Graham Hay <grahamrhay@xxxxxxxxx> writes: > We have a fairly large repo (~2.4GB), mainly due to binary resources > (for an ios app). I know this can generally be a problem, but I have a > specific question. > > If I cut a branch, and edit a few (non-binary) files, and push, what > should be uploaded? I assumed it was just the diff (I know whole > compressed files are used, I mean the differences between my branch > and where I cut it from). Is that correct? If you start from this state: (the 'origin') (you) ---Z---A clone -> ---Z---A and edit a few files, say, a/b, a/c and d/e/f, and committed to make the history look like this: (the 'origin') (you) ---Z---A ---Z---A---B i.e. "git diff --name-only A B" would show these three files, then the next push from you to the origin, i.e. (the 'origin') (you) ---Z---A---B <- push ---Z---A---B would involve transferring from you to the origin of the following: * The commit object that holds the message, authorship, etc. for B * The top-level tree object of commit B (as that is different from that of A) * The tree object for 'a', 'd', 'd/e' and the blob object for 'a/b', 'a/c', and 'd/e/f'. However, that assumes that nothing is happening on the 'origin' side. If the 'origin', for example, rewound its head to Z before you attempt to push your B, then you may end up sending objects that do not exist in Z that are reachable from B. Just like the above bullet points enumerated what is different between A and B, you can enumerate what is different between Z and A and add that to the above set. That would be what will be sent. If the 'origin' updated its tip to a commit you do not even know about, normally you will be prevented from pushing B because we would not want you to lose somebody else's work. If you forced such push, then you may end up sending a lot more. -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe git" in the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html