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This version of GitHub Enterprise Server was discontinued on 2024-09-25. No patch releases will be made, even for critical security issues. For better performance, improved security, and new features, upgrade to the latest version of GitHub Enterprise Server. For help with the upgrade, contact GitHub Enterprise support.

Collaboration with Git Large File Storage

With Git LFS enabled, you'll be able to fetch, modify, and push large files just as you would expect with any file that Git manages. However, a user that doesn't have Git LFS will experience a different workflow.

If collaborators on your repository don't have Git LFS installed, they won't have access to the original large file. If they attempt to clone your repository, they will only fetch the pointer files, and won't have access to any of the actual data.

Tip

To help users without Git LFS enabled, we recommend you set guidelines for repository contributors that describe how to work with large files. For example, you may ask contributors not to modify large files, or to upload changes to a file sharing service like Dropbox or Google Drive. For more information, see Setting guidelines for repository contributors.

Viewing large files in pull requests

GitHub Enterprise Server does not render some Git LFS objects in pull requests. Only the pointer file is shown, with contents similar to the following:

+version https://git-lfs.github.com/spec/vi
+id sha256:7194bdd797bde471a6e29b4fa9c8c2278b3c4dadfc5cb2c36d7f4531dc6cb8f
+size 17330

For more information about pointer files, see About Git Large File Storage.

To view changes made to large files, check out the pull request locally to review the diff. For more information, see Checking out pull requests locally.

Further reading