This is a fork of the original repository. Original codebase is upgraded to support Python 3 and added AWS S3 as a storage option. Integration tests for both RSYNC and AWS S3 are also Dockerized.
sudo curl -L https://raw.githubusercontent.com/reedus-io/git-fat/master/git-fat -o /usr/local/bin/git-fat
sudo chmod +x /usr/local/bin/git-fat
All test dependencies are packaged inside the supplied Dockerfile. To run the integration tests:
docker run --rm -it $(docker build -q .) bash test.sh
This executes git-fat against Minio (Mock S3) and a local RSYNC directory destination.
Checking large binary files into a source repository (Git or otherwise) is a bad idea because repository size quickly becomes unreasonable. Even if the instantaneous working tree stays manageable, preserving repository integrity requires all binary files in the entire project history, which given the typically poor compression of binary diffs, implies that the repository size will become impractically large. Some people recommend checking binaries into different repositories or even not versioning them at all, but these are not satisfying solutions for most workflows.
- clones of the source repository are small and fast because no binaries are transferred, yet fully functional with complete metadata and incremental retrieval (
git clone --depth
has limited granularity and couples metadata to content) git-fat
supports the same workflow for large binaries and traditionally versioned files, but internally manages the "fat" files separatelygit-bisect
works properly even when versions of the binary files change over time- selective control of which large files to pull into the local store
- local fat object stores can be shared between multiple clones, even by different users
- can easily support fat object stores distributed across multiple hosts
- depends only on stock Python and rsync
- git-annex is a far more comprehensive solution, but with less transparent workflow and with more dependencies.
- git-media adopts a similar approach to
git-fat
, but with a different synchronization philosophy and with many Ruby dependencies.
Place git-fat
in your PATH
.
Edit (or create) .gitattributes
to regard any desired extensions as fat files.
$ cd path-to-your-repository
$ cat >> .gitattributes
*.png filter=fat -crlf
*.jpg filter=fat -crlf
*.gz filter=fat -crlf
^D
Run git fat init
to activate the extension. Now add and commit as usual.
Matched files will be transparently stored externally, but will appear
complete in the working tree.
Set a remote store for the fat objects by editing .gitfat
.
[rsync]
remote = your.remote-host.org:/share/fat-store
To use an Amazon S3 bucket as the storage backend, you should first install the
AWS CLI and have it on your PATH. Your .gitfat
configuration would look like this:
[s3]
bucket = your-s3-bucket-name
prefix = owner/repo
This file should typically be committed to the repository so that others will automatically have their remote set. This remote address can use any protocol supported by rsync.
Most users will configure it to use remote ssh in a directory with shared
access. To do this, set the sshuser
and sshport
variables in .gitfat
configuration file. For example, to use rsync with ssh, with the default
port (22) and authenticate with the user "fat", your configuration would
look like this:
[rsync]
remote = your.remote-host.org:/share/fat-store
sshuser = fat
Before we start, let's turn on verbose reporting so we can see what's
happening. Without this environment variable, all the output lines
starting with git-fat
will not be shown.
$ export GIT_FAT_VERBOSE=1
First, we create a repository and configure it for use with git-fat
.
$ git init repo
Initialized empty Git repository in /tmp/repo/.git/
$ cd repo
$ git fat init
$ cat > .gitfat
[rsync]
remote = localhost:/tmp/fat-store
$ mkdir -p /tmp/fat-store # make sure the remote directory exists
$ echo '*.gz filter=fat -crlf' > .gitattributes
$ git add .gitfat .gitattributes
$ git commit -m'Initial repository'
[master (root-commit) eb7facb] Initial repository
2 files changed, 3 insertions(+)
create mode 100644 .gitattributes
create mode 100644 .gitfat
Now we add a binary file whose name matches the pattern we set in .gitattributes
.
$ curl https://nodeload.github.com/jedbrown/git-fat/tar.gz/master -o master.tar.gz
% Total % Received % Xferd Average Speed Time Time Time Current
Dload Upload Total Spent Left Speed
100 6449 100 6449 0 0 7741 0 --:--:-- --:--:-- --:--:-- 9786
$ git add master.tar.gz
git-fat filter-clean: caching to /tmp/repo/.git/fat/objects/b3489819f81603b4c04e8ed134b80bace0810324
$ git commit -m'Added master.tar.gz'
[master b85a96f] Added master.tar.gz
git-fat filter-clean: caching to /tmp/repo/.git/fat/objects/b3489819f81603b4c04e8ed134b80bace0810324
1 file changed, 1 insertion(+)
create mode 100644 master.tar.gz
The patch itself is very simple and does not include the binary.
$ git show --pretty=oneline HEAD
918063043a6156172c2ad66478c6edd5c7df0217 Add master.tar.gz
diff --git a/master.tar.gz b/master.tar.gz
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..12f7d52
--- /dev/null
+++ b/master.tar.gz
@@ -0,0 +1 @@
+#$# git-fat 1f218834a137f7b185b498924e7a030008aee2ae
Now let's push our fat files using the rsync configuration that we set up earlier.
