f4fdb1d04018ba316d60b1a1015e9cf52a90885f
[sgt/agedu] / agedu.but
1 \cfg{man-identity}{agedu}{1}{2008-11-02}{Simon Tatham}{Simon Tatham}
2
3 \define{dash} \u2013{-}
4
5 \title Man page for \cw{agedu}
6
7 \U NAME
8
9 \cw{agedu} - correlate disk usage with last-access times to identify
10 large and disused data
11
12 \U SYNOPSIS
13
14 \c agedu [ options ] action [action...]
15 \e bbbbb iiiiiii iiiiii iiiiii
16
17 \U DESCRIPTION
18
19 \cw{agedu} scans a directory tree and produces reports about how
20 much disk space is used in each directory and subdirectory, and also
21 how that usage of disk space corresponds to files with last-access
22 times a long time ago.
23
24 In other words, \cw{agedu} is a tool you might use to help you free
25 up disk space. It lets you see which directories are taking up the
26 most space, as \cw{du} does; but unlike \cw{du}, it also
27 distinguishes between large collections of data which are still in
28 use and ones which have not been accessed in months or years \dash
29 for instance, large archives downloaded, unpacked, used once, and
30 never cleaned up. Where \cw{du} helps you find what's using your
31 disk space, \cw{agedu} helps you find what's \e{wasting} your disk
32 space.
33
34 \cw{agedu} has several operating modes. In one mode, it scans your
35 disk and builds an index file containing a data structure which
36 allows it to efficiently retrieve any information it might need.
37 Typically, you would use it in this mode first, and then run it in
38 one of a number of \q{query} modes to display a report of the disk
39 space usage of a particular directory and its subdirectories. Those
40 reports can be produced as plain text (much like \cw{du}) or as
41 HTML. \cw{agedu} can even run as a miniature web server, presenting
42 each directory's HTML report with hyperlinks to let you navigate
43 around the file system to similar reports for other directories.
44
45 So you would typically start using \cw{agedu} by telling it to do a
46 scan of a directory tree and build an index. This is done with a
47 command such as
48
49 \c $ agedu -s /home/fred
50 \e bbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbb
51
52 which will build a large data file called \c{agedu.dat} in your
53 current directory. (If that current directory is \e{inside}
54 \cw{/home/fred}, don't worry \dash \cw{agedu} is smart enough to
55 discount its own index file.)
56
57 Having built the index, you would now query it for reports of disk
58 space usage. If you have a graphical web browser, the simplest and
59 nicest way to query the index is by running \cw{agedu} in web server
60 mode:
61
62 \c $ agedu -w
63 \e bbbbbbbb
64
65 which will print (among other messages) a URL on its standard output
66 along the lines of
67
68 \c URL: http://127.164.152.163:48638/
69
70 (That URL will always begin with \cq{127.}, meaning that it's in the
71 \cw{localhost} address space. So only processes running on the same
72 computer can even try to connect to that web server, and also there
73 is access control to prevent other users from seeing it \dash see
74 below for more detail.)
75
76 Now paste that URL into your web browser, and you will be shown a
77 graphical representation of the disk usage in \cw{/home/fred} and
78 its immediate subdirectories, with varying colours used to show the
79 difference between disused and recently-accessed data. Click on any
80 subdirectory to descend into it and see a report for its
81 subdirectories in turn; click on parts of the pathname at the top of
82 any page to return to higher-level directories. When you've finished
83 browsing, you can just press Ctrl-D to send an end-of-file
84 indication to \cw{agedu}, and it will shut down.
85
86 After that, you probably want to delete the data file
87 \cw{agedu.dat}, since it's pretty large. In fact, the command
88 \cw{agedu -R} will do this for you; and you can chain \cw{agedu}
89 commands on the same command line, so that instead of the above you
90 could have done
91
92 \c $ agedu -s /home/fred -w -R
93 \e bbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbb
94
95 for a single self-contained run of \cw{agedu} which builds its
96 index, serves web pages from it, and cleans it up when finished.
