There are plenty of utilities (GUI, such as filelight and TUI, such as dua as well) for analyzing disk usage by space, but I would like to view my folders based on the count of files, as I’m making backups, and folders with lots of small files (e.g. node_modules) take very long to move around, so I guess that I’d be better of compressing those into a single file before archiving, as it’s already highly unlikely that I’ll need to access them anyway. Thanks for any pointers in advance!

  • isti115@lemmy.worldOP
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    8 months ago

    Thanks for your input! To me it seems like Nemo only counts the direct descendants and doesn’t recurse, which makes it less useful for this purpose, but still nice to know!

    • palordrolap@kbin.social
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      8 months ago

      The find command could be your friend for getting a full depth count. Something like:

      find /path/name/here/ | wc -l
      
      

      Or just:

      find . | wc -l
      
      

      for the current directory.

      There’s also a command called locate (often with another letter in front, but accessible by just that word) which maintains a database of filenames on a system that can be used, provided it’s installed and has built that database.

      Pro: Faster than churning the disk every time with find. (Though disk cache can help alleviate some of this).

      Cons: Can get out of date with a changing filesystem. Harder to search for relative paths like .

      locate -r '^/path/name/here/' | wc -l
      
      

      … would be roughly equivalent to the first find example.