$ git fat push
Pushing to localhost:/tmp/fat-store
building file list ...
1 file to consider
sent 61 bytes received 12 bytes 48.67 bytes/sec
total size is 6449 speedup is 88.34
We might normally set a remote now and push the git repository.
Now let's look at what happens when we clone.
$ cd ..
$ git clone repo repo2
Cloning into 'repo2'...
done.
$ cd repo2
$ git fat init # don't forget
$ ls -l # file is just a placeholder
total 4
-rw-r--r-- 1 jed users 53 Nov 25 22:42 master.tar.gz
$ cat master.tar.gz # holds the SHA1 of the file
#$# git-fat 1f218834a137f7b185b498924e7a030008aee2ae
We can always get a summary of what fat objects are missing in our local cache.
Orphan objects:
1f218834a137f7b185b498924e7a030008aee2ae
Now get any objects referenced by our current HEAD
. This command also
accepts the --all
option to pull full history, or a revision to pull
selected history.
$ git fat pull
receiving file list ...
1 file to consider
1f218834a137f7b185b498924e7a030008aee2ae
6449 100% 6.15MB/s 0:00:00 (xfer#1, to-check=0/1)
sent 30 bytes received 6558 bytes 4392.00 bytes/sec
total size is 6449 speedup is 0.98
Restoring 1f218834a137f7b185b498924e7a030008aee2ae -> master.tar.gz
git-fat filter-smudge: restoring from /tmp/repo2/.git/fat/objects/1f218834a137f7b185b498924e7a030008aee2ae
Everything is in place
$ git status
git-fat filter-clean: caching to /tmp/repo2/.git/fat/objects/1f218834a137f7b185b498924e7a030008aee2ae
# On branch master
nothing to commit, working directory clean
$ ls -l # recovered the full file
total 8
-rw-r--r-- 1 jed users 6449 Nov 25 17:10 master.tar.gz
- Set the "fat" file types in
.gitattributes
. - Use normal git commands to interact with the repository without thinking about what files are fat and non-fat. The fat files will be treated specially.
- Synchronize fat files with
git fat push
andgit fat pull
.
Sometimes large objects were added to a repository by accident or for
lack of a better place to put them. If you are willing to rewrite
history, forcing everyone to reclone, you can retroactively manage those
files with git fat
. Be sure that you understand the consequences of
git filter-branch
before attempting this. This feature is experimental
and irreversible, so be doubly careful with backups.
Run git fat find THRESH_BYTES > fat-files
and inspect fat-files
in
an editor. Lines will be sorted by the maximum object size that has been
at each path, and look like
something.big filter=fat -text # 8154677 1
where the first number after the #
is the number of bytes and the
second number is the number of modifications that path has seen. You
will normally filter out some of these paths using grep and/or an
editor. When satisfied, remove the ends of the lines (including the #
)
and append to .gitattributes
. It's best to git add .gitattributes
and commit
at this time (likely enrolling some extant files into git fat
).
Copy .gitattributes
to /tmp/fat-filter-files
and edit to remove
everything after the file name (e.g., sed s/ \+filter=fat.*$//
).
Currently, this may only contain exact paths relative to the root of the
repository. Finally, run
git filter-branch --index-filter \
'git fat index-filter /tmp/fat-filter-files --manage-gitattributes' \
--tag-name-filter cat -- --all
(You can remove the --manage-gitattributes
option if you don't want to
append all the files being enrolled in git fat
to .gitattributes
,
however, future users would need to use .git/info/attributes
to have
the git fat
fileters run.)
When this finishes, inspect to see if everything is in order and follow
the
Checklist for Shrinking a Repository
in the git filter-branch
man page, typically git clone file:///path/to/repo
. Be sure to git fat push
from the original
repository.
See the script test-retroactive.sh
for an example of cleaning.
The actual binary files are stored in .git/fat/objects
, leaving .git/objects
nice and small.
$ du -bs .git/objects
2212 .git/objects/
$ ls -l .git/fat/objects # This is where the file actually goes, but that's not important
total 8
-rw------- 1 jed users 6449 Nov 25 17:01 1f218834a137f7b185b498924e7a030008aee2ae
If you have multiple clones that access the same filesystem, you can make
.git/fat/objects
a symlink to a common location, in which case all content
will be available in all repositories without extra copies. You still need to
git fat push
to make it available to others.
- Allow pulling and pushing only select files
- Relate orphan objects to file system
- Put some more useful message in smudged (working tree) version of missing files.
- More friendly configuration for multiple fat remotes
- Make commands safer in presence of a dirty tree.
- Private setting of a different remote.
- Gracefully handle unmanaged files when the filter is called (either legacy files or files matching the pattern that should some reason not be treated as fat).