97
98 If you don't have a graphical web browser, you can do text-based
99 queries as well. Having scanned \cw{/home/fred} as above, you might
100 run
101
102 \c $ agedu -t /home/fred
103 \e bbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbb
104
105 which again gives a summary of the disk usage in \cw{/home/fred} and
106 its immediate subdirectories; but this time \cw{agedu} will print it
107 on standard output, in much the same format as \cw{du}. If you then
108 want to find out how much \e{old} data is there, you can add the
109 \cw{-a} option to show only files last accessed a certain length of
110 time ago. For example, to show only files which haven't been looked
111 at in six months or more:
112
113 \c $ agedu -t /home/fred -a 6m
114 \e bbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbb
115
116 That's the essence of what \cw{agedu} does. It has other modes of
117 operation for more complex situations, and the usual array of
118 configurable options. The following sections contain a complete
119 reference for all its functionality.
120
121 \U OPERATING MODES
122
123 This section describes the operating modes supported by \cw{agedu}.
124 Each of these is in the form of a command-line option, sometimes
125 with an argument. Multiple operating-mode options may appear on the
126 command line, in which case \cw{agedu} will perform the specified
127 actions one after another. For instance, as shown in the previous
128 section, you might want to perform a disk scan and immediately
129 launch a web server giving reports from that scan.
130
131 \dt \cw{-s} \e{directory} or \cw{--scan} \e{directory}
132
133 \dd In this mode, \cw{agedu} scans the file system starting at the
134 specified directory, and indexes the results of the scan into a
135 large data file which other operating modes can query.
136
137 \lcont{
138
139 By default, the scan is restricted to a single file system (since
140 the expected use of \cw{agedu} is that you would probably use it
141 because a particular disk partition was running low on space). You
142 can remove that restriction using the \cw{--cross-fs} option; other
143 configuration options allow you to include or exclude files or
144 entire subdirectories from the scan. See the next section for full
145 details of the configurable options.
146
147 The index file is created with restrictive permissions, in case the
148 file system you are scanning contains confidential information in
149 its structure.
150
151 Index files are dependent on the characteristics of the CPU
152 architecture you created them on. You should not expect to be able
153 to move an index file between different types of computer and have
154 it continue to work. If you need to transfer the results of a disk
155 scan to a different kind of computer, see the \cw{-D} and \cw{-L}
156 options below.
157
158 }
159
160 \dt \cw{-w} or \cw{--web}
161
162 \dd In this mode, \cw{agedu} expects to find an index file already
163 written. It allocates a network port, and starts up a web server on
164 that port which serves reports generated from the index file. By
165 default it invents its own URL and prints it out.
166
167 \lcont{
168
169 The web server runs until \cw{agedu} receives an end-of-file event
170 on its standard input. (The expected usage is that you run it from
171 the command line, immediately browse web pages until you're
172 satisfied, and then press Ctrl-D.)
173
174 In case the index file contains any confidential information about
175 your file system, the web server protects the pages it serves from
176 access by other people. On Linux, this is done transparently by
177 means of using \cw{/proc/net/tcp} to check the owner of each
178 incoming connection; failing that, the web server will require a
179 password to view the reports, and \cw{agedu} will print the password
180 it invented on standard output along with the URL.
181
182 Configurable options for this mode let you specify your own address
183 and port number to listen on, and also specify your own choice of
184 authentication method (including turning authentication off
185 completely) and a username and password of your choice.
186
187 }
188
189 \dt \cw{-t} \e{directory} or \cw{--text} \e{directory}
190
191 \dd In this mode, \cw{agedu} generates a textual report on standard
192 output, listing the disk usage in the specified directory and all
193 its subdirectories down to a fixed depth. By default that depth is
194 1, so that you see a report for \e{directory} itself and all of its
195 immediate subdirectories. You can configure a different depth using
196 \cw{-d}, described in the next section.
197
198 \lcont{
199
200 Used on its own, \cw{-t} merely lists the \e{total} disk usage in
201 each subdirectory; \cw{agedu}'s additional ability to distinguish
202 unused from recently-used data is not activated. To activate it, use
203 the \cw{-a} option to specify a minimum age.
