I'm going to archive an old huge project containing a lot of garbage. I hope I'll never need it again, but I want to put all important things under version control. Because of the chaos in the project, it's not easy to say what are the sources and what can go away (there's no makefile
, no make clean
, nothing). So I'd like to put there nearly everything and consider only the largest files for exclusion.
How can I list the files to be committed (or to be staged) together with their size?
I could write a script or whatever, but hope for a simpler solution. I'm working under Cygwin and the only gui available is git gui
which doesn't show the file sizes. Otherwise it'd be perfect for what I need.
You could try this. It finds all files larger than 1M and sorts them from largest to smallest. The file sizes printed are in bytes:
Output:
Updated: loop over the files returned by
find
and print theirgit
status:I don't know about Git, but if you're using Mercurial, you could use a combination of:
To a first approximation,
du -sk .
at the top of the directory tree will give you the space needed. After you dogit gc
, it might be an overestimate.But you should have been using version control long before you reached the point of retiring the project.