Version 13 (modified by 16 years ago) (diff) | ,
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git-bigfiles - Git for big files
git-bigfiles is our fork of Git. It has two goals:
- make life bearable for people using Git on projects hosting very large files (hundreds of megabytes)
- merge back as many changes as possible into upstream Git
Features
git-bigfiles already features the following fixes:
- config: add
core.bigFileThreshold
option to treat files larger than this value as big files - git-p4: fix poor string building performance when importing big files (git-p4 is now only marginally faster on Linux but 4 to 10 times faster on Win32)
- fast-import: avoid computing deltas on big files and deflate them on-the-fly (fast-import is now twice as fast and uses 3.7 times less memory with big files)
Results
Git fast-import
memory usage and running time when importing a repository with binary files up to 150 MiB:
Development
git-bigfiles development is centralised in a repo.or.cz
Git repository.
Clone the repository:
git clone git://repo.or.cz/git/git-bigfiles.git
If you already have a working copy of upstream git, you may save a lot of bandwidth by doing:
git clone git://repo.or.cz/git/git-bigfiles.git --reference /path/to/git/
The main Git repository is constantly merged into git-bigfiles. See the git-bigfiles repository on repo.or.cz.
To do
The following commands are real memory hogs with big files:
git diff-tree --stat --summary -M <sha1> HEAD
Attachments (3)
- git-bigfiles.png (57.8 KB) - added by 16 years ago.
- fast-import-memory.png (26.9 KB) - added by 16 years ago.
- pack-objects-memory.png (17.4 KB) - added by 16 years ago.
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