204
205 The directory structure stored in \cw{agedu}'s index file is treated
206 as a set of literal strings. This means that you cannot refer to
207 directories by synonyms. So if you ran \cw{agedu -s .}, then all the
208 path names you later pass to the \cw{-t} option must be either
209 \cq{.} or begin with \cq{./}. Similarly, symbolic links within the
210 directory you scanned will not be followed; you must refer to each
211 directory by its canonical, symlink-free pathname.
212
213 }
214
215 \dt \cw{-R} or \cw{--remove}
216
217 \dd In this mode, \cw{agedu} deletes its index file. Running just
218 \cw{agedu -R} on its own is therefore equivalent to typing \cw{rm
219 agedu.dat}. However, you can also put \cw{-R} on the end of a
220 command line to indicate that \cw{agedu} should delete its index
221 file after it finishes performing other operations.
222
223 \dt \cw{-D} or \cw{--dump}
224
225 \dd In this mode, \cw{agedu} reads an existing index file and
226 produces a dump of its contents on standard output. This dump can
227 later be loaded into a new index file, perhaps on another computer.
228
229 \dt \cw{-L} or \cw{--load}
230
231 \dd In this mode, \cw{agedu} expects to read a dump produced by the
232 \cw{-D} option from its standard input. It constructs an index file
233 from that dump, exactly as it would have if it had read the same
234 data from a disk scan in \cw{-s} mode.
235
236 \dt \cw{-S} \e{directory} or \cw{--scan-dump} \e{directory}
237
238 \dd In this mode, \cw{agedu} will scan a directory tree and convert
239 the results straight into a dump on standard output, without
240 generating an index file at all. So running \cw{agedu -S /path}
241 should produce equivalent output to that of \cw{agedu -s /path -D},
242 except that the latter will produce an index file as a side effect
243 whereas \cw{-S} will not.
244
245 \lcont{
246
247 (The output will not be exactly \e{identical}, due to a
248 difference in treatment of last-access times on directories.
249 However, it should be effectively equivalent for most purposes. See
250 the documentation of the \cw{--dir-atime} option in the next section
251 for further detail.)
252
253 }
254
255 \dt \cw{-H} \e{directory} or \cw{--html} \e{directory}
256
257 \dd In this mode, \cw{agedu} will generate an HTML report of the
258 disk usage in the specified directory and its immediate
259 subdirectories, in the same form that it serves from its web server
260 in \cw{-w} mode. However, this time, a single HTML report will be
261 generated and simply written to standard output, with no hyperlinks
262 pointing to other similar pages.
263
264 \U OPTIONS
265
266 This section describes the various configuration options that affect
267 \cw{agedu}'s operation in one mode or another.
268
269 The following option affects nearly all modes (except \cw{-S}):
270
271 \dt \cw{-f} \e{filename} or \cw{--file} \e{filename}
272
273 \dd Specifies the location of the index file which \cw{agedu}
274 creates, reads or removes depending on its operating mode. By
275 default, this is simply \cq{agedu.dat}, in whatever is the current
276 working directory when you run \cw{agedu}.
277
278 The following options affect the disk-scanning modes, \cw{-s} and
279 \cw{-S}:
280
281 \dt \cw{--cross-fs} and \cw{--no-cross-fs}
282
283 \dd These configure whether or not the disk scan is permitted to
284 cross between different file systems. The default is not to:
285 \cw{agedu} will normally skip over subdirectories on which a
286 different file system is mounted. This makes it convenient when you
287 want to free up space on a particular file system which is running
288 low. However, in other circumstances you might wish to see general
289 information about the use of space no matter which file system it's
290 on (for instance, if your real concern is your backup media running
291 out of space, and if your backups do not treat different file
292 systems specially); in that situation, use \cw{--cross-fs}.
293
294 \lcont{
295
296 (Note that this default is the opposite way round from the
297 corresponding option in \cw{du}.)
298
299 }
300
301 \dt \cw{--prune} \e{wildcard} and \cw{--prune-path} \e{wildcard}
302
303 \dd These cause particular files or directories to be omitted
304 entirely from the scan. If \cw{agedu}'s scan encounters a file or
305 directory whose name matches the wildcard provided to the
306 \cw{--prune} option, it will not include that file in its index, and
307 also if it's a directory it will skip over it and not scan its
308 contents.
