Git LFS lets you store files up to 2 GB in size.
Git LFS handles large files by storing references to the file in the repository, but not the actual file itself. To work around Git's architecture, Git LFS creates a pointer file which acts as a reference to the actual file (which is stored somewhere else). GitHub Enterprise manages this pointer file in your repository. When you clone the repository down, GitHub Enterprise uses the pointer file as a map to go and find the large file for you.
As an analogy, say you walk into a restaurant wearing an enormous coat. You hand your coat over to the attendant, and it's exchanged for a ticket that identifies where the coat is stored. After you finish your meal, you hand your ticket to the attendant, who retrieves your coat from storage and returns it to you. Git LFS works the same way.
Pointer file format
Git LFS's pointer file looks like this:
version https://git-lfs.github.com/spec/v1
oid sha256:4cac19622fc3ada9c0fdeadb33f88f367b541f38b89102a3f1261ac81fd5bcb5
size 84977953
It tracks the version
of Git LFS you're using, followed by a unique identifier for the file (oid
). It also stores the size
of the final file.
Tip: Git LFS cannot be used with GitHub Pages sites.