Sort disk usage from directories in the current directory Show Sample Output
A little bit smaller, faster and should handle files with special characters in the name.
simple find -> xargs sort of thing that I get a lot of use out of. Helps find huge files and gives an example of how to use xargs to deal with them. Tested on OSX snow leopard (10.6). Enjoy. Show Sample Output
tar directory and compress it with showing progress and Disk IO limits. Pipe Viewer can be used to view the progress of the task, Besides, he can limit the disk IO, especially useful for running Servers. Show Sample Output
This command will search all subfolders of the current directory and list the names of the folders which contain less than 2 MB of data. I use it to clean up my mp3 archive and to delete the found folders pipe the output to a textfile & run:
while read -r line; do rm -Rv "$line"; done < textfile
very handy if you copy or download a/some file(s) and want to know how big it is at the moment
Display the size (human reading) of all the directories in your home path (~). Show Sample Output
Often you need to find the files that are taking up the most disk space in order to free up space asap. This script can be run on the enitre filesystem as root or on a home directory to find the largest files. Show Sample Output
Greater than 500M and sorted by size.
This combines the above two command into one. Note that you can leave off the last two commands and simply run the command as "find /home/ -type f -exec du {} \; 2>/dev/null | sort -n | tail -n 10" The last two commands above just convert the output into human readable format.
du -m option to not go across mounts (you usually want to run that command to find what to destroy in that partition) -a option to also list . files -k to display in kilobytes sort -n to sort in numerical order, biggest files last tail -10 to only display biggest 10
Show the top 10 file size
If you're only using -m or -k, you will need to remember they are either in Megabyte or kilobyte forms. So by using -B, it gives you the unit of the size measurement, which helps you from reading the result faster. You can try with -B K as well. Show Sample Output
as per eightmillion's comment. Simply economical :)
This one line Perl script will display the smallest to the largest files sizes in all directories on a server. Show Sample Output
from my bashrc ;)
This command give a human readable result without messing up the sorting.
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