I'm not that well versed in using git, but have been using Xcode and a local repository on my machine.
All seemed well, until today when I was trying to free up some space on my HDD.
I noticed that in my repository's .git directory there were a couple of large files (6.3 and 1.4 GB).

I have no idea what these files are for, and a Google search has revealed little about them.
Because I have a Macbook Air, storage space is at a premium.
I would like to find a way to compress or remove these large files, but I don't want to corrupt git's version history.
The screenshot shows two small index files and two huge packs. So I believe you have commited a few huge files in Git.
To find top 10 largest blobs, you can use the following command:
git verify-pack -v .git/objects/pack/<pack>.idx | sort -k 3 -n | tail -10
It should produce: SHA-1 blob size ... Then you can look at this object using its SHA-1:
git show <SHA-1>
or you can learn its name:
git rev-list --objects --all | grep <SHA-1>
The Pro Git book has an excellent section on what to do when you've accidentally committed something huge into your repository:
http://git-scm.com/book/en/Git-Internals-Maintenance-and-Data-Recovery
Pack files are bundled history files that git uses.
If you want to clean up some space, do the following:
git branch to list branches, and git branch -d <old branch> to delete old branches (do this first)git gc will clean and compact the repogit prune will remove extra files (like the reflog, which keeps track of all commits, even deleted ones)git gc --prune=now will gc and prune in one commandAfter doing this, I'd be interested to see how much space you save. If your repo's history is really 7 GB, you'd probably be better off in moving it to an external HDD.
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