60

Is it possible to get info about how much space is wasted by changes in every commit — so I can find commits which added big files or a lot of files. This is all to try to reduce git repo size (rebasing and maybe filtering commits)

3
  • 1
    Consider simply running git gc occasionally, possibly as git gc --aggressive
    – Hasturkun
    Commented Aug 17, 2009 at 7:33
  • git gc (and git gc --prune); --aggresive can even give worse results (but usually shouldn't), and is usually not worth it. Commented Aug 17, 2009 at 19:55
  • This answer is much better: stackoverflow.com/a/10847242/520567 Commented Jun 9, 2014 at 13:32

7 Answers 7

28

You could do this:

git ls-tree -r -t -l --full-name HEAD | sort -n -k 4

This will show the largest files at the bottom (fourth column is the file (blob) size.

If you need to look at different branches you'll want to change HEAD to those branch names. Or, put this in a loop over the branches, tags, or revs you are interested in.

0
18

Forgot to reply, my answer is:

git rev-list --all --pretty=format:'%H%n%an%n%s'    # get all commits
git diff-tree -r -c -M -C --no-commit-id #{sha}     # get new blobs for each commit
git cat-file --batch-check << blob ids              # get size of each blob
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  • 1
    @sschuberth: If I read your script correctly it only takes into account files that were added in a particular commit. It won't detect when a file grew substantially in a commit.
    – kynan
    Commented Apr 19, 2012 at 0:07
  • @kynan: You're right, as that's what the OP requested (and what I needed). But it's easy to change the script to detect modified files: Basically you just need to replace "A" by "M" in the grep call. That will report the total file size after the modification (not the number of bytes added / removed). I'd happily accept a pull request on GitHub to make the script more generic.
    – sschuberth
    Commented Apr 24, 2012 at 14:04
  • 7
    Broken link, the script is now located here
    – Luke
    Commented Dec 15, 2012 at 1:55
  • 1
    --diff-filter might be used instead of the unreliable grep but anyways, this answer is much better IMO: stackoverflow.com/a/10847242/520567 Commented Jun 9, 2014 at 13:33
11

All of the solutions provided here focus on file sizes but the original question asked was about commit sizes, which in my opinion, and in my case in point, was more important to find (because what I wanted is to get rid of many small binaries introduced in a single commit, which summed up accounted for a lot of size, but small size if measured individually by file).

A solution that focuses on commit sizes is the provided here, which is this perl script:

#!/usr/bin/perl
foreach my $rev (`git rev-list --all --pretty=oneline`) {
  my $tot = 0;
  ($sha = $rev) =~ s/\s.*$//;
  foreach my $blob (`git diff-tree -r -c -M -C --no-commit-id $sha`) {
    $blob = (split /\s/, $blob)[3];
    next if $blob == "0000000000000000000000000000000000000000"; # Deleted
    my $size = `echo $blob | git cat-file --batch-check`;
    $size = (split /\s/, $size)[2];
    $tot += int($size);
  }
  my $revn = substr($rev, 0, 40);
#  if ($tot > 1000000) {
    print "$tot $revn " . `git show --pretty="format:" --name-only $revn | wc -l`  ;
#  }
}

And which I call like this:

./git-commit-sizes.pl | sort -n -k 1
2

Personally, I found this answer to be most helpful when trying to find large files in the history of a git repo: Find files in git repo over x megabytes, that don't exist in HEAD

2
#!/bin/bash
COMMITSHA=$1

CURRENTSIZE=$(git ls-tree -lrt $COMMITSHA | grep blob | sed -E "s/.{53} *([0-9]*).*/\1/g" | paste -sd+ - | bc)
PREVSIZE=$(git ls-tree -lrt $COMMITSHA^ | grep blob | sed -E "s/.{53} *([0-9]*).*/\1/g" | paste -sd+ - | bc)
echo "$CURRENTSIZE - $PREVSIZE" | bc
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  • And also I suggest to use git format-patch to get commit size (there will be some additional size for mail header, but actually if you need to fast commit is not too huge - it's not so important to get exact size, +- 1K will be good accuracy) Commented Jun 19, 2014 at 16:09
2

git fat find N where N is in bytes will return all the files in the whole history which are larger than N bytes.

You can find out more about git-fat here: https://github.com/cyaninc/git-fat

2
  • Bummer. I tried it on Git Shell for Windows that comes with GitHub Desktop and the command didn't work, giving me an error.
    – DucRP
    Commented Jan 9, 2017 at 15:06
  • @DucRP I think you have to install git fat on you computer
    – mvoelcker
    Commented Jan 27, 2022 at 19:39
1

git cat-file -s <object> where <object> can refer to a commit, blob, tree, or tag.

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