dedupe
dotfiles
dedupe | dotfiles | |
---|---|---|
3 | 5 | |
3 | 125 | |
- | - | |
0.0 | 6.5 | |
over 6 years ago | about 2 months ago | |
Python | Shell | |
BSD 2-clause "Simplified" License | The Unlicense |
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dedupe
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fdupes alternatives?
I wrote https://github.com/Gumnos/dedupe which sounds like it might be useful to you. It's faster than several of the alternatives I've found (many run the checksum across the whole of every file, this uses the file-size as a first-line discriminator, and only if the files are the same size does it go to the trouble of checking the checksum of the files). I designed it for creating hard-links in my media collection, but in the --dry-run mode, it should emit the file-names allowing you to pass it to xargs to remove them if it looks copacetic.
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File Management via CLI
You can use my dedupe.py script with the dry-run flag (-n) to find all the duplicates on your drive. If you run it without the dry-run flag, it will attempt to make hard-links so that each file exists only once on the drive with multiple hard-links to the underlying file. It should be pretty fast, only needing to checksum file-content in the event that files have the same size (several other such deduplication methods work by checksumming every file on the drive which can be slow).
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What tools / utilities have you written that you use regularly?
a file-deduplication utility that hard-links duplicate files to save space (our family photo gallery gets pics put in multiple albums for various audiences, so I can cut down on a lot of duplication with this)
dotfiles
- Extended Inline ASM for custom memset(ptr, 0, len) segfault? It usually does not do so in identical extern ASM.
- skeeto/dotfiles: My personal dotfiles
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(x86-64, Windows) Pushing variable to stack for call
Intel's manuals: fantastic reference once you learn how to read it. I looked up push in here when I helped you, which is how I knew there was no 64-bit immediate push. I use it so often I built a tool to quickly jump to specific mnemonics: x86-index builds an index and x86-lookup opens the PDF to the right page (works on Windows given a proper shell).
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What tools / utilities have you written that you use regularly?
qpkg: personal package manager, for managing custom-built packages in ~/.local.
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Linux graphics from scratch
I know what you mean, which is part of why I don't run any of the mainstream desktop environments. Instead I run Openbox (config) without a taskbar or anything like that. If I really want to focus, or I'm working on a remote machine, then I'll fullscreen the terminal (not maximize, actually fullscreen) and essentially just use tmux as my window manager.
What are some alternatives?
ripgrep-all - rga: ripgrep, but also search in PDFs, E-Books, Office documents, zip, tar.gz, etc.
smenu - smenu started as a lightweight and flexible terminal menu generator, but quickly evolved into a powerful and versatile CLI selection tool for interactive or scripting use.
file-arranger - Simple & capable Directory arranger/cleaner
hastyhex - A blazing fast hex dumper
xonsh - :shell: Python-powered, cross-platform, Unix-gazing shell.
nbrowser - 🔗 🌐 : an easy way to open links in browsers, mimic the "Open URL with..." dialog on Android, `nbrowser` help you open links in a browser
tawk - Like awk, but using tcl as the scripting language.
kks - Handy Kakoune companion.
mpd_what - An mpd album art and info getter
note-keeper - :notebook: A tiny bash tool for taking and organizing notes.
ledger - Double-entry accounting system with a command-line reporting interface
td-cli - A todo command line todo manager ✔️