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Yoran Heling
projects@yorhel.nl
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NCDU 1.X MANUAL


NAME

ncdu - NCurses Disk Usage


SYNOPSIS

ncdu [options] dir


DESCRIPTION

ncdu (NCurses Disk Usage) is a curses-based version of the well-known 'du', and
provides a fast way to see what directories are using your disk space.


OPTIONS


MODE SELECTION

-h, --help

Print a short help message and quit.

-v, -V, --version

Print ncdu version and quit.

-f FILE

Load the given file, which has earlier been created with the -o option. If FILE
is equivalent to -, the file is read from standard input.

For the sake of preventing a screw-up, the current version of ncdu will assume
that the directory information in the imported file does not represent the
filesystem on which the file is being imported. That is, the refresh, file
deletion and shell spawning options in the browser will be disabled.

dir

Scan the given directory.

-o FILE

Export all necessary information to FILE instead of opening the browser
interface. If FILE is -, the data is written to standard output. See the
examples section below for some handy use cases.

Be warned that the exported data may grow quite large when exporting a directory
with many files. 10.000 files will get you an export in the order of 600 to 700
KiB uncompressed, or a little over 100 KiB when compressed with gzip. This
scales linearly, so be prepared to handle a few tens of megabytes when dealing
with millions of files.

-e

Enable extended information mode. This will, in addition to the usual file
information, also read the ownership, permissions and last modification time for
each file. This will result in higher memory usage (by roughly ~30%) and in a
larger output file when exporting.

When using the file export/import function, this flag will need to be added both
when exporting (to make sure the information is added to the export), and when
importing (to read this extra information in memory). This flag has no effect
when importing a file that has been exported without the extended information.

This enables viewing and sorting by the latest child mtime, or modified time,
using 'm' and 'M', respectively.


INTERFACE OPTIONS

-0

Don't give any feedback while scanning a directory or importing a file, other
than when a fatal error occurs. Ncurses will not be initialized until the scan
is complete. When exporting the data with -o, ncurses will not be initialized at
all. This option is the default when exporting to standard output.

-1

Similar to -0, but does give feedback on the scanning progress with a single
line of output. This option is the default when exporting to a file.

In some cases, the ncurses browser interface which you'll see after the
scan/import is complete may look garbled when using this option. If you're not
exporting to a file, -2 is probably a better choice.

-2

Provide a full-screen ncurses interface while scanning a directory or importing
a file. This is the only interface that provides feedback on any non-fatal
errors while scanning.

-q

Quiet mode. While scanning or importing the directory, ncdu will update the
screen 10 times a second by default, this will be decreased to once every 2
seconds in quiet mode. Use this feature to save bandwidth over remote
connections. This option has no effect when -0 is used.

-r

Read-only mode. This will disable the built-in file deletion feature. This
option has no effect when -o is used, because there will not be a browser
interface in that case. It has no effect when -f is used, either, because the
deletion feature is disabled in that case anyway.

WARNING: This option will only prevent deletion through the file browser. It is
still possible to spawn a shell from ncdu and delete or modify files from there.
To disable that feature as well, pass the -r option twice (see -rr).

-rr

In addition to -r, this will also disable the shell spawning feature of the file
browser.

--si

List sizes using base 10 prefixes, that is, powers of 1000 (KB, MB, etc), as
defined in the International System of Units (SI), instead of the usual base 2
prefixes, that is, powers of 1024 (KiB, MiB, etc).

--confirm-quit

Requires a confirmation before quitting ncdu. Very helpful when you accidentally
press 'q' during or after a very long scan.

--color SCHEME

Select a color scheme. The following schemes are recognized: off to disable
colors, dark for a color scheme intended for dark backgrounds and dark-bg for a
variation of the dark color scheme that also works in terminals with a light
background.

The default is dark-bg unless the NO_COLOR environment variable is set.


SCAN OPTIONS

These options affect the scanning progress, and have no effect when importing
directory information from a file.

-x

Do not cross filesystem boundaries, i.e. only count files and directories on the
same filesystem as the directory being scanned.

--exclude PATTERN

Exclude files that match PATTERN. The files will still be displayed by default,
but are not counted towards the disk usage statistics. This argument can be
added multiple times to add more patterns.

-X FILE, --exclude-from FILE

Exclude files that match any pattern in FILE. Patterns should be separated by a
newline.

--exclude-caches

Exclude directories containing CACHEDIR.TAG. The directories will still be
displayed, but not their content, and they are not counted towards the disk
usage statistics. See http://www.brynosaurus.com/cachedir/

-L, --follow-symlinks

Follow symlinks and count the size of the file they point to. As of ncdu 1.14,
this option will not follow symlinks to directories and will count each
symlinked file as a unique file (i.e. unlike how hard links are handled). This
is subject to change in later versions.

--exclude-firmlinks

(MacOS only) Exclude firmlinks.

--exclude-kernfs

(Linux only) Exclude Linux pseudo filesystems, e.g. /proc (procfs), /sys
(sysfs).

The complete list of currently known pseudo filesystems is: binfmt, bpf, cgroup,
cgroup2, debug, devpts, proc, pstore, security, selinux, sys, trace.


KEYS

?

Show help + keys + about screen

up, down, j, k

Cycle through the items

right, enter, l

Open selected directory

left, <, h

Go to parent directory

n

Order by filename (press again for descending order)

s

Order by filesize (press again for descending order)

C

Order by number of items (press again for descending order)

a

Toggle between showing disk usage and showing apparent size.

