UNBURDEN-HOME-DIR(1) | Unburden Your Home Directory | UNBURDEN-HOME-DIR(1) |
unburden-home-dir - unburdens home directories from caches and trashes
unburden-home-dir unburdens the home directory from files and directory which cause high I/O or disk usage but are neither important if they are lost, e.g. caches or trash directory.
When being run it moves the files and directories given in the configuration file to a location outside the home directory, e.g. /tmp or /scratch, and puts appropriate symbolic links in the home directory instead.
Example configuration files can be found at /usr/share/doc/unburden-home-dir/examples/ on Debian-based systems and in the etc/ directory of the source tar ball.
/etc/unburden-home-dir, /etc/unburden-home-dir.list, ~/.unburden-home-dir, ~/.unburden-home-dir.list, ~/.config/unburden-home-dir/config, ~/.config/unburden-home-dir/list, /etc/default/unburden-home-dir, /etc/X11/Xsession.d/95unburden-home-dir
Read the documentation at either /usr/share/doc/unburden-home-dir/html/ on debianoid installations, at https://unburden-home-dir.readthedocs.io/ online, or in the docs/ directory in the source tar ball for an explanation of these files.
corekeeper https://packages.debian.org/corekeeper, autotrash(1), agedu(1), bleachbit(1), mundus https://sebikul.github.io/mundus/, computer-janitor(1), rmlint(1).
Of, course, du(1) can help you to find potential files or directories to handle by unburden-home-dir, but there are quite some du(1)-like tools out there which are way more comfortable, e.g. ncdu(1) (text-mode), baobab(1) (GNOME), filelight(1) (KDE), xdiskusage(1) (X tool calling du(1) itself), or xdu(1) (X tool reading du(1) output from STDIN).
Unburden Home Dir is written and maintained by Axel Beckert abe@deuxchevaux.org.
Unburden Home Dir is available under the terms of the GNU General Public License (GPL) version 2 or any later version at your option.
April 2022 |