doing as stated in this answer, it worked great. I didn't use the "git fetch --depth=2147483647" line, but I used the rest. Jun 24, 2014 at 13:55
  • 7
    @Jose A. -- I experienced this problem when I was on a newer version of msysgit. If you are on msysgit, try an older version (<=1.8.3). Otherwise, try git fetch --depth 1000 (then 2000, etc., increasing incrementally until all the files are pulled).
    – ingyhere
    Mar 19, 2015 at 15:25
  • 5
    Hi, dear friend. Thank you for your great solution. But the last git pull --all not works. Because of git clone --depth 1 will set fetching range only one branch. So we have to edit .git/config first.
    – pjincz
    Jul 9, 2016 at 16:11
  • 8
    Be aware that this is not a real solution as it will set fetching to only one branch and you might end up in this situation: stackoverflow.com/questions/20338500/…
    – wranvaud
    Oct 19, 2016 at 18:59
  • 4
    Adding to @pjincz comment, and for us the not so versed on git config files, the actual change required to get the git fetch --all to work is to change fetch = +refs/heads/master:refs/remotes/origin/master to fetch = +refs/heads/*:refs/remotes/origin/* ( master to * ), this line must be below the node [remote "origin"]. Close the file and repeat the git fetch --all command. Tested with git version 2.19.2.windows.1 Nov 27, 2018 at 14:35
224

This error may occur for memory needs of git. You can add these lines to your global git configuration file, which is .gitconfig in $USER_HOME, in order to fix that problem.

[core] 
packedGitLimit = 512m 
packedGitWindowSize = 512m 
[pack] 
deltaCacheSize = 2047m 
packSizeLimit = 2047m 
windowMemory = 2047m
10
  • This worked for me - although I still needed several attempts, but without this change abort came at 30%, afterwards at 75%... and once it went up to 100% and worked. :)
    – peschü
    Mar 15, 2017 at 6:33
  • 6
    Works for me. But set 8096m for all properties. Feb 8, 2020 at 9:02
  • 3
    This problem happened frequently for me on Windows 10 with Git 2.25.0. I found that if I did git pull from the remote machine repeatedly it would occasionally succeed. But what a nuisance. Then I discovered that if you run git daemon from within the built-in Windows Bash prompt it works 100% with no workaround needed.
    – Stefan
    Feb 15, 2020 at 15:30
  • 1
    @M-Pixel It should be added to client's .gitconfig.
    – bhdrkn
    Jun 7, 2020 at 20:03
  • 1
    My 64-bit Git v2.37.1 on Windows 11 doesn't let me set core.packedGitLimit, core.packedGitWindowSize, and pack.packSizeLimit to anything over 4095m, but using this value and 8096m for the pack.deltaCacheSize and pack.windowMemory options fixed the problem. Disabling compression and doing a shallow clone did not work. In my case, Git failed to clone a Pantheon.io repo.
    – CodeManX
    Feb 28, 2023 at 15:35
64

finally solved by git config --global core.compression 9

From a BitBucket issue thread:

I tried almost five times, and it still happen.

Then I tried to use better compression and it worked!

git config --global core.compression 9

From the Git Documentation:

core.compression
An integer -1..9, indicating a default compression level. -1 is the zlib default.
0 means no compression, and 1..9 are various speed/size tradeoffs, 9 being slowest.
If set, this provides a default to other compression variables, such as core.looseCompression and pack.compression.

4
  • 5
    Needed to run git repack in combination with this solution and then it worked.
    – erikH
    Oct 19, 2018 at 13:59
  • This works for me too, through VPN and corporate proxy. --compression 0 did not work nor did all the .gitconfig changes suggested above. Dec 9, 2019 at 22:33
  • Probably changing the config parms here (to reduce size of transferred data) would do the job, alternately.
    – ingyhere
    Aug 6, 2020 at 17:52
  • 2
    git config --global core.compression 9 repack worked.
    – hafiz031
    Feb 16, 2022 at 10:48
49

As @ingyhere said:

Shallow Clone

First, turn off compression:

git config --global core.compression 0

Next, let's do a partial clone to truncate the amount of info coming down:

git clone --depth 1 <repo_URI>

When that works, go into the new directory and retrieve the rest of the clone:

git fetch --unshallow

or, alternately,

git fetch --depth=2147483647

Now, do a pull:

git pull --all

Then to solve the problem of your local branch only tracking master

open your git config file (.git/config) in the editor of your choice

where it says:

[remote "origin"]
    url=<git repo url>
    fetch = +refs/heads/master:refs/remotes/origin/master

change the line

fetch = +refs/heads/master:refs/remotes/origin/master

to

fetch = +refs/heads/*:refs/remotes/origin/*

Do a git fetch and git will pull all your remote branches now

5
  • 3
    It works, but I left compression to 9 not 0 which failed. Apr 16, 2020 at 16:21
  • You could also do this: git branch -r | awk -F'origin/' '!/HEAD|master/{print $2 " " $1"origin/"$2}' | xargs -L 1 git branch -f --track followed by git fetch --all --prune --tags and git pull --all. It will set all remote tracking branches locally.
    – ingyhere
    Aug 6, 2020 at 17:48
  • Changing from fetch = +refs/heads/*:refs/remotes/origin/* to fetch = +refs/heads/devel:refs/remotes/origin/devel did it for me. Yes, I did the reverse and at our company we use "devel" for our main branch name Apr 28, 2022 at 13:28
  • Clone was passed, but the error appears at fetch. Error fixed by set compression to 9. Sep 30, 2022 at 10:37
  • for i in `seq 100 100 30000`; do git fetch --depth=$i; done did the trick for me (max seq value was chosen about the amount of available commits), since git fetch --unshallow still failed. Let it run until the output only shows: remote: Total 0 (delta 0), reused 0 (delta 0), pack-reused 0 again and again. Was the only way that worked for me on Banana Pi M2+ with armbian cloning neovim. Dec 16, 2022 at 7:41
28

I was getting the same error, on my side i resolved by running this command, In windows it has some memory issue.

git config --global pack.windowsMemory 256m
1
19

In my case this was quite helpful:

git clone --depth 1 --branch $BRANCH $URL

This will limit the checkout to mentioned branch only, hence will speed up the process.

Hope this will help.

0
19

I faced this problem with macOS Big Sur M1 Chip and none of the solutions worked for me.

Edit: Works as a solution for M2 Chip aswell.

I solved it by increasing ulimits below.

ulimit -f 2097152
ulimit -c 2097152
ulimit -n 2097152

Running the commands above, will be valid for only current terminal session, so first run this and then clone the repository.

1
  • I confirm, this solution works on my M3 chip also, thanks
    – jpmottin
    Feb 16 at 12:36
15

I tried all of that commands and none works for me, but what works was change the git_url to http instead ssh

if is clone command do :

git clone <your_http_or_https_repo_url> 

else if you are pulling on existing repo, do it with

git remote set-url origin <your_http_or_https_repo_url>

hope this help someone!

4
  • 1
    This question is really about the error message in the output above when there's a problem syncing giant chunks of files from a connected repo. You're saying that cutting over to https from ssh allowed the clone to finish?
    – ingyhere
    Dec 11, 2014 at 1:48
  • 2
    Yes! That work for me, I have a 4gb+ repo and the only one solution I got that work was that!
    – elin3t
    Dec 11, 2014 at 3:17
  • 2
    I'd really like to know why this worked. Is there something in the SSH protocol that chokes on large objects that HTTPS does not? Is this a transport layer issue?
    – bdetweiler
    Dec 18, 2018 at 13:55
  • A long time I did above (switch to HTTPS); today I noticed that there was a middle-man-attack, and if I use VPN the SSH works just fine (without HTTPS need).
    – Top-Master
    Jul 27, 2022 at 18:49
10

I got this error when git ran out of memory.

Freeing up some memory (in this case: letting a compile job finish) and trying again worked for me.

1
  • For me, there wasn't much memory available, freeing some up and retrying solved it. Jan 15, 2015 at 18:23
8

In my case it was a connection problem. I was connected to an internal wifi network, in which I had limited access to ressources. That was letting git do the fetch but at a certain time it crashed. This means it can be a network-connection problem. Check if everything is running properly: Antivirus, Firewall, etc.

The answer of elin3t is therefore important because ssh improves the performance of the downloading so that network problems can be avoided

1
  • 1
    Switched to a different network, and then it finally worked.
    – YTG
    Jan 17, 2021 at 14:51
7

Setting below's config doesn't work for me.

[core] 
packedGitLimit = 512m 
packedGitWindowSize = 512m 
[pack] 
deltaCacheSize = 2047m 
packSizeLimit = 2047m 
windowMemory = 2047m

As previous comment, it might the memory issue from git. Thus, I try to reduce working threads(from 32 to 8). So that it won't get much data from server at the same time. Then I also add "-f " to force to sync other projects.

-f: Proceed with syncing other projects even if a project fails to sync.

Then it works fine now.

repo sync -f -j8
7

It's confusing because Git logs may suggest any connection or ssh authorization errors, eg: ssh_dispatch_run_fatal: Connection to x.x.x.x port yy: message authentication code incorrect, the remote end hung up unexpectedly, early EOF.

