A utility for inspecting disk usage in directory trees.
dredge <directory to inspect>
k
and PgUp
go up, j
and PgDn
go down, l
descends one level down into the selected
directory, and h
goes one level up. q
quits.
d
deletes a file or directory; you will see a (y/N)
prompt each time you use this function.
The deletion is recursive, i.e. deletion of a directory will delete all its
contents. Symbolic links will be deleted without following.
The delete function will always delete something if you have the permissions
to do so, e.g. if a file or directory is write protected but owned by you, it will
be deleted just like any other file. Directories containing write protected files
will similarly be deleted with no special warning.
- Deletion of write-protected files, see above.
dredge
is pretty dumb. If it can't delete a file for any reason, it just won't. The file won't disappear fromdredge
's listing, but otherwise you won't see any special feedback indicating that there was a failure.- Continuing on the "
dredge
is dumb" theme,dredge
will generally ignore things it doesn't understand. It just won't show them to you, or you'll see a zero byte 'file' that can't be deleted. dredge
won't follow symbolic links. It just sees them as regular files, though it will show you the link targets.dredge
doesn't account for multiple hard links pointing to the same inode, i.e. it will count that disk usage twice.dredge
will happily cross filesystem boundaries without telling you.dredge
loads the target directory tree into memory on startup, and from that point onwards it never attempts to check the consistency of its model against the real thing. If you make changes outside ofdredge
and don't restart it, you won't see those changes (though deletion operations may fail if the files they target no longer exist).dredge
isfairlyvery wasteful in its use of memory. Memory's cheap, right?
dredge
is immature software written as a hobby project to learn Rust
by someone (me) for whom the description
"does not possess guru-level understanding of file systems" is a severe
understatement of the actual level of ignorance involved. Though I don't
think anyone will actually use it, I am releasing
it because I've personally found it useful. I make no guarantees about it being
bug-free, reasonably performant, correct in its presentation of data, or
anything else.
Note that ncdu
is a similar program with a much higher level of maturity,
more cool features, and a larger user base. You should probably just use ncdu
instead, for now.