A more efficient way, with reversed order to put the focus in the big ones. Show Sample Output
Using the double dash before the source and target makes the command work fine with weird filenames.
Everyone wants to take spaces out of filenames. Forget that. I want to put them back in. We've got tools and filesystems that support spaces, they look better, so I'm going to use them. Because of how find works I find I need to run this multiple times, if it's renaming subdirs. But it can be re-run without issues. I got this version of the command from a comment in this underscore-generating command. http://www.commandlinefu.com/commands/view/760/find-recursively-from-current-directory-down-files-and-directories-whose-names-contain-single-or-multiple-whitespaces-and-replace-each-such-occurrence-with-a-single-underscore. All I did was change the regex. Show Sample Output
A really useful pair of du options. Show Sample Output
Shows the size of folders and files, sorted from highest to lowest in human format (gb, mb,kb,etc...) Very useful to see the folders that are occupying more space. Show Sample Output
All folders, human-readable, no subfolder, with a total. Even shorter.
If you have a directory with lot of backups (full backups I mean), when it gets to some size, you could want to empty some space. With this command you'll remove half of the files. The command assumes that your backup files starts with YYYYMMDD or that they go some alphabetical order. Show Sample Output
all files in the directory get moved, in doing so the new name of the file is the original name with out spaces (using translate command)
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