Every time I enter in my command window
git lfs install
the message I get is git: 'lfs' is not a git command. See 'git --help'.
I tried looking up for a solution, but none of the answers were clear. Can someone explain clear how to fix this?
It looks like you haven't downloaded git-lfs on your machine, so git lfs install
isn't a registered command by git.
Install git-lfs as outlined below:
git --version
, and update if required.Download git-lfs by following the steps based on your operating system.
Debian / Ubuntu
$ curl -s https://packagecloud.io/install/repositories/github/git-lfs/script.deb.sh | sudo bash
$ sudo apt-get install git-lfs
MacOS (Using Homebrew)
$ brew update
$ brew install git-lfs
Windows
Download and run the latest windows installer.
Finally, run git-lfs install
to install git-lfs
on your system.
You can always run git-lfs uninstall
to uninstall.
More detailed information (such as for installation on other platforms) can be found on git-lfs's installation page.
sudo apt-get install git-lfs
command was not there! Anyway, thank you so much for the answer!
Commented
Nov 2, 2021 at 8:34
curl
command, but not the sudo apt-get install git-lfs
command, which is quite important.
Commented
Jan 18, 2022 at 6:15
You can't directly use
git lfs install
Instead of that, you can use these commands to download and install (you have to download it before installing).
sudo apt-get install git-lfs
git-lfs install
Here is a solution for people installing git-lfs on a system without "sudo". Basically, it is to download the latest tarball (from here), uncompress it, add it to your environment PATH, and install it to git. It worked for me, at least.
wget https://github.com/git-lfs/git-lfs/releases/download/v3.2.0/git-lfs-linux-amd64-v3.2.0.tar.gz
tar -xzf git-lfs-linux-amd64-v3.2.0.tar.gz
PATH=$PATH:/export/fs04/a12/rhuang/git-lfs-3.2.0/
git lfs install
git lfs version
install.sh
(may need to modify the prefix
to a non-system path) -- github.com/git-lfs/git-lfs#from-binary
Commented
Sep 12, 2023 at 1:35
In addition to "arct" answer, if you have an M1 Silicone Mac, you must use the following to install it using homebrew
arch -arm64 brew install git-lfs
none of those pages specify how to install. They just say download and install. I'm running in circles here. Quite frustrating. Download and install, but no mention in getting started as to HOW to install.
"Download and install the Git command line extension. Once downloaded and installed, set up Git LFS for your user account by running: git lfs install"
Sure I can download, but nothing I'm attempting will install. Brew won't recognize the commands, nor will mac port. cd to the location of the folder. Attempt again. Nothing. Not even when running git-lfs from the download and reading those directions is there any clarity. "To get started with Git LFS, the following commands can be used..." They don't work. Can't enter commands in the git-lfs window, nor are they recognized in bash.
Thanks.
Had to go here to find an answer to that assumed process:
https://www.addictivetips.com/mac-os/run-shell-sh-script-on-macos/
How to run a Shell or .sh script on macOS
cd ~/Downloads/git-lfs-darwin-amd64-v2.13.2
chmod +x install.sh
sh install.sh
LFS is not part of Git, it needs to be installed separately. See the Git LFS site. Following the 'Getting Started' instructions for your platform should resolve the issue.
Note if you are on Apple Silicon (eg M1), and using homebrew installed in the default way, homebrew will be installed at /opt/homebrew
. (See https://docs.brew.sh/Installation).
This path (/opt/homebrew
) is not part of the default PATH
env variable. Looks like this causes issues in git recognizing lfs in subsequent git lfs ...
commands.
Fix is to include it in the path: export PATH=$PATH:/opt/homebrew/bin
. And then do the git lfs ...
operations.
I had this when building with Atlassian Bamboo and the resolution was to build first time without lfs checked (advanced options). After that you can go back and select lfs and it fetches fine from git without the lfs error.
use git bash cmd window, also make sure you've downloaded and installed git lfs
my answer is on the assumption that you are probably using Windows OS, so using the other given solutions may not work, so this is for if you are on windows
If you have committed a file larger than 100 MB and cannot push it due to Git's file size limitations, you will need to use Git LFS. If you are still facing errors after installing Git LFS and need to add it, you will have to remove the large file from your commit history.
This can be done by using the following command:
git lfs migrate import --include="*.csv, *.psd"
For more, you can check the github official doc
sudo apt-get install git-lfs
see: github.com/git-lfs/git-lfs/wiki/Installation