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The web-application is a custom-built CMS which has several sub-applications and each one of them has code and content residing in the same directory structure. Due to the application framework's architecture the code and content are intertwined (content depends upon the code for its display and other functionalities) and hence are inseparable. The contents are not stored as BLOB rather they are stored as files and the underlying DB is used to link them. Size of sub-applications ranges from 20GB - 250GB and more (this is the killer).

The web-application will go for some enhancements in code (new sub-applications, bug-fixes etc.) and at the same time users will add/update the contents through the already live system. Hence, a deployment/release process is required and most importantly a version control system needs to be suggested for both code and content.

Git comes to the picture because of reasons - it is open-source & free, ease of branching & merging, its not centralized & hence no single-point-of-failure.

BUT after some initial research in the web, I found out some disappointing facts which are applicable to our application - using Git for large systems like ours is painful (checkout, clone, merge, push, pull) and commands are complicated ("geeky" would be more appropriate) for a developer base which is DVCS ignorant and mostly Windows users.

There is no fixed mindset for Git but if I have to go for a centralized approach (in really WORST case) then what should be the way (CVS & SVN apart). I have read about Perforce being a stable one and is also used in Google (I expect some brashes here!!).

Please share, guide and comment your views. I really require them.

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  • 7
    Git was not designed for such large repositories (although work on making it behave better for large files and large repositories is ongoing)... but I think that you would have problems with performance of any version control systems which doesn't do operations per-file way (which has its own serious disadvantages), or doesn't support partial checkouts. Do you really need to version control those large files alongside code? Jun 16, 2009 at 7:19
  • I just read about a DVCS called monotone. May be an alternative for you.
    – Mike Caron
    Nov 19, 2009 at 16:50
  • I am dealing with a Huge repository currently. I'm researching submodules to see if that improves things at all.
    – Mike Caron
    Nov 19, 2009 at 16:50

7 Answers 7

27

I just happened to be reading this blog post not one minute ago. It's a bit of a rant about the scalability of git.

Edit: Eight years later, and Git has Large File Storage (LFS), and Microsoft is open sourcing Git Virtual File System (GVFS) so they can use git to develop Windows.

5
  • Nice post :) Hmm are those issues solveable or maybe it's git's design that's in fault?
    – the_drow
    Jun 16, 2009 at 7:10
  • Solvable? I don't know. Linus designed git to handle the linux source code tree, a job it does very well. But that's pretty much all text files. The repository, checkout and built objects all total less than 2GB on my computer.
    – pgs
    Jun 16, 2009 at 7:30
  • 4
    The referenced article is extremely outdated and not very relevant. Apr 11, 2013 at 1:18
  • 6
    Link answers are not good; links become dead, or move like this one already did. We ought to include at least a minor description with this answer.
    – ANeves
    May 16, 2014 at 15:55
  • The linked article is eight years old, and both Git and Perforce have evolved a lot. Apr 5, 2017 at 4:31
16

First, I don't agree that Git is inappropriate for non-technical users. Yes, there are certain features that newbies won't use (e.g. git-send-email). But there are also GUIs like TortoiseGit to make simple things simple.

However, I think you're approaching things the wrong way. Basically, you have content that will change frequently and needs to be editable very easily by Joe Bloggs, and code that will be modified less frequently by coders. The traditional solution is to use a real CMS (e.g. Alfresco, SugarCRM, Drupal, etc. or a Wiki (MediaWiki, MoinMon, etc.), with optional plug-ins. Keep in mind, wikis (and most CMSes) allow versioning of content, in a "user-friendly" way.

Even if you must keep your in-house code, I think you should still want to extricate the content so they can be treated separately. Once you have the code and content separate, your repository will be a more reasonable size. Then, you can use whatever VCS you want (though I'm not really sure you're right that Git is inherently bad for large repos).

