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  • Do I have to do something to tell Git whether some files are binary (like in Subversion)? Or, can Git handle binary data automatically?
  • If I change the binary file, so that I have 100 binary revisions, will git just store all 100 versions individually in the repository?
  • What are submodules for with git?

4 Answers 4

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  1. Git can usually detect binary files automatically.
  2. No, Git will attempt to store delta-based changesets if it's less expensive to (not always the case).
  3. Submodules are used if you want to reference other Git repositories within your project.
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    Shouldn't this answer include a recommendation to not use Git to store binaries? Git was explicitly designed for text storage, not binary. There are other tools which are better at archive management, i.e. NuGet, Maven, Artifactory, etc.
    – skitheo
    Mar 20, 2018 at 23:53
  • 2
    @skitheo I would've liked a more nuanced answer as well and particularly something about chance of things blowing up Jul 19, 2019 at 10:18
28

I had essentially the same problem: I wanted to git pickle files, which are binary, but git thinks they're text.

I found this chapter on Git Attributes in the Pro Git Book. So I resolved my issues by creating a .gitattributes file with this line:

*.pickle binary
5
git add my-binary-file
git commit
git push

Will add your binary file; it is automatic.

Indeed, if you have 100 versions of your file it will store it (but compressed).

You can use submodules to make references to other repositories.

0
-3

The issue is with .gitignore

The following paths are ignored by one of your .gitignore files: XXX/YYYY/Bin1_0x1d_0x0d.bin

Use -f if you really want to add them.

git add -f XXX/YYYY/*

OR

git add -f XXX/YYYY/Bin1_0x1d_0x0d.bin

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