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Mastering Git

You're reading from   Mastering Git Attain expert-level proficiency with Git by mastering distributed version control features

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Product type Paperback
Published in Aug 2024
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781835086070
Length 444 pages
Edition 2nd Edition
Tools
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Author (1):
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Jakub Narębski Jakub Narębski
Author Profile Icon Jakub Narębski
Jakub Narębski
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Table of Contents (21) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Part 1 - Exploring Project History and Managing Your Own Work FREE CHAPTER
2. Chapter 1: Git Basics in Practice 3. Chapter 2: Developing with Git 4. Chapter 3: Managing Your Worktrees 5. Chapter 4: Exploring Project History 6. Chapter 5: Searching Through the Repository 7. Part 2 - Working with Other Developers
8. Chapter 6: Collaborative Development with Git 9. Chapter 7: Publishing Your Changes 10. Chapter 8: Advanced Branching Techniques 11. Chapter 9: Merging Changes Together 12. Chapter 10: Keeping History Clean 13. Part 3 - Managing, Configuring, and Extending Git
14. Chapter 11: Managing Subprojects 15. Chapter 12: Managing Large Repositories 16. Chapter 13: Customizing and Extending Git 17. Chapter 14: Git Administration 18. Chapter 15: Git Best Practices 19. Index 20. Other Books You May Enjoy

Managing Large Repositories

Because of its distributed nature, Git includes the full change history in each copy of the repository. Every clone gets not only all the files but every revision of every file ever committed. This allows for efficient development (local operations not involving a network are usually fast enough so that they are not a bottleneck) and efficient collaboration with others (their distributed nature allows for many collaborative workflows).

But what happens when the repository you want to work on is huge? Can we avoid taking a large amount of disk space for version control storage? Is it possible to reduce the amount of data that end users need to retrieve while cloning the repository? Do we need to have all files present to be able to work on a project?

If you think about it, there are broadly three main reasons for repositories to become massive: they can accumulate a very long history (every revision direction), they can include huge binary assets that...

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