309
310 \lcont{
311
312 Note that in most Unix shells, wildcards will probably need to be
313 escaped on the command line, to prevent the shell from expanding the
314 wildcard before \cw{agedu} sees it.
315
316 \cw{--prune-path} is similar to \cw{--prune}, except that the
317 wildcard is matched against the entire pathname instead of just the
318 filename at the end of it. So whereas \cw{--prune *a*b*} will match
319 any file whose actual name contains an \cw{a} somewhere before a
320 \cw{b}, \cw{--prune-path *a*b*} will also match a file whose name
321 contains \cw{b} and which is inside a directory containing an
322 \cw{a}, or any file inside a directory of that form, and so on.
323
324 }
325
326 \dt \cw{--exclude} \e{wildcard} and \cw{--exclude-path} \e{wildcard}
327
328 \dd These cause particular files or directories to be omitted from
329 the index, but not from the scan. If \cw{agedu}'s scan encounters a
330 file or directory whose name matches the wildcard provided to the
331 \cw{--exclude} option, it will not include that file in its index
332 \dash but unlike \cw{--prune}, if the file in question is a
333 directory it will still scan its contents and index them if they are
334 not ruled out themselves by \cw{--exclude} options.
335
336 \lcont{
337
338 As above, \cw{--exclude-path} is similar to \cw{--exclude}, except
339 that the wildcard is matched against the entire pathname.
340
341 }
342
343 \dt \cw{--include} \e{wildcard} and \cw{--include-path} \e{wildcard}
344
345 \dd These cause particular files or directories to be re-included in
346 the index and the scan, if they had previously been ruled out by one
347 of the above exclude or prune options. You can interleave include,
348 exclude and prune options as you wish on the command line, and if
349 more than one of them applies to a file then the last one takes
350 priority.
351
352 \lcont{
353
354 For example, if you wanted to see only the disk space taken up by
355 MP3 files, you might run
356
357 \c $ agedu -s . --exclude '*' --include '*.mp3'
358 \e bbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbb
359
360 which will cause everything to be omitted from the scan, but then
361 the MP3 files to be put back in. If you then wanted only a subset of
362 those MP3s, you could then exclude some of them again by adding,
363 say, \cq{--exclude-path './queen/*'} (or, more efficiently,
364 \cq{--prune ./queen}) on the end of that command.
365
366 As with the previous two options, \cw{--include-path} is similar to
367 \cw{--include} except that the wildcard is matched against the
368 entire pathname.
369
370 }
371
372 \dt \cw{--progress}, \cw{--no-progress} and \cw{--tty-progress}
373
374 \dd When \cw{agedu} is scanning a directory tree, it will typically
375 print a one-line progress report every second showing where it has
376 reached in the scan, so you can have some idea of how much longer it
377 will take. (Of course, it can't predict \e{exactly} how long it will
378 take, since it doesn't know which of the directories it hasn't
379 scanned yet will turn out to be huge.)
380
381 \lcont{
382
383 By default, those progress reports are displayed on \cw{agedu}'s
384 standard error channel, if that channel points to a terminal device.
385 If you need to manually enable or disable them, you can use the
386 above three options to do so: \cw{--progress} unconditionally
387 enables the progress reports, \cw{--no-progress} unconditionally
388 disables them, and \cw{--tty-progress} reverts to the default
389 behaviour which is conditional on standard error being a terminal.
390
391 }
392
393 \dt \cw{--dir-atime} and \cw{--no-dir-atime}
394
395 \dd In normal operation, \cw{agedu} ignores the atimes (last access
396 times) on the \e{directories} it scans: it only pays attention to
397 the atimes of the \e{files} inside those directories. This is
398 because directory atimes tend to be reset by a lot of system
399 administrative tasks, such as \cw{cron} jobs which scan the file
400 system for one reason or another \dash or even other invocations of
401 \cw{agedu} itself, though it tries to avoid modifying any atimes if
402 possible. So the literal atimes on directories are typically not
403 representative of how long ago the data in question was last
404 accessed with real intent to use that data in particular.
