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A modern, cross-platform, multi-threaded, and general purpose filesystem and disk-usage utility that is aware of .gitignore and hidden file rules.

Home Page: https://crates.io/crates/erdtree

License: MIT License

Rust 99.51% Shell 0.49%
command command-line command-line-tool rust cli tree du exa dua dust

erdtree's Introduction

erdtree (erd)

Build status Crates.io Packaging status Crates.io

erdtree is a modern, cross-platform, multi-threaded, and general purpose filesystem and disk-usage utility that is aware of .gitignore and hidden file rules. The following are some feature highlights:

  • Reports disk usage using a variety of metrics: bytes (logical or physical), blocks (Unix-only), word-count, or line-count.
  • Supports an ls -l-like view with information about owners, group, file permission, etc. (Unix-only).
  • Respects hidden file and gitignore rules by default.
  • Supports regular expressions and glob based searching by file-type.
  • Comes with several layouts: a reverse tree output, a tree-like output, or a du-like output.
  • Granular sorting capabilities.
  • Supports icons.
  • Colorized with LS_COLORS.

You can think of erdtree as a little bit of du, tree, find, wc and ls.

failed to load picture

Table of Contents

Usage

$ erd --help
erdtree (erd) is a cross-platform, multi-threaded, and general purpose filesystem and disk usage utility.

Usage: erd [OPTIONS] [DIR]

Arguments:
  [DIR]
          Directory to traverse; defaults to current working directory

Options:
  -c, --config <CONFIG>
          Use configuration of named table rather than the top-level table in .erdtree.toml

  -C, --color <COLOR>
          Mode of coloring output
          
          [default: auto]

          Possible values:
          - none:  Print plainly without ANSI escapes
          - auto:  Attempt to colorize output
          - force: Turn on colorization always

  -d, --disk-usage <DISK_USAGE>
          Print physical or logical file size
          
          [default: physical]

          Possible values:
          - logical:
            How many bytes does a file contain
          - physical:
            How many actual bytes on disk, taking into account blocks, sparse files, and compression
          - line:
            How many total lines a file contains
          - word:
            How many total words a file contains
          - block:
            How many blocks are allocated to store the file

  -f, --follow
          Follow symlinks

  -H, --human
          Print disk usage in human-readable format

  -i, --no-ignore
          Do not respect .gitignore files

  -I, --icons
          Display file icons

  -l, --long
          Show extended metadata and attributes

      --group
          Show file's groups

      --ino
          Show each file's ino

      --nlink
          Show the total number of hardlinks to the underlying inode

      --octal
          Show permissions in numeric octal format instead of symbolic

      --time <TIME>
          Which kind of timestamp to use; modified by default

          Possible values:
          - create: Time created (alias: ctime)
          - access: Time last accessed (alias: atime)
          - mod:    Time last modified (alias: mtime)

      --time-format <TIME_FORMAT>
          Which format to use for the timestamp; default by default

          Possible values:
          - iso:
            Timestamp formatted following the iso8601, with slight differences and the time-zone omitted
          - iso-strict:
            Timestamp formatted following the exact iso8601 specifications
          - short:
            Timestamp only shows date without time in YYYY-MM-DD format
          - default:
            Timestamp is shown in DD MMM HH:MM format

  -L, --level <NUM>
          Maximum depth to display

  -p, --pattern <PATTERN>
          Regular expression (or glob if '--glob' or '--iglob' is used) used to match files

      --glob
          Enables glob based searching

      --iglob
          Enables case-insensitive glob based searching

  -t, --file-type <FILE_TYPE>
          Restrict regex or glob search to a particular file-type

          Possible values:
          - file: A regular file
          - dir:  A directory
          - link: A symlink

  -P, --prune
          Remove empty directories from output

  -s, --sort <SORT>
          How to sort entries
          
          [default: size]

          Possible values:
          - name:    Sort entries by file name in lexicographical order
          - rname:   Sort entries by file name in reversed lexicographical order
          - size:    Sort entries by size smallest to largest, top to bottom
          - rsize:   Sort entries by size largest to smallest, bottom to top
          - access:  Sort entries by newer to older Accessing Date
          - raccess: Sort entries by older to newer Accessing Date
          - create:  Sort entries by newer to older Creation Date
          - rcreate: Sort entries by older to newer Creation Date
          - mod:     Sort entries by newer to older Alteration Date
          - rmod:    Sort entries by older to newer Alteration Date

      --dir-order <DIR_ORDER>
          Sort directories before or after all other file types
          
          [default: none]

          Possible values:
          - none:  Directories are ordered as if they were regular nodes
          - first: Sort directories above files
          - last:  Sort directories below files

  -T, --threads <THREADS>
          Number of threads to use
          
          [default: 10]

  -u, --unit <UNIT>
          Report disk usage in binary or SI units
          
          [default: bin]

          Possible values:
          - bin: Displays disk usage using binary prefixes
          - si:  Displays disk usage using SI prefixes

  -x, --one-file-system
          Prevent traversal into directories that are on different filesystems

  -y, --layout <LAYOUT>
          Which kind of layout to use when rendering the output
          
          [default: regular]

          Possible values:
          - regular:  Outputs the tree with the root node at the bottom of the output
          - inverted: Outputs the tree with the root node at the top of the output
          - flat:     Outputs a flat layout using paths rather than an ASCII tree
          - iflat:    Outputs an inverted flat layout with the root at the top of the output

  -., --hidden
          Show hidden files

      --no-git
          Disable traversal of .git directory when traversing hidden files

      --completions <COMPLETIONS>
          Print completions for a given shell to stdout
          
          [possible values: bash, elvish, fish, powershell, zsh]

      --dirs-only
          Only print directories

      --no-config
          Don't read configuration file

      --no-progress
          Hides the progress indicator

      --suppress-size
          Omit disk usage from output

      --truncate
          Truncate output to fit terminal emulator window

  -h, --help
          Print help (see a summary with '-h')

  -V, --version
          Print version

-l, --long and all of its arguments are currently not available on Windows, but support for a Windows variant is planned.

