in my project, i had by mistake added some big image files to my repo. i read up on GitHub
how to remove files from the history, and it did work: you cannot see the files in the history anymore. BUT then i made a tar.gz
from my project for backup, and it is now twice the size it used to have! i haven't added anything else that could justify this increase, so my suspicion is that the repo data that used to represent the image files was not really thrown out of the repo. can someone corroborate that? is there a fix?
edit to clarify i know pretty little about git so i took exactly the steps as indicated on the GitHub help pages, with the single exception that i had to use a force
switch from the second file onwards, as in git filter-branch -f --index-filter ...
.
to partially answer my own question, i think i could create a second git repo without the unwanted materials by
- creating an empty repo in a different location
- reproducing the file situation at different steps of my project, leaving out unwanted ones
- and finally use that new repo instead of the old to push materials to GitHub.
has that been done before? specifically, can i use that new git repo instead of the old one with the same project on GitHub?
btw, for what it's worth, this is about a presentation i am writing right now; there is an image of the tower of Babel in it that existed in several versions in high resolution, which explains the size of the problem (~100MB of unwanted data).
edit 2 thx a lot for suggestions; i did
rm -rf .git/refs/original/
git reflog expire expire=now --all
git reflog expire --all
git gc --aggressive --prune=now
with the effect that the *.tar.gz
size got smaller by a mere 0.5%...
edit 3 it is daunting to experience the sheer complexity that is git. i'm giving up at this point. i did a test with a small throw-away repo; i did an initial commit, added a big file, did a commit, removed the file and tried to erase its traces from memory with
rm very-big-file.xcf
git filter-branch --index-filter 'git rm --cached --ignore-unmatch very-big-file.xcf' --prune-empty -- --all
rm -rf .git/refs/original/
git reflog expire --all
git gc --aggressive --prune=now
these are the recorded *.tar.gz
sizes:
foo.tar.gz 7,518
foo2.tar.gz 65,735,003
foo3.tar.gz 32,777,155
the big file's compressed size is 32,955,246 bytes, which makes it entirely plausible that it is still fully present under .git
, maybe even in uncompressed form.
GIT Y U SO STUBBORN??
isn't there any git purge
extension to do this? i mean, git filter-branch --index-filter 'git rm --cached --ignore-unmatch very-big-file.xcf' --prune-empty -- --all
is not exactly what i could type from memory when i have a slight hangover.
git gc
? Did you remove it from the index withgit rm --cached
?git filter-branch
instructions and did it on all branches, right? Did you then do therm -rf .git/refs/original/
andgit reflog expire=now --all
andgit gc --prune=now
steps?reflog expire
above. Anwyay let me expand on your third update...