Once you have multiple repositories, and have perhaps configured numcopies, any given file can have many more copies than is needed, or perhaps fewer than you would like. How to manage this? The whereis subcommand can be used to see how many copies of a file are known, but then you have to decide what to get or drop. In this example, there are perhaps not enough copies of the first file, and too many of the second file. $ cd /media/usbdrive $ git annex whereis whereis my_cool_big_file (1 copy) 0c443de8-e644-11df-acbf-f7cd7ca6210d -- laptop whereis other_file (3 copies) 0c443de8-e644-11df-acbf-f7cd7ca6210d -- laptop 62b39bbe-4149-11e0-af01-bb89245a1e61 -- usb drive [here] 7570b02e-15e9-11e0-adf0-9f3f94cb2eaa -- backup drive What would be handy is some automated versions of get and drop, that only gets a file if there are not yet enough copies of it, or only drops a file if there are too many copies. Well, these exist, just use the --auto option. $ git annex get --auto --numcopies=2 get my_cool_big_file (from laptop...) ok $ git annex drop --auto --numcopies=2 drop other_file ok With two quick commands, git-annex was able to decide for you how to work toward having two copies of your files. $ git annex whereis whereis my_cool_big_file (2 copies) 0c443de8-e644-11df-acbf-f7cd7ca6210d -- laptop 62b39bbe-4149-11e0-af01-bb89245a1e61 -- usb drive [here] whereis other_file (2 copies) 0c443de8-e644-11df-acbf-f7cd7ca6210d -- laptop 7570b02e-15e9-11e0-adf0-9f3f94cb2eaa -- backup drive The --auto option can also be used with the copy command, again this lets git-annex decide whether to actually copy content. The above shows how to use --auto to manage content based on the number of copies. It's also possible to configure, on a per-repository basis, which content is desired. Then --auto also takes that into account see [[preferred_content]] for details.