pydf(1)
report colourised filesystem disk space usage
SYNOPSIS
pydf
[options]
[file]
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.
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.
BUGS
When running with python3, mountpoints with out-of-locale non ASCII
names will not be displayed (due to inability of os.statvfs to use bytes
instead of strings).
FILES
- /etc/pydfrc
-
main configuration file
- ~/.pydfrc
-
per-user configuration file