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I have a git repository I store random things in. Mostly random scripts, text files, websites I've designed and so on.

There are some large binary files I have deleted over time (generally 1-5MB), which are sitting around increasing the size of the repository, which I don't need in the revision history.

Basically I want to be able to do..

me@host:~$ [magic command or script]
aad29819a908cc1c05c3b1102862746ba29bafc0 : example/blah.psd : 3.8MB : 130 days old
6e73ca29c379b71b4ff8c6b6a5df9c7f0f1f5627 : another/big.file : 1.12MB : 214 days old

..then be able to go though each result, checking if it's no longer required then removing it (probably using filter-branch)

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4 Answers

up vote 27 down vote accepted

This is an adaptation of the git-find-blob script I posted previously:

#!/usr/bin/perl
use 5.008;
use strict;
use Memoize;

sub usage { die "usage: git-large-blob <size[b|k|m]> [<git-log arguments ...>]\n" }

@ARGV or usage();
my ( $max_size, $unit ) = ( shift =~ /^(\d+)([bkm]?)\z/ ) ? ( $1, $2 ) : usage();

my $exp = 10 * ( $unit eq 'b' ? 0 : $unit eq 'k' ? 1 : 2 );
my $cutoff = $max_size * 2**$exp; 

sub walk_tree {
    my ( $tree, @path ) = @_;
    my @subtree;
    my @r;

    {
        open my $ls_tree, '-|', git => 'ls-tree' => -l => $tree
            or die "Couldn't open pipe to git-ls-tree: $!\n";

        while ( <$ls_tree> ) {
            my ( $type, $sha1, $size, $name ) = /\A[0-7]{6} (\S+) (\S+) +(\S+)\t(.*)/;
            if ( $type eq 'tree' ) {
                push @subtree, [ $sha1, $name ];
            }
            elsif ( $type eq 'blob' and $size >= $cutoff ) {
                push @r, [ $size, @path, $name ];
            }
        }
    }

    push @r, walk_tree( $_->[0], @path, $_->[1] )
        for @subtree;

    return @r;
}

memoize 'walk_tree';

open my $log, '-|', git => log => @ARGV, '--pretty=format:%T %h %cr'
    or die "Couldn't open pipe to git-log: $!\n";

my %seen;
while ( <$log> ) {
    chomp;
    my ( $tree, $commit, $age ) = split " ", $_, 3;
    my $is_header_printed;
    for ( walk_tree( $tree ) ) {
        my ( $size, @path ) = @$_;
        my $path = join '/', @path;
        next if $seen{ $path }++;
        print "$commit $age\n" if not $is_header_printed++;
        print "\t$size\t$path\n";
    }
}
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I'm having difficulties understanding this code. Any examples of how to use your nice command? – neoneye May 30 '09 at 19:59
3  
aha. no arguments. it just took some time for it to output anything to the screen. git-large-blob 500k – neoneye May 30 '09 at 21:27
love it! thnx a ton! – alex Jul 21 '10 at 20:29
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Aristote's script will show you what you want. You also need to know that deleted files will still take up space in the repo.

By default, Git keeps changes around for 30 days before they can be garbage-collected. If you want to remove them now:

$ git reflog expire --expire=1.minute refs/heads/master
     # all deletions up to 1 minute  ago available to be garbage-collected
$ git fsck --unreachable 
     # lists all the blobs(file contents) that will be garbage-collected 
$ git prune 
$ git gc

A side comment: While I'm big fan of Git, Git doesn't bring any advantages to storing your collection of "random scripts, text files, websites" and binary files. Git tracks changes in content, particularly the history of coordinated changes among many text files, and does so very efficiently and effectively. As your question illustrates, Git doesn't have good tools for tracking individual file changes. And it doesn't track changes in binaries, so any revision stores another full copy in the repo.

Of course this use of Git is a perfectly good way to get familiar with how it works.

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There's no advantage to using git like this, but it handles it fine, and using a different VCS just because it handles binary files (or random bunches of files) better would be inconvenient (convenience being the only reason I keep the directory in git!) – dbr Nov 19 '08 at 10:28
Git stores «another full copy» of any file, there is no difference is it a text file or a binary one! Though it can not show you changes in binary file. – tig Dec 1 '11 at 9:36
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More compact ruby script:

#!/usr/bin/env ruby -w
head, treshold = ARGV
head ||= 'HEAD'
Megabyte = 1000 ** 2
treshold = (treshold || 0.1).to_f * Megabyte

big_files = {}

IO.popen("git rev-list #{head}", 'r') do |rev_list|
  rev_list.each_line do |commit|
    commit.chomp!
    for object in `git ls-tree -zrl #{commit}`.split("\0")
      bits, type, sha, size, path = object.split(/\s+/, 5)
      size = size.to_i
      big_files[sha] = [path, size, commit] if size >= treshold
    end
  end
end

big_files.each do |sha, (path, size, commit)|
  where = `git show -s #{commit} --format='%h: %cr'`.chomp
  puts "%4.1fM\t%s\t(%s)" % [size.to_f / Megabyte, path, where]
end

Usage:

$ ruby big_file.rb master 0.3
3.8M  example/blah.psd  (aad2981: 4 months ago)
1.1M  another/big.file  (6e73ca2: 2 weeks ago)
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Ouch... that first script (by Aristotle), is pretty slow. On the git.git repo, looking for files > 100k, it chews up the CPU for about 6 minutes.

It also appears to have several wrong SHAs printed -- often a SHA will be printed that has nothing to do with the filename mentioned in the next line.

Here's a faster version. The output format is different, but it is very fast, and it is also -- as far as I can tell -- correct.

The program is a bit longer but a lot of it is verbiage.

#!/usr/bin/perl
use 5.10.0;
use strict;
use warnings;

use File::Temp qw(tempdir);
END { chdir( $ENV{HOME} ); }
my $tempdir = tempdir( "git-files_tempdir.XXXXXXXXXX", TMPDIR => 1, CLEANUP => 1 );

my $min = shift;
$min =~ /^\d+$/ or die "need a number";

# ----------------------------------------------------------------------

my @refs =qw(HEAD);
@refs = @ARGV if @ARGV;

# first, find blob SHAs and names (no sizes here)
open( my $objects, "-|", "git", "rev-list", "--objects", @refs) or die "rev-list: $!";
open( my $blobfile, ">", "$tempdir/blobs" ) or die "blobs out: $!";

my ( $blob, $name );
my %name;
my %size;
while (<$objects>) {
    next unless / ./;    # no commits or top level trees
    ( $blob, $name ) = split;
    $name{$blob} = $name;
    say $blobfile $blob;
}
close($blobfile);

# next, use cat-file --batch-check on the blob SHAs to get sizes
open( my $sizes, "-|", "< $tempdir/blobs git cat-file --batch-check | grep blob" ) or die "cat-file: $!";

my ( $dummy, $size );
while (<$sizes>) {
    ( $blob, $dummy, $size ) = split;
    next if $size < $min;
    $size{ $name{$blob} } = $size if ( $size{ $name{$blob} } || 0 ) < $size;
}

my @names_by_size = sort { $size{$b} <=> $size{$a} } keys %size;

say "
The size shown is the largest that file has ever attained.  But note
that it may not be that big at the commit shown, which is merely the
most recent commit affecting that file.
";

# finally, for each name being printed, find when it was last updated on each
# branch that we're concerned about and print stuff out
for my $name (@names_by_size) {
    say "$size{$name}\t$name";

    for my $r (@refs) {
        system("git --no-pager log -1 --format='%x09%h%x09%x09%ar%x09$r' $r -- $name");
    }
    print "\n";
}
print "\n";
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