Git alias:
repacker = repack -a -d -f --depth=300 --window=300 --window-memory=1g
Example:
git repacker
This command takes a long time to run, perhaps even overnight.
It does the equivalent of "git gc --aggressive" but done properly, which is to do something like:
git repack -a -d --depth=250 --window=250
The depth setting is about how deep the delta chains can be; make them longer for old history - it's worth the space overhead.
The window setting is about how big an object window we want each delta candidate to scan.
And here, you might well want to add the "-f" flag (which is the "drop all old deltas", since you now are actually trying to make sure that this one actually finds good candidates.
And then it's going to take forever and a day (ie a "do it overnight" thing). But the end result is that everybody downstream from that repository will get much better packs, without having to spend any effort on it themselves.
http://metalinguist.wordpress.com/2007/12/06/the-woes-of-git-gc-aggressive-and-how-git-deltas-work/
We also add the --window-memory limit of 1 gig, which helps protect us from a window that has very large objects such as binary blobs.