Bitbucket git repo has a size limit of 2GB, and now I have one repo ( let's call it bigsize repo) that is already dangerously close to that limit, due to a lot of binary files ( files with extensions of dll
and msm
). It's so close to the limit that I'm scared anymore commit operation involving binary files will tip the size to over 2GB, and hence the commit will fail and unable to proceed.
Now, how to best go by to reduce the bigsize repo size?
I'm thinking about using the LFS feature, but then, there is a 1GB limit on the LFS space, which I afraid will not be sufficient for the usage of this repo ( as the majority of the repo size is coming from the binary files that I want to store in LFS).
So I'm thinking about just removing all the binary files ( I don't mind losing them from source control, as I have them on my local drive) from the repo and the history, how to best do this, considering the current size of my bigsize repo?
The attack plan that I have:
- Make sure that for all the branches on the bigsize repo ( yes, I've more than one branch on this gigantic repo), I've remove all of the binary files ( by submitting a commit that specifies
*.dll
in gitignore and usegit rm -rf -cached
command) . This is needed because "By default the BFG doesn't modify the contents of your latest commit on your master (or 'HEAD') branch, even though it will clean all the commits before it." - Then use BFG delete-files command to "rewrite the history" so that the repo size will be reduced.
Does the approach work for a repo that is very closed to 2GB? I afraid that at step 1, when I use git rm
, it will add to the history and push the repo size to over 2GB, and hence fail.
Important details:
- I'm the sole author of the repository
- Now I am multiple active branches. Throughout the history there are multiple branches that are merged into the main branch
- I don't use the repo for discussions or code reviews, and not even tags. I just use it as a single branch, with occasional branching and merging