405
406 \lcont{
407
408 Instead, \cw{agedu} makes up a fake atime for every directory it
409 scans, which is equal to the newest atime of any file in or below
410 that directory (or the directory's last \e{modification} time,
411 whichever is newest). This is based on the assumption that all
412 \e{important} accesses to directories are actually accesses to the
413 files inside those directories, so that when any file is accessed
414 all the directories on the path leading to it should be considered
415 to have been accessed as well.
416
417 In unusual cases it is possible that a directory itself might embody
418 important data which is accessed by reading the directory. In that
419 situation, \cw{agedu}'s atime-faking policy will misreport the
420 directory as disused. In the unlikely event that such directories
421 form a significant part of your disk space usage, you might want to
422 turn off the faking. The \cw{--dir-atime} option does this: it
423 causes the disk scan to read the original atimes of the directories
424 it scans.
425
426 The faking of atimes on directories also requires a processing pass
427 over the index file after the main disk scan is complete.
428 \cw{--dir-atime} also turns this pass off. Hence, this option
429 affects the \cw{-L} option as well as \cw{-s} and \cw{-S}.
430
431 (The previous section mentioned that there might be subtle
432 differences between the output of \cw{agedu -s /path -D} and
433 \cw{agedu -S /path}. This is why. Doing a scan with \cw{-s} and then
434 dumping it with \cw{-D} will dump the fully faked atimes on the
435 directories, whereas doing a scan-to-dump with \cw{-S} will dump
436 only \e{partially} faked atimes \dash specifically, each directory's
437 last modification time \dash since the subsequent processing pass
438 will not have had a chance to take place. However, loading either of
439 the resulting dump files with \cw{-L} will perform the atime-faking
440 processing pass, leading to the same data in the index file in each
441 case. In normal usage it should be safe to ignore all of this
442 complexity.)
443
444 }
445
446 \dt \cw{--mtime}
447
448 \dd This option causes \cw{agedu} to index files by their last
449 modification time instead of their last access time. You might want
450 to use this if your last access times were completely useless for
451 some reason: for example, if you had recently searched every file on
452 your system, the system would have lost all the information about
453 what files you hadn't recently accessed before then. Using this
454 option is liable to be less effective at finding genuinely wasted
455 space than the normal mode (that is, it will be more likely to flag
456 things as disused when they're not, so you will have more candidates
457 to go through by hand looking for data you don't need), but may be
458 better than nothing if your last-access times are unhelpful.
459
460 The following options affect the web server mode \cw{-w}, and in one
461 case also the stand-along HTML generation mode \cw{-H}:
462
463 \dt \cw{-r} \e{age range} or \cw{--age-range} \e{age range}
464
465 \dd The HTML reports produced by \cw{agedu} use a range of colours
466 to indicate how long ago data was last accessed, running from red
467 (representing the most disused data) to green (representing the
468 newest). By default, the lengths of time represented by the two ends
469 of that spectrum are chosen by examining the data file to see what
470 range of ages appears in it. However, you might want to set your own
471 limits, and you can do this using \cw{-r}.
472
473 \lcont{
474
475 The argument to \cw{-r} consists of a single age, or two ages
476 separated by a minus sign. An age is a number, followed by one of
477 \cq{y} (years), \cq{m} (months), \cq{w} (weeks) or \cq{d} (days).
478 The first age in the range represents the oldest data, and will be
479 coloured red in the HTML; the second age represents the newest,
480 coloured green. If the second age is not specified, it will default
481 to zero (so that green means data which has been accessed \e{just
482 now}).
483
484 For example, \cw{-r 2y} will mark data in red if it has been unused
485 for two years or more, and green if it has been accessed just now.
486 \cw{-r 2y-3m} will similarly mark data red if it has been unused for
487 two years or more, but will mark it green if it has been accessed
488 three months ago or later.