M

Order by latest child mtime, or modified time. (press again for descending
order) Requires the -e flag.

d

Delete the selected file or directory. An error message will be shown when the
contents of the directory do not match or do not exist anymore on the
filesystem.

t

Toggle dirs before files when sorting.

g

Toggle between showing percentage, graph, both, or none. Percentage is relative
to the size of the current directory, graph is relative to the largest item in
the current directory.

c

Toggle display of child item counts.

m

Toggle display of latest child mtime, or modified time. Requires the -e flag.

e

Show/hide 'hidden' or 'excluded' files and directories. Please note that even
though you can't see the hidden files and directories, they are still there and
they are still included in the directory sizes. If you suspect that the totals
shown at the bottom of the screen are not correct, make sure you haven't enabled
this option.

i

Show information about the current selected item.

r

Refresh/recalculate the current directory.

b

Spawn shell in current directory.

Ncdu will determine your preferred shell from the NCDU_SHELL or SHELL variable
(in that order), or will call /bin/sh if neither are set. This allows you to
also configure another command to be run when he 'b' key is pressed. For
example, to spawn the vifm(1) file manager instead of a shell, run ncdu as
follows:

export NCDU_SHELL=vifm
ncdu

Ncdu will set the NCDU_LEVEL environment variable or increment it before
spawning the shell. This variable allows you to detect when your shell is
running from within ncdu, which can be useful to avoid nesting multiple
instances of ncdu. Ncdu itself does not (currently) warn when attempting to run
nested instances.

q

Quit


FILE FLAGS

Entries in the browser interface may be prefixed by a one-character flag. These
flags have the following meaning:

!

An error occurred while reading this directory.

.

An error occurred while reading a subdirectory, so the indicated size may not be
correct.

<

File or directory is excluded from the statistics by using exclude patterns.

>

Directory is on another filesystem.

^

Directory is excluded from the statistics due to being a Linux pseudo
filesystem.

**@**

This is neither a file nor a folder (symlink, socket, ...).

H

Same file was already counted (hard link).

e

Empty directory.


EXAMPLES

To scan and browse the directory you're currently in, all you need is a simple:

ncdu

If you want to scan a full filesystem, your root filesystem, for example, then
you'll want to use -x:

ncdu -x /

Since scanning a large directory may take a while, you can scan a directory and
export the results for later viewing:

ncdu -1xo- / | gzip >export.gz
# ...some time later:
zcat export.gz | ncdu -f-

To export from a cron job, make sure to replace -1 with -0 to suppress any
unnecessary output.

You can also export a directory and browse it once scanning is done:

ncdu -o- | tee export.file | ./ncdu -f-

The same is possible with gzip compression, but is a bit kludgey:

ncdu -o- | gzip | tee export.gz | gunzip | ./ncdu -f-

To scan a system remotely, but browse through the files locally:

ssh -C user@system ncdu -o- / | ./ncdu -f-

The -C option to ssh enables compression, which will be very useful over slow
links. Remote scanning and local viewing has two major advantages when compared
to running ncdu directly on the remote system: You can browse through the
scanned directory on the local system without any network latency, and ncdu does
not keep the entire directory structure in memory when exporting, so you won't
consume much memory on the remote system.


HARD LINKS

Every disk usage analysis utility has its own way of (not) counting hard links.
There does not seem to be any universally agreed method of handling hard links,
and it is even inconsistent among different versions of ncdu. This section
explains what each version of ncdu does.

ncdu 1.5 and below does not support any hard link detection at all: each link is
considered a separate inode and its size is counted for every link. This means
that the displayed directory sizes are incorrect when analyzing directories
which contain hard links.

ncdu 1.6 has basic hard link detection: When a link to a previously encountered
inode is detected, the link is considered to have a file size of zero bytes. Its
size is not counted again, and the link is indicated in the browser interface
with a 'H' mark. The displayed directory sizes are only correct when all links
to an inode reside within that directory. When this is not the case, the sizes
may or may not be correct, depending on which links were considered as
"duplicate" and which as "original". The indicated size of the topmost directory
(that is, the one specified on the command line upon starting ncdu) is always
correct.

ncdu 1.7 and later has improved hard link detection. Each file that has more
than two links has the "H" mark visible in the browser interface. Each hard link
is counted exactly once for every directory it appears in. The indicated size of
each directory is therefore, correctly, the sum of the sizes of all unique
inodes that can be found in that directory. Note, however, that this may not
always be same as the space that will be reclaimed after deleting the directory,
as some inodes may still be accessible from hard links outside it.


BUGS

Directory hard links are not supported. They will not be detected as being hard
links, and will thus be scanned and counted multiple times.

Some minor glitches may appear when displaying filenames that contain multibyte
or multicolumn characters.

All sizes are internally represented as a signed 64bit integer. If you have a
directory larger than 8 EiB minus one byte, ncdu will clip its size to 8 EiB
minus one byte. When deleting items in a directory with a clipped size, the
resulting sizes will be incorrect.

Item counts are stored in a signed 32-bit integer without overflow detection. If
you have a directory with more than 2 billion files, quite literally anything
can happen.

On macOS 10.15 and later, running ncdu on the root directory without
`--exclude-firmlinks` may cause directories to be scanned and counted multiple
times. Firmlink cycles are currently (1.16) not detected, so it may also cause
ncdu to get stuck in an infinite loop and eventually run out of memory.

Please report any other bugs you may find at the bug tracker, which can be found
on the web site at https://dev.yorhel.nl/ncdu


AUTHOR

Written by Yoran Heling <projects@yorhel.nl>.


SEE ALSO

du(1)

all lefts and rights reversed