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    Matthew, have you used TortoiseGit yourself? I haven't, but the impression I've got is that it is still very beta (if not alpha). And I have tried using MSYS Git on Windows and find it clunky and idiosyncratic. And without a useable GUI interface like TortoiseGit, is really is not suitable for non-techies or the faint of heart.
    – Evan
    Jun 16, 2009 at 7:07
  • Evan, I haven't had opportunity to use it yet either. However, it's based on the popular TortoiseSVN, and it's actively maintained. Thus, I definitely think it is usable. Jun 16, 2009 at 8:40
  • 3
    I experimented with TortoiseGit very briefly at my workplace as we were evaluating alternative source control systems. My non-technical test users were utterly confounded and confused by it, and within a few hours were actively hostile.
    – Crashworks
    Jun 20, 2009 at 3:30
  • 1
    @Evan I wasn't using TortoiseGit in 2009, but in 2014 the gui interface has become so good that I use it more frequently than using git in a terminal.
    – simonzack
    Sep 18, 2014 at 19:41
  • @simonzack That's awesome to hear and good to know. I must admit I much prefer Mercurial (and TortoiseHg is good too, for the record) but next time I need to get my Git-fu on, I'll absolutely take a look at it.
    – Evan
    Sep 19, 2014 at 6:45
10

git does not scale for large repositories. It's not the space, it's the number of files. Please read my blog article that I wrote a while back about this.

In my experience, if you want a scalable, fast, centralized source control system, P4 is the way to go.

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  • Perforce is so good at this specific issue. Pixar stores every frame of every film it does in Perforce. That's a LOT of data. This link is a bit of Perforce propaganda but you can't argue with the numbers it describes. It scales very well. perforce.com/blog/140924/…
    – Br.Bill
    Feb 9, 2017 at 0:26
8

Is SVN really such a bad option?

PROS:

  • Can handle large repositories e.g. many linux distro's use it, also Apache, Sourceforge
  • Has nice GUI front end with TortoiseSVN to keep your windows users happy
  • Can be used with windows integrated authentication to keep admins happy
  • Many different backup strategies can be adopted based on your requirements (svnadmin hotcopy or dump, svnsync, post-commit hooks) to help ease your single point of failure concern.

CONS:

  • Centralised VCS

Disclaimer: I've never used Perforce and have been a happy SVN admin and user for ~6 years (since v0.29)

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  • I think the file sizes we're talking about are going to cause issues with any system - 250GB of files in a single checkout, regardless of the VCS overhead, is going to be flat out painful over a network. Jun 16, 2009 at 17:19
  • I agree Sean, but if he wants a VCS solution why choose a system designed for source code rather than any type of file?
    – si618
    Jun 17, 2009 at 0:27
  • +1 Additional con: not so good with merges. SVN is still a really good tool, though, and not something that should just be thrown out arbitrarily as "not worth it."
    – jpmc26
    Aug 21, 2014 at 0:45
  • Agreed, although merges have gotten better since 1.6, and suck less in 1.8 ;-)
    – si618
    Aug 21, 2014 at 1:54
4

There's a utility script called git-split that chops up a git repo to make it more efficient.

2

Microsoft just released Git Virtual File System (GVFS) specifically to handle large code base with git. More details here at msdn

Also Microsoft hosts the Windows source in a monstrous 300GB Git repository

I do not have any experience using GVFS.

-3

I used git only once for a school project (php site with Zend Framework).

We used git but the teacher needed to have the final release on a svn repo.

Comparing the checkout size:

git checkout was half the size of MB of the svn checkout.

My two cents.

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  • 1
    Of course, and it always will be because SVN keeps a BASE copy inside your working copy (in the .svn folder). This means diffs, reverts, etc don't need a network. SVN was built to handle low bandwidth comms (think dialup).
    – si618
    Jun 16, 2009 at 5:53
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    git keeps diffs as well - it is distributed version control system so you don't need network to be able to work
    – stefanB
    Jun 16, 2009 at 6:27
  • 3
    Stefan is right. SVN will /not/ allow you do arbitrary diffs, only a diff against your most recent update. If you want to be able to work heavily offline, you need a real DCVS, which SVN is not. Jun 16, 2009 at 9:01
  • 1
    @stefanB No, git doesn't use diffs. It keeps a record of the entire full file for every different file you use. This is made more efficient by using gzip compression, but it's still every version of every file the repo has ever had, something drastically different than keeping diffs.
    – jpmc26
    Aug 21, 2014 at 0:48

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