Server-side solution

Let's optimize git repository on the server side:

  1. Enter to my server's git bare repository.
  2. Call git gc.
  3. Call git repack -A

Eg:

ssh admin@my_server_url.com
sudo su git
cd /home/git/my_repo_name # where my server's bare repository exists.
git gc
git repack -A

Now I am able clone this repository without errors, e.g. on the client side:

git clone git@my_server_url.com:my_repo_name

The command git gc may be called at the git client side to avoid similar git push problem.


If you are an administrator of Gitlab service - trigger Housekeeping manually. It calls internally git gc or git repack.


Client-side solution

Other (hack, client-side only) solution is downloading last master without history:

git clone --single-branch --depth=1 git@my_server_url.com:my_repo_name

There is a chance that buffer overflow will not occur.

0
7

I am facing the issue too, this is my solution:

git fetch --refetch

From the git-fetch help:

Instead of negotiating with the server to avoid transferring commits and associated objects that are already present locally, this option fetches all objects as a fresh clone would

2
  • None other solution worked, except this. Saved my day. Thanks! Jan 19 at 16:26
  • Wow, have an upvote sir, nothing else worked! Feb 21 at 12:52
6

Note that Git 2.13.x/2.14 (Q3 2017) does raise the default core.packedGitLimit which influences git fetch:
The default packed-git limit value has been raised on larger platforms (from 8 GiB to 32 GiB) to save "git fetch" from a (recoverable) failure while "gc" is running in parallel.

See commit be4ca29 (20 Apr 2017) by David Turner (csusbdt).
Helped-by: Jeff King (peff).
(Merged by Junio C Hamano -- gitster -- in commit d97141b, 16 May 2017)

Increase core.packedGitLimit

When core.packedGitLimit is exceeded, git will close packs.
If there is a repack operation going on in parallel with a fetch, the fetch might open a pack, and then be forced to close it due to packedGitLimit being hit.
The repack could then delete the pack out from under the fetch, causing the fetch to fail.

Increase core.packedGitLimit's default value to prevent this.

On current 64-bit x86_64 machines, 48 bits of address space are available.
It appears that 64-bit ARM machines have no standard amount of address space (that is, it varies by manufacturer), and IA64 and POWER machines have the full 64 bits.
So 48 bits is the only limit that we can reasonably care about. We reserve a few bits of the 48-bit address space for the kernel's use (this is not strictly necessary, but it's better to be safe), and use up to the remaining 45.
No git repository will be anywhere near this large any time soon, so this should prevent the failure.

1
  • 1
    I tried most things in this thread and this is the thing that finally allowed me to clone my repos onto a new machine.
    – BinarySolo
    Feb 19 at 11:01
5

A previous answer recommends setting to 512m. I'd say there are reasons to think that's counterproductive on a 64bit architecture. The documentation for core.packedGitLimit says:

Default is 256 MiB on 32 bit platforms and 32 TiB (effectively unlimited) on 64 bit platforms. This should be reasonable for all users/operating systems, except on the largest projects. You probably do not need to adjust this value.

If you want to try it out check if you have it set and then remove the setting:

git config --show-origin core.packedGitLimit
git config --unset --global core.packedGitLimit

Edit: Having an Ouroboros moment here it should be mentioned that this in combination with solution from @amirreza-moeini-yegane solved this problem for me today.

git config --global core.compression 0
4

I had the same problem, I even tried to download the project directly from the website as a zip file but the download got interrupted at the exact same percent.

This single line fixed my problem like a charm

git config --global core.compression 0

I know other answers have mentioned this but, no one here mentioned that this line alone can fix the problem.

Hope it helps.

0
4

Network quality matters, try to switch to a different network. What helped me was changing my Internet connection from Virgin Media high speed land-based broadband to a hotspot on my phone.

Before that I tried the accepted answer to limit clone size, tried switching between 64 and 32 bit versions, tried disabling the git file cache, none of them helped.

Then I switched to the connection via my mobile, and the first step (git clone --depth 1 <repo_URI>) succeeded. Switched back to my broadband, but the next step (git fetch --unshallow) also failed. So I deleted the code cloned so far, switched to the mobile network tried again the default way (git clone <repo_URI>) and it succeeded without any issues.

0
4

Tried almost all the answers here but no luck.. Finally got it worked by using the Github desktop app, https://desktop.github.com/

Macbook with M1 chip/Monterey not sure if it mattered.

