I have a git repository with only one master branch. One of our contributor made a commit(A) and pushed a wrong large file to the master branch. The repository size has grown very high due to that wrong commit(A). After his commit, we worked on the same branch and did lot more useful commit. The actual content size should be 200 MB but due one wrong commit the whole repo size has become 2GB.
Now we are planning to completely remove the changes made by commit(A) from the repository. This i could do by creating a branch by keeping version just before the commit(A). But I do not want to lose the commits made after the commit(A), as those are the main commits for the project.
Is there any way I can completely remove a particular commit and the changes made by it. So that if someone clones the repository the size will be only 200MB.