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pydf - report colourised filesystem disk space usage

Author

       Radovan Garabík <garabik@kassiopeia.juls.savba.sk>

                                                                                                         PYDF(1)

Bugs

       POSIX mandates to have f_blocks and f_bfree to be the number in units of f_frsize. However, many programs
       are buggy, including df(1) from coreutils, and Linux kernel often lies and reports f_frsize  ==  f_bsize.
       Some  filesystem and some other operating systems don't, and then the size reported by pydf is incorrect.
       As a stopgap measure, there is a parameter statvfs_block in /etc/pydfrc where you can force  f_frsize  or
       f_bsize.

Description

pydf  is  a  python  script  that displays the amount of disk space available on the mounted filesystems,
       using different colours for different types of filesystems. Output format is completely customizable.

       If an optional
              file argument is given, pydf displays just information about filesystem  containing  the  file(s),
              otherwise it displays information about all mounted filesystems.

Files

/etc/pydfrc
              main configuration file

       ~/.pydfrc
              per-user configuration file

Name

       pydf - report colourised filesystem disk space usage

Options

--help Show summary of options.

       -v,--version
              Show version of program.

       -a,--all
              include filesystems having 0 blocks

       -h,--human-readable
              print sizes in human readable format (e.g., 133K 2341M 2448G)

       -H,--si
              likewise, but use powers of 1000 not 1024

       --block-size=SIZE
              use SIZE-byte blocks

       -k,--kilobytes
              like --block-size=1024

       -i,--inodes
              show information about inodes instead of blocks

       -l,--local
              limit listing to local filesystems

       -m,--megabytes
              like --block-size=1048576

       -g,--gigabytes
              like --block-size=1073741824

       --blocks
              use filesystem native block size

       --bw   do not use colours

       --mounts=FILE
              file  to  get mount information from.  On normal linux system, only /etc/mtab or /proc/mounts make
              sense.  Use /proc/mounts when /etc/mtab is corrupted or inaccessible (the output looks a bit weird
              in this case though)

       -B,--show-binds
              Show also mount --bind mounted filesystems.

See Also

df(1)

Synopsis

pydf[options][file]

See Also