And that’s all, I’m happy since I was out of space.
Personally I’m a huge fan of dust
I normally use
rm
for that. Orwipefs
if I’m feeling particularly spicy.Filelight is about finding the folders you don’t use that take a lot of space. Basically an easier way to look into which folder takes up what.
Wooosh 😉
My dad’s Linux setup couldn’t log in. After a bit of investigation, starting the session manually and so on, i got a hunch and indeed; i saw in Baobab that the backup script took the wrong disk, filled up the one with home, making it slow, so the log-in thingie timed out, failing the session.
I like Bleachbit but I’ll check this out
Excellent! I missed DaisyDisn. It looks great!
Personally I’m loving diskonaut. “Graphical” representation but at, ahem, terminal velocity.
Linky pls
https://github.com/imsnif/diskonaut
No package for my distro, I “installed” an AppImage with AM (which is also how I discovered it)
tyvm
Jesus, that rustup folder is HUGE
One of the things I dislike about Rust is the massive amount of disk space and time it takes to do a download, compile, test run.
2GB of dependencies and build files for a 200K binary is a bit much.
I use dua, but this looks neat too.
this looks exactly like gnome disk usage analyzer
Those are rookie numbers.
The following NEW packages will be installed: filelight gamin kded5 kio kwayland-data kwayland-integration libdbusmenu-qt5-2 libgamin0 libhfstospell11 libkf5auth-data libkf5authcore5 libkf5codecs-data libkf5codecs5 libkf5completion-data libkf5completion5 libkf5config-bin libkf5config-data libkf5configcore5 libkf5configgui5 libkf5configwidgets-data libkf5configwidgets5 libkf5coreaddons-data libkf5coreaddons5 libkf5crash5 libkf5dbusaddons-bin libkf5dbusaddons-data libkf5dbusaddons5 libkf5doctools5 libkf5globalaccel-bin libkf5globalaccel-data libkf5globalaccel5 libkf5globalaccelprivate5 libkf5guiaddons-bin libkf5guiaddons-data libkf5guiaddons5 libkf5i18n-data libkf5i18n5 libkf5iconthemes-bin libkf5iconthemes-data libkf5iconthemes5 libkf5idletime5 libkf5itemviews-data libkf5itemviews5 libkf5jobwidgets-data libkf5jobwidgets5 libkf5kiocore5 libkf5kiogui5 libkf5kiontlm5 libkf5kiowidgets5 libkf5notifications-data libkf5notifications5 libkf5service-bin libkf5service-data libkf5service5 libkf5solid5 libkf5solid5-data libkf5sonnet5-data libkf5sonnetcore5 libkf5sonnetui5 libkf5textwidgets-data libkf5textwidgets5 libkf5wallet-bin libkf5wallet-data libkf5wallet5 libkf5waylandclient5 libkf5widgetsaddons-data libkf5widgetsaddons5 libkf5windowsystem-data libkf5windowsystem5 libkf5xmlgui-bin libkf5xmlgui-data libkf5xmlgui5 libkwalletbackend5-5 libpolkit-qt5-1-1 libqt5texttospeech5 libqt5waylandclient5 libqt5waylandcompositor5 libvoikko1 qtspeech5-speechd-plugin qtwayland5 sonnet-plugins 0 upgraded, 81 newly installed, 0 to remove and 0 not upgraded.
A bit too much to just install one soft. Hard pass.
[moonpie@osiris ~]$ du -h $(which filelight) 316K /usr/bin/filelight
K = kilobytes.
[moonpie@osiris ~]$ pacman -Ql filelight | awk '{print $2}' | xargs du | awk '{print $1}' | paste -sd+ | bc 45347740
45347740 bytes is 43.247 megabytes. That is to say, the entire install of filelight is only 43 megabytes.
KDE packages have many dependencies, which cause the packages themselves to be extremely tiny. By sharing a ton of code via libraries, they save a lot of space.
It being KDE is even less reason to use it
flatpak install flathub org.kde.filelight
On gtk desktops it’s something like Baobab. Too sad that the big guys can’t make lightweight and standalone software.
My little widget to get the weather, Blazing Fast Uber Duper made in Rust, has like 85 total dependencies from like 3 crates that I need…
My own software is a hard pass for myself…
That’s great!
Another thing that is great, since we are talking about disk space: people, check your Rust repositiry, it might be huge.
I deleted that folder and, in my case, freed 12gb. Not too shabby.
It’s a KDE application, yes.
You could try baobab instead.
That’s very normal if you don’t have any KDE apps. If you were using KDE and installed a GNOME app it’d be similar.
Looks like the depends list of the average KDE app on a none KDE system.
Lol I had no idea it relied on so much. Its just built into KDE. Really great app overall.
Basically all KDE apps have the same dependency set. So install one and the next ones will only install the app most likely. On KDE itself you’d already have these.
No one showing love for ncdu around here?
Ncdu is my go-to tool. Can’t live without it on the servers I administer. However from this thread I’ve also learned about gdu, diskonaut and du-dust that I need to check out.
Goat
dust
Yes, it’s
du
in Rust + more.Isn’t that a wayland notification daemon already?
Edit: no, that’s dunst.
Btw, how do you do the background color thing?
Now someone needs to do a rewrite of dunst in rust called runst to make the confusion complete.
I was confused what you meant by background colour thing so I went to
dust
docs haha.Now I got you. It’s a codeblock so it shows in monospace font. Look up .md formatting for tips.
In this case its a word between backticks `
Came to recommend du-dust!
I have to remember to check this out. its on my reminders in my self host calendar but its been offline fpr quite some time after moving.
I use gdu personally
My
/
is a tmpfs.There is no state accumulating that I didn’t explicitly specify, exactly because I don’t want to deal with those kind of chores.
These tools are also useful for finding large files in your home directory. E.g. I’ve found a large amount of Linux ISOs I didn’t need anymore.
The always huge and killing my system space:
- pacman cache
- docker bullshit
- flatpaks
- journalctl files!