As uninit does not need to actually write out any data, just remove it, it should be possible to uninit in old stores. % git annex uninit git-annex: Repository version 2 is not supported. Upgrade this repository: git-annex upgrade If the repo happens to be broken, this essentially locks in data. > No, because you can always check out the version of git-annex you need > for that repository. > > uninit, as implemented, runs unannex on every file and then does some > cleanup. The cleanup does not need to write state, but the unannex does. > And it depends on the object directory layout, which has changed between > versions. So supporting old versions in this code would complicate it > quite a lot. I don't want to go there. --[[Joey]] >>Requiring a version upgrade for unannex is fine. Yet, I see a problem when a git repo is broken; you are stuck without being able to uninit. In this case an uninit that does nothing but undo the symlinking would be useful. -- Richard >>> As I said, version 2 of git-annex is still there for people who need >>> it for whatever reason. [[done]] --[[Joey]]