31 lines
1.5 KiB
Markdown
31 lines
1.5 KiB
Markdown
git-annex is designed for scalability. The key points are:
|
|
|
|
* Arbitrarily large files can be managed. The only constraint
|
|
on file size are how large a file your filesystem can hold.
|
|
|
|
While git-annex does checksum files by default, there
|
|
is a [[WORM_backend|backends]] available that avoids the checksumming
|
|
overhead, so you can add new, enormous files, very fast. This also
|
|
allows it to be used on systems with very slow disk IO.
|
|
|
|
* Memory usage should be constant. This is a "should", because there
|
|
can sometimes be leaks (and this is one of haskell's weak spots),
|
|
but git-annex is designed so that it does not need to hold all
|
|
the details about your repository in memory.
|
|
|
|
The one exception is that [[todo/git-annex_unused_eats_memory]],
|
|
because it *does* need to hold the whole repo state in memory. But
|
|
that is still considered a bug, and hoped to be solved one day.
|
|
Luckily, that command is not often used.
|
|
|
|
* Many files can be managed. The limiting factor is git's own
|
|
limitations in scaling to repositories with a lot of files, and as git
|
|
improves this will improve. Scaling to hundreds of thousands of files
|
|
is not a problem, scaling beyond that and git will start to get slow.
|
|
|
|
To some degree, git-annex works around innefficiencies in git; for
|
|
example it batches input sent to certian git commands that are slow
|
|
when run in an emormous repository.
|
|
|
|
* It can use as much, or as little bandwidth as is available. In
|
|
particular, any interrupted file transfer can be resumed by git-annex.
|