\U NAME
-\cw{agedu} - correlate disk usage with last-access times to identify
-large and disused data
+\cw{agedu} \dash correlate disk usage with last-access times to
+identify large and disused data
\U SYNOPSIS
which will print (among other messages) a URL on its standard output
along the lines of
-\c URL: http://127.164.152.163:48638/
+\c URL: http://127.0.0.1:48638/
(That URL will always begin with \cq{127.}, meaning that it's in the
\cw{localhost} address space. So only processes running on the same
to go through by hand looking for data you don't need), but may be
better than nothing if your last-access times are unhelpful.
+The following option affects all the modes that generate reports:
+the web server mode \cw{-w}, the stand-alone HTML generation mode
+\cw{-H} and the text report mode \cw{-t}.
+
+\dt \cw{--files}
+
+\dd This option causes \cw{agedu}'s reports to list the individual
+files in each directory, instead of just giving a combined report
+for everything that's not in a subdirectory.
+
The following options affect the web server mode \cw{-w}, and in one
-case also the stand-along HTML generation mode \cw{-H}:
+case also the stand-alone HTML generation mode \cw{-H}:
\dt \cw{-r} \e{age range} or \cw{--age-range} \e{age range}
files and directories and about 20Gb of data, produced an index file
over 60Mb in size. Furthermore, since the data file must be
memory-mapped during most processing, it can never grow larger than
-available address space, so a \em{really} big filesystem may need to
+available address space, so a \e{really} big filesystem may need to
be indexed on a 64-bit computer. (This is one reason for the
existence of the \cw{-D} and \cw{-L} options: you can do the
scanning on the machine with access to the filesystem, and the