Hello,
Sorry for my ignorance. I did not think it out. I figured using another internal tool would be cool. I enjoy this list and learn a lot on here, like today. Thanks for all the hard work. @tech is cool too. I don't know much C but it's neat to look at the patches. I remember git has lfs too. I have never used git like that though. Any of you folks used the git lfs? I can't donate like before. Lot's of medical stuff going on right now.
73
Reese KN4NTU
On Sat, Jun 28, 2025 at 11:38:37AM +0200, Stefan Sperling wrote:
> On Fri, Jun 27, 2025 at 10:41:05PM -0400, Reese Johnson wrote:
> > Backup into got. :)
>
> I realize you might be joking, but to anyone taking this seriously, don't do this!
> The most well-known caveat is that this is not a suitable solution for large files.
> But in any case you will eventually hit the limits where it stops working.
>
> I ran an experiment once where I comitted all my archived email and newly arriving
> messages into a (private) git repository every 5 minutes, just to see what would happen.
> (Email was simply the most convenient source of plenty of text data available to me.)
> This repo ended up being about 600GB in size at which point I stopped the experiment.
> 8 GB of the objects were already packed, but with thousands of loose objects created via
> regular commits it became impossible to repack the repository due to memory constraints.
> On box with 16GB of RAM I ended up with 592GB of loose objects which could not be compressed,
> neither by git gc nor by gotadmin cleanup.
>
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