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du(1) estimate file space usage
du(1P, 1p) estimate file space usage

DU(1) User Commands DU(1)

du - estimate file space usage

du [OPTION]... [FILE]...
du [OPTION]... --files0-from=F

Summarize device usage of the set of FILEs, recursively for directories.

Mandatory arguments to long options are mandatory for short options too.

-0, --null
end each output line with NUL, not newline
write counts for all files, not just directories
print apparent sizes rather than device usage; although the apparent size is usually smaller, it may be larger due to holes in ('sparse') files, internal fragmentation, indirect blocks, and the like
scale sizes by SIZE before printing them; e.g., '-BM' prints sizes in units of 1,048,576 bytes; see SIZE format below
equivalent to '--apparent-size --block-size=1'
produce a grand total
dereference only symlinks that are listed on the command line
print the total for a directory (or file, with --all) only if it is N or fewer levels below the command line argument; --max-depth=0 is the same as --summarize
summarize device usage of the NUL-terminated file names specified in file F; if F is -, then read names from standard input
equivalent to --dereference-args (-D)
print sizes in human readable format (e.g., 1K 234M 2G)
list inode usage information instead of block usage
like --block-size=1K
dereference all symbolic links
count sizes many times if hard linked
like --block-size=1M
don't follow any symbolic links (this is the default)
for directories do not include size of subdirectories
like -h, but use powers of 1000 not 1024
display only a total for each argument
exclude entries smaller than SIZE if positive, or entries greater than SIZE if negative
show time of the last modification of any file in the directory, or any of its subdirectories
show time as WORD instead of modification time: atime, access, use, ctime or status
show times using STYLE, which can be: full-iso, long-iso, iso, or +FORMAT; FORMAT is interpreted like in 'date'
exclude files that match any pattern in FILE
exclude files that match PATTERN
skip directories on different file systems
display this help and exit
output version information and exit

Display values are in units of the first available SIZE from --block-size, and the DU_BLOCK_SIZE, BLOCK_SIZE and BLOCKSIZE environment variables. Otherwise, units default to 1024 bytes (or 512 if POSIXLY_CORRECT is set).

The SIZE argument is an integer and optional unit (example: 10K is 10*1024). Units are K,M,G,T,P,E,Z,Y,R,Q (powers of 1024) or KB,MB,... (powers of 1000). Binary prefixes can be used, too: KiB=K, MiB=M, and so on.

PATTERN is a shell pattern (not a regular expression). The pattern ? matches any one character, whereas * matches any string (composed of zero, one or multiple characters). For example, *.o will match any files whose names end in .o. Therefore, the command

du --exclude='*.o'

will skip all files and subdirectories ending in .o (including the file .o itself).

Written by Torbjorn Granlund, David MacKenzie, Paul Eggert, and Jim Meyering.

GNU coreutils online help: <https://www.gnu.org/software/coreutils/>
Report any translation bugs to <https://translationproject.org/team/>

Copyright © 2023 Free Software Foundation, Inc. License GPLv3+: GNU GPL version 3 or later <https://gnu.org/licenses/gpl.html>.
This is free software: you are free to change and redistribute it. There is NO WARRANTY, to the extent permitted by law.

Full documentation <https://www.gnu.org/software/coreutils/du>
or available locally via: info '(coreutils) du invocation'

February 2024 GNU coreutils 9.4