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To test Git's behavior with very large pack files, we need a way to generate such files quickly. A naive approach using only readily-available Git commands would take over 10 hours for a 4GB pack file, which is prohibitive. Side-stepping Git's machinery and actual zlib compression by writing uncompressed content with the appropriate zlib header makes things much faster. The fastest method using this approach generates many small, unreachable blob objects and takes about 1.5 minutes for 4GB. However, this cannot be used because we need to test git clone, which requires a reachable commit history. Generating many reachable commits with small, uncompressed blobs takes about 4 minutes for 4GB. But this approach 1) does not reproduce the issues we want to fix (which require individual objects larger than 4GB) and 2) is comparatively slow because of the many SHA-1 calculations. The approach taken here generates a single large blob (filled with NUL bytes), along with the trees and commits needed to make it reachable. This takes about 2.5 minutes for 4.5GB, which is the fastest option that produces a valid, clonable repository with an object large enough to trigger the bugs we want to test. Signed-off-by: Johannes Schindelin <johannes.schindelin@gmx.de> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>