Mail Archives: djgpp/2000/07/11/06:16:22
From: | "Rafael García" <rafael AT geninfor DOT com>
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Newsgroups: | comp.os.msdos.djgpp
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Subject: | Filetree disk size
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Date: | Tue, 11 Jul 2000 12:01:22 +0200
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Organization: | Telefonica Transmision de Datos
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Lines: | 33
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Message-ID: | <8keric$jff$1@diana.bcn.ttd.net>
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To: | djgpp AT delorie DOT com
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DJ-Gateway: | from newsgroup comp.os.msdos.djgpp
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Reply-To: | djgpp AT delorie DOT com
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Does anybody know a portable program to recursively show sizes of
subdirectories?
Something like this:
945 \dir
345 \dir\uno
200 \dir\uno\a
100 \dir\uno\b
45 \dir\uno\c
600 \dir\otro
400 \dir\otro\a
200 \dir\otro\b
I think this is so useful that it would be a basic listing of any OS. I am
sure it exist in Unix but I have not under Windows/DOS. Yes, I can see total
size of ONE folder in "properties" dialog, but I need a global view to show
heavy stuff easily.
I wrote it in C years ago, including slack percentage, but it does not work
with LFN nor all file systems. I am not sure what is the problem, perhaps
FAT32 and Novell cannot give me correct sizes for clusters with ffblk
structures.
Do you know how to get that listing?
Thank you
I'm not sure what NG to send this question, but you are so effective...
:-)
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