489
490 }
491
492 \dt \cw{--address} \e{addr}[\cw{:}\e{port}]
493
494 \dd Specifies the network address and port number on which
495 \cw{agedu} should listen when running its web server. If you want
496 \cw{agedu} to listen for connections coming in from any source, you
497 should probably specify the special IP address \cw{0.0.0.0}. If the
498 port number is omitted, an arbitrary unused port will be chosen for
499 you and displayed.
500
501 \lcont{
502
503 If you specify this option, \cw{agedu} will not print its URL on
504 standard output (since you are expected to know what address you
505 told it to listen to).
506
507 }
508
509 \dt \cw{--auth} \e{auth-type}
510
511 \dd Specifies how \cw{agedu} should control access to the web pages
512 it serves. The options are as follows:
513
514 \lcont{
515
516 \dt \cw{magic}
517
518 \dd This option only works on Linux, and only when the incoming
519 connection is from the same machine that \cw{agedu} is running on.
520 On Linux, the special file \cw{/proc/net/tcp} contains a list of
521 network connections currently known to the operating system kernel,
522 including which user id created them. So \cw{agedu} will look up
523 each incoming connection in that file, and allow access if it comes
524 from the same user id under which \cw{agedu} itself is running.
525 Therefore, in \cw{agedu}'s normal web server mode, you can safely
526 run it on a multi-user machine and no other user will be able to
527 read data out of your index file.
528
529 \dt \cw{basic}
530
531 \dd In this mode, \cw{agedu} will use HTTP Basic authentication: the
532 user will have to provide a username and password via their browser.
533 \cw{agedu} will normally make up a username and password for the
534 purpose, but you can specify your own; see below.
535
536 \dt \cw{none}
537
538 \dd In this mode, the web server is unauthenticated: anyone
539 connecting to it has full access to the reports generated by
540 \cw{agedu}. Do not do this unless there is nothing confidential at
541 all in your index file, or unless you are certain that nobody but
542 you can run processes on your computer.
543
544 \dt \cw{default}
545
546 \dd This is the default mode if you do not specify one of the above.
547 In this mode, \cw{agedu} will attempt to use Linux magic
548 authentication, but if it detects at startup time that
549 \cw{/proc/net/tcp} is absent or non-functional then it will fall
550 back to using HTTP Basic authentication and invent a user name and
551 password.
552
553 }
554
555 \dt \cw{--auth-file} \e{filename} or \cw{--auth-fd} \e{fd}
556
557 \dd When \cw{agedu} is using HTTP Basic authentication, these
558 options allow you to specify your own user name and password. If you
559 specify \cw{--auth-file}, these will be read from the specified
560 file; if you specify \cw{--auth-fd} they will instead be read from a
561 given file descriptor which you should have arranged to pass to
562 \cw{agedu}. In either case, the authentication details should
563 consist of the username, followed by a colon, followed by the
564 password, followed \e{immediately} by end of file (no trailing
565 newline, or else it will be considered part of the password).
566
567 \U LIMITATIONS
568
569 The data file is pretty large. The core of \cw{agedu} is the
570 tree-based data structure it uses in its index in order to
571 efficiently perform the queries it needs; this data structure
572 requires \cw{O(N log N)} storage. This is larger than you might
573 expect; a scan of my own home directory, containing half a million
574 files and directories and about 20Gb of data, produced an index file
575 over 60Mb in size. Furthermore, since the data file must be
576 memory-mapped during most processing, it can never grow larger than
577 available address space, so a \em{really} big filesystem may need to
578 be indexed on a 64-bit computer. (This is one reason for the
579 existence of the \cw{-D} and \cw{-L} options: you can do the
580 scanning on the machine with access to the filesystem, and the
581 indexing on a machine big enough to handle it.)
582
583 The data structure also does not usefully permit access control
584 within the data file, so it would be difficult \dash even given the
585 willingness to do additional coding \dash to run a system-wide
586 \cw{agedu} scan on a \cw{cron} job and serve the right subset of
587 reports to each user.
588
589 \U LICENCE
590
591 \cw{agedu} is free software, distributed under the MIT licence. Type
592 \cw{agedu --licence} to see the full licence text.
593
594 \versionid $Id$