On Wed, 9 Mar 2016 15:01:01 -0800 (PST) "Jerome O'Connor" <jer...@csiferroscan.co.nz> wrote:
[...] > so yeah, 4 separate operations, 9 different corrupted objects. Any > ideas what's happening here and how i can fix it? > I'm running Win7 Ultimate SP1. Drive F: is a 1TB windows software > RAID 1. Drives D: and G: are 1TB partitions on the same 2TB single > HDD. Using TortoiseGit 1.8.11 and > git 1.9.4.msysgit.1 > and the corruption happens regardless of whether i'm using the > tortoisegit gui, or the command line for git Before other things, can you verify it's not memory errors (check out memtest and memtest86+, run them both, for several hours) or disk errors (use smartmontools for Windows and do a "long" / "offline" test of your drives -- if you're not running an expensive RAID array which should have certain knobs to run SMART checks of its own). I mean, if your box does not have ECC RAM, occasional bit flips might lead to what you're observing. Trying a recent version of Git is also a good idea--it's now following the upstream releases pretty close. 160GB archive also appears to be a good candidate for processing with 64-bit software (though using 32-bit Git should not matter for the kind of problem you're facing). -- You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "Git for human beings" group. To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email to git-users+unsubscr...@googlegroups.com. For more options, visit https://groups.google.com/d/optout.