cross-posted from: https://discuss.tchncs.de/post/13814482

I just noticed that eza can now display total disk space used by directories!

I think this is pretty cool. I wanted it for a long time.

There are other ways to get the information of course. But having it integrated with all the other options for listing directories is fab. eza has features like --git-awareness, --tree display, clickable --hyperlink, filetype --icons and other display, permissions, dates, ownerships, and other stuff. being able to mash everything together in any arbitrary way which is useful is handy. And of course you can --sort=size

docs:

  --total-size               show the size of a directory as the size of all
                             files and directories inside (unix only)

It also (optionally) color codes the information. Values measures in kb, mb, and gb are clear. Here is a screenshot to show that:

eza --long -h --total-size --sort=oldest --no-permissions --no-user

Of course it take a little while to load large directories so you will not want to use by default.

Looks like it was first implemented Oct 2023 with some fixes since then. (Changelog). PR #533 - feat: added recursive directory parser with `–total-size` flag by Xemptuous

  • linuxPIPEpowerOP
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    8 months ago

    Thanks! I always appreciate another tool for this. I tried to run it but have dep issues.

    What is gwc? I can’t find a package by that name nor is it included that I can see.

    Websearch finds GeoWebCache, Gnome Wave Cleaner, GtkWaveCleaner, several IT companies… nothing that looks relevant.

    edit: also stumped looking for gsort. it seems to be associated with something called STATA which is statistical analysis software. Is that something you are involved with maybe running some special stuff on your system?

    PS you missed a newline at the end before closing the code block which is why the image was showing up as markdown instead of displaying properly.

    Change:

        }```
    

    to:

        }
        ```
    
    • some_guy@lemmy.sdf.org
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      8 months ago

      Aha with the new line! Thank you!

      I believe gwc and gsort are part of coreutils based on this:

      $ gwc --help
      Usage: gwc [OPTION]... [FILE]...
        or:  gwc [OPTION]... --files0-from=F
      Print newline, word, and byte counts for each FILE, and a total line if
      more than one FILE is specified.  A word is a nonempty sequence of non white
      space delimited by white space characters or by start or end of input.
      
      With no FILE, or when FILE is -, read standard input.
      
      The options below may be used to select which counts are printed, always in
      the following order: newline, word, character, byte, maximum line length.
        -c, --bytes            print the byte counts
        -m, --chars            print the character counts
        -l, --lines            print the newline counts
            --files0-from=F    read input from the files specified by
                                 NUL-terminated names in file F;
                                 If F is - then read names from standard input
        -L, --max-line-length  print the maximum display width
        -w, --words            print the word counts
            --total=WHEN       when to print a line with total counts;
                                 WHEN can be: auto, always, only, never
            --help        display this help and exit
            --version     output version information and exit
      
      GNU coreutils online help: <https://www.gnu.org/software/coreutils/>
      Full documentation <https://www.gnu.org/software/coreutils/wc>
      or available locally via: info '(coreutils) wc invocation'