Subversion will handle your > 1GB files with good natured aplomb for the most part but if there are many large changes expect the generation of diffs to take a while...
Subversion Best practices has a section on large files:
A nice feature of Subversion is that by design, there is no limit to
the size of files it can handle. Files are sent "streamily" in both
directions between Subversion client and server, using a small,
constant amount of memory on each side of the network.
Of course, there are a number of practical issues to consider. While
there's no need to worry about files in the kilobyte-sized range (e.g.
typical source-code files), committing larger files can take a
tremendous amount of both time and space (e.g. files that are dozens
or hundreds of megabytes large.)
To begin with, remember that your Subversion working copy stores
pristine copies of all version-controlled files in the .svn/text-base/
area. This means that your working copy takes up at least twice as
much disk space as the original dataset. Beyond that, the Subversion
client follows a (currently unadjustable) algorithm for committing
files:
. Copies the file to .svn/tmp/ (can take a while, and temporarily uses
extra disk space))
. Performs a binary diff between the tmpfile and the
pristine copy, or between the tmpfile and an empty-file if newly
added. (can take a very long time to compute, even though only a small
amount of data might ultimately be sent over the network)
. Sends the
diff to the server, then moves the tmpfile into .svn/text-base/
So
while there's no theoretical limit to the size of your files, you'll
need to be aware that very large files may require quite a bit of
patient waiting while your client chugs away. You can rest assured,
however, that unlike CVS, your large files won't incapacitate the
server or affect other users.