xdiskusage(1) xdiskusage(1) 23 Dec 1998 NAME xdiskusage - Grapical display of disk usage SYNOPSIS xdiskusage [-a] [-d[isplay] host:n.n] [-g[eometry] WxH+X+Y] [-t[itle] windowtitle] [-n[ame] classname] [-i[conic]] [-fg color] [-bg color] [-bg2 color] [directory...] [file...] DESCRIPTION xdiskusage displays the output of "du" in an X window, allowing you to graphically compare the sizes that the files and directories take. This program was inspired by, and the user interface design copied from, the "xdu" program written by Phillip C. Dykstra <phil@arl.army.mil> USAGE Typing "xdiskusage dir" where "dir" is a directory causes "du" to be run on that directory and the result displayed. If the named file is a symbolic link it is dereferenced before being sent to du. The "-a" switch, if given, is passed to "du" to cause all files to be measured. Typing "xdiskusage file" where "file" is not a directory makes xdiskusage parse that file as though it was "du" output and display the result. You can type several file and directory names and get several display windows. If no files are named, you can pipe the output from another program to xdiskusage. If stdin is not a terminal xdiskusage will parse it as "du" output and display the result. Typing just "xdiskusage" brings up the disk browser described here: DISK BROWSER By default xdiskusage presents you with a list of all the disks mounted on your system (it found these by running "df"). Click one of these names and it will scan the entire disk (by running "du") and present a graphical display of how much space all the files are taking on that disk. You can click on several disks (or on the same disk multiple times, for instance if you have changed the files stored on it) and get multiple display windows. The "rescan" button reruns "df" to get a new list of disks. You need to do this if you mount or unmount a disk, or to see new usage percentages. - 1 - Formatted: November 14, 2024 xdiskusage(1) xdiskusage(1) 23 Dec 1998 The (C) button shows you the copyright and license. You can type a filename into the input field on the bottom and type Enter. If the name is a directory, xdiskusage will attempt to run "du" on it and display the result. If the name is a file it is assummed to be "du" output and it is parsed and displayed. The "all files" button sends the -a switch to "du" causing it to list the space for every file on the disk. This can significantly increase the time it takes to scan. DISPLAY Each white box represents a directory. It's size is equal to the sum of all it's contents (all subdirectories and files). To the right of each box are stacked the boxes for the subdirectories (and files if the "all files" switch was given). If you selected a disk from the disk browser, some extra boxes are added to show information learned from df. "(free)" is the free space reported by df. "(permission denied)" is space that df said was used but du did not report (this may be due to other errors, but permission errors are the normal reason). "(inodes)" is the difference between the total size of the disk and the used + available space reported by du, this is overhead used by the file system. The left-most box is the "current directory". Clicking on any box makes it the current directory: putting it on the left edge and blowing it up to the height of the window and scaling all it's contents the same. Clicking on the current directory goes up to it's parent directory. To dismiss any window type Escape. MENU ITEMS There is a pop-up menu on the right-hand mouse button. Every item on the menu has a keyboard shortcut. The menu items are: In (right arrow) go to the first child of the current directory. Next (down arrow) go down to brother of current directory. Previous (up arrow) go up to the brother of current directory. Out (left arrow) go to parent of current directory. Root (slash) put the current directory back to the outermost one Sort/Largest (s) sort largest size at the top - 2 - Formatted: November 14, 2024 xdiskusage(1) xdiskusage(1) 23 Dec 1998 Sort/Smallest (r) sort smallest size at the top Sort/Alphabetical (a) sort in alphabetical order Sort/Reverse Alphabetical (z) sort in backwards alphabetical order Sort/Unsorted (u) sort in the order read from du. Columns/2-11 (2-9,0,1) arrange display to have N columns. Copy to Clipboard (c) the pathname of the current directory is put in the X clipboard (you can then paste it into a shell command). Print (p) The current display is printed. The output is Encapsulated PostScript. It will either run it through lpr (or any command you choose) or send it to a file. BUGS Gets confused by "df" output on some platforms, requiring platform- specific code. COPYRIGHT Copyright (C) 2000 Bill Spitzak This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the License, or (at your option) any later version. This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU General Public License for more details. You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License along with this library; if not, write to the Free Software Foundation, Inc., 59 Temple Place, Suite 330, Boston, MA 02111-1307 USA. AUTHORS Written by Bill Spitzak spitzak@d2.com - 3 - Formatted: November 14, 2024