From what I've read, the frequency of how often a binary file changes could also play a factor in LFS determination. Would you be willing to add a script to determine this? I suppose one method would be to take the number of days each binary has been in the repo and divide it by the number of changes it's had, but there could be better measures. If it could then be sorted in descending order, we'd see the 'busiest' binaries at the top.
From what I've read, the frequency of how often a binary file changes could also play a factor in LFS determination. Would you be willing to add a script to determine this? I suppose one method would be to take the number of days each binary has been in the repo and divide it by the number of changes it's had, but there could be better measures. If it could then be sorted in descending order, we'd see the 'busiest' binaries at the top.