Disk Usage/Free Utility (Linux, BSD, macOS & Windows)
- User-friendly, colorful output
- Adjusts to your terminal's width
- Sort the results according to your needs
- Groups & filters devices
- Can conveniently output JSON
- FreeBSD:
pkg install duf
- with scoop:
scoop install duf
- Android (via termux):
pkg install duf
- Binaries for Linux, FreeBSD, OpenBSD, macOS, Windows
Make sure you have a working Go environment (Go 1.12 or higher is required). See the install instructions.
Compiling duf is easy, simply run:
git clone https://github.com/muesli/duf.git
cd duf
go build
You can simply start duf without any command-line arguments:
duf
If you supply arguments, duf will only list specific devices & mount points:
duf /home /some/file
If you want to list everything (including pseudo, duplicate, inaccessible file systems):
duf --all
You can show and hide specific tables:
duf --only local,network,fuse,special,loops,binds
duf --hide local,network,fuse,special,loops,binds
You can also show and hide specific filesystems:
duf --only-fs tmpfs,vfat
duf --hide-fs tmpfs,vfat
Sort the output:
duf --sort size
Valid keys are: mountpoint, size, used, avail, usage, inodes,
inodes_used, inodes_avail, inodes_usage, type, filesystem.
Show or hide specific columns:
duf --output mountpoint,size,usage
Valid keys are: mountpoint, size, used, avail, usage, inodes,
inodes_used, inodes_avail, inodes_usage, type, filesystem.
List inode information instead of block usage:
duf --inodes
If duf doesn't detect your terminal's colors correctly, you can set a theme:
duf --theme light
If you prefer your output as JSON:
duf --json
Users of oh-my-zsh should be aware that it already defines an alias called
duf, which you will have to remove in order to use duf:
unalias duf
