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[[!comment format=mdwn
username="joey"
subject="""comment 1"""
date="2017-01-31T16:55:27Z"
content="""
git repositories don't contain parity files for their data. Instead, git
relies on multiple copies of the repository to keep things safe. Not as
efficient as parity files, but a lot easier, and protects against many more
disasters than do parity files. git-annex takes the same approach.
Lots Of Copies Keeps Stuff Safe.
Even if git-annex started generating parity files for its objects,
the git repository would still not have them, so bit flips could still
corrupt your git-annex repository.
Nothing stops you from writing git hooks that maintain parity files
alongside all the files in a git repository. If you do that, you'll get
parity files for the git-annex files too. But I don't see this being needed
in git-annex itself and AFAICS there are plenty of hooks in git and
git-annex to allow doing that.
"""]]
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