1
  • on windows as well, Github desktop worked
    – HariHaran
    Jan 5 at 5:07
3

In my case nothing worked when the protocol was https, then I switched to ssh, and ensured, I pulled the repo from last commit and not entire history, and also specific branch. This helped me:

git clone --depth 1 "ssh:.git" --branch “specific_branch”

3

I have the same problem. Following the first step above i was able to clone, but I cannot do anything else. Can't fetch, pull or checkout old branches.

Each command runs much slower than usual, then dies after compressing the objects.

I:\dev [master +0 ~6 -0]> git fetch --unshallow
remote: Counting objects: 645483, done.
remote: Compressing objects: 100% (136865/136865), done.

error: RPC failed; result=18, HTTP code = 20082 MiB | 6.26 MiB/s

fatal: early EOF

fatal: The remote end hung up unexpectedly

fatal: index-pack failed

This also happens when your ref's are using too much memory. Pruning the memory fixed this for me. Just add a limit to what you fetching like so ->

git fetch --depth=100

This will fetch the files but with the last 100 edits in their histories. After this, you can do any command just fine and at normal speed.

2
  • what do u mean TED? Aug 29, 2016 at 14:04
  • 2
    this "answer" should have been a comment on @ingyhere 's answer.
    – mc0e
    Mar 14, 2017 at 7:59
3

None of the solutions above worked for me.

The solution that finally worked for me was switching SSH client. GIT_SSH environment variable was set to the OpenSSH provided by Windows Server 2019. Version 7.7.2.1

C:\Windows\System32\OpenSSH\ssh.exe

I simply installed putty, 0.72

choco install putty

And changed GIT_SSH to

C:\ProgramData\chocolatey\lib\putty.portable\tools\PLINK.EXE

3

In my case the problem was none of the git configuration parameters but the fact that my repository had one file exceeding the maximum file size allowed on my system. I was able to check it trying to download a large file and getting an "File Size Limit Exceeded" on Debian.

After that I edited my /etc/security/limits.conf file adding et the end of it the following lines:

  • hard fsize 1000000
  • soft fsize 1000000

To actually "apply" the new limit values you need to re-login

1
  • This works? Can you let me know what exactly this change do? Jul 29, 2020 at 7:36
3

I have tried for several times after I set git buffer, as I mentioned in the question, it seems work now.

So if you met this error, run this command:

git config --global http.postBuffer 2M

and then try again for some times.

Reference:

git push error: RPC failed; result=56, HTTP code = 0

2
  • Why would this affect a git clone using the git: protocol?
    – kfsone
    Feb 18, 2022 at 6:29
  • I don't know But using this command makes it possible to clone large projects Feb 18, 2022 at 9:32
3

For me it worked when I changed the compression to git config --global core.compression 9

This works

2

Tried most of the answers here, I got the error with the PUTTY SSH Client with all possible constellations.

Once I switched to OpenSSH the error was gone (remove the Environment Variable GIT_SSH and restart the git bash).

I was using a new machine and newest git versions. On many other/older machines (AWS as well) it did work as expected with PUTTY as well without any git configuration.

2

Using @cmpickle answer, I built a script to simplify the clone process.

It is hosted here: https://gist.github.com/gianlucaparadise/10286e0b1c5409bd1049d67640fb7c03

You can run it using the following line:

curl -sL https://git.io/JvtZ5 | sh -s repo_uri repo_folder
2

Tangentially related and only useful in case you have no root access and manually extract Git from an RPM (with rpm2cpio) or other package (.deb, ..) into a subfolder. Typical use case: you try to use a newer version of Git over the outdated one on a corporate server.

If git clone fails with fatal: index-pack failed without early EOF mention but instead a help message about usage: git index-pack, there is a version mismatch and you need to run git with the --exec-path parameter:

git --exec-path=path/to/subfoldered/git/usr/bin/git clone <repo>

In order to have this happen automatically, specify in your ~/.bashrc:

export GIT_EXEC_PATH=path/to/subfoldered/git/usr/libexec
1

I tried pretty much all the suggestions made here but none worked. For us the issue was temperamental and became worse and worse the larger the repos became (on our Jenkins Windows build slave).

It ended up being the version of ssh being used by git. Git was configured to use some version of Open SSH, specified in the users .gitconfig file via the core.sshCommand variable. Removing that line fixed it. I believe this is because Windows now ships with a more reliable / compatible version of SSH which gets used by default.

1

My solution was to eventually use SSH instead of HTTP/HTTPS.

1
git config --global core.compression 9 repack
1
  • Although this code might answer the question, I recommend that you also provide an explanation what your code does and how it solves the problem of the question. Answers with an explanation are usually more helpful and of better quality, and are more likely to attract upvotes. Mar 2 at 11:49

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