Installation

crates.io (non-Windows)

Make sure you have Rust and its toolchain installed.

$ cargo install erdtree

crates.io (Windows)

The Windows version relies on some experimental features in order to properly support hard-link detection. If you want to build from crates.io you'll first need to install the nightly toolchain before installing erdtree:

$ rustup toolchain install nightly-2023-06-11

Thereafter:

$ cargo +nightly-2023-06-11 install erdtree

Homebrew-core

$ brew install erdtree

Scoop

$ scoop install erdtree

NetBSD

$ pkgin install erdtree

Releases

Binaries for common architectures can be downloaded from latest releases.

Latest non-release

If you'd like the latest features that are on master but aren't yet included as part of a release:

$ cargo install --git https://github.com/solidiquis/erdtree --branch master

Other means of installation to come.

Documentation

Configuration file

If erdtree's out-of-the-box defaults don't meet your specific requirements, you can set your own defaults using a configuration file.

The configuration file currently comes in two flavors: .erdtreerc (to be deprecated) and .erdtree.toml. If you have both, .erdtreerc will take precedent and .erdtree.toml will be disregarded, but please note that .erdtreerc will be deprecated in the near future. There is no reason to have both.

TOML file

erdtree will look for .erdtree.toml in any of the following locations:

On Unix-systems:

$ERDTREE_TOML_PATH
$XDG_CONFIG_HOME/erdtree/.erdtree.toml
$XDG_CONFIG_HOME/.erdtree.toml
$HOME/.config/erdtree/.erdtree.toml
$HOME/.erdtree.toml

On Windows:

%APPDATA%\erdtree\.erdtree.toml

Here and below is an example of a valid .erdtree.toml:

icons = true
human = true

# Compute file sizes like `du`
# e.g. `erd --config du`
[du]
disk_usage = "block"
icons = true
layout = "flat"
no-ignore = true
no-git = true
hidden = true
level = 1

# Do as `ls -l`
# e.g. `erd --config ls`
[ls]
icons = true
human = true
level = 1
suppress-size = true
long = true

# How many lines of Rust are in this code base?
# e.g. `erd --config rs`
[rs]
disk-usage = "line"
level = 1
pattern = "\\.rs$"

.erdtree.toml supports multiple configurations. The top-level table is the main config that will be applied without additional arguments. If you wish to use a separate configuration, create a named table like du above, set your arguments, and invoke it like so:

$ erd --config du

# equivalent to

$ erd --disk-usage block --icons --layout flat --no-ignore --no-git --hidden --level 1

As far as the arguments go there are only three rules you need to be aware of:

  1. .erdtree.toml only accepts long-named arguments without the preceding "--".
  2. Types are enforced, so numbers are expected to be numbers, booleans are expected to be booleans, strings are expected to be strings, and so on and so forth.
  3. snake_case and kebap-case works.

.erdtreerc

erdtree will look for a configuration file in any of the following locations:

On Linux/Mac/Unix-like:

  • $ERDTREE_CONFIG_PATH
  • $XDG_CONFIG_HOME/erdtree/.erdtreerc
  • $XDG_CONFIG_HOME/.erdtreerc
  • $HOME/.config/erdtree/.erdtreerc
  • $HOME/.erdtreerc

On Windows:

  • $ERDTREE_CONFIG_PATH
  • %APPDATA%\erdtree\.erdtreerc

The format of a config file is as follows:

  • Every line is an erdtree option/argument.
  • Lines starting with # are considered comments and are thus ignored.

Arguments passed to erdtree on the command-line will override those found in .erdtreerc.

Click here for an example .erdtreerc.

If you have a config that you would like to ignore without deleting you can use --no-config.

Hardlinks

If multiple hardlinks that point to the same inode are in the same file-tree, all will be included in the output but only one is considered when computing overall disk usage.

Symlinks

-f, --follow
      Follow symlinks

Symlinks when followed will have their targets (and descendants) counted towards total disk usage, otherwise the size of the symlink itself will be reported. If a symlink's target happens to be in the same file-tree as the symlink itself, the target and its descendants will not be double-counted towards the total disk-usage. When a symlink to a directory is followed all of the box-drawing characters of its descendants will be painted in a different color for better visual feedback:

failed to load picture

Disk usage

By default disk usage is reported as the total amount of physical bytes stored on the disk. To get the human-readable form:

-H, --human
      Print disk usage in human-readable format

When using the human-readable form, binary units (e.g. 1 KiB = 1024 B) are reported by default. If you prefer SI units (1 KB = 1000 B) you can use the following:

-u, --unit <UNIT>
      Report disk usage in binary or SI units
      
      [default: bin]

      Possible values:
      - bin: Displays disk usage using binary prefixes
      - si:  Displays disk usage using SI prefixes

Additionally, various other disk usage metrics may be used instead of physical bytes. You have the following metrics available:

-d, --disk-usage <DISK_USAGE>
      Print physical or logical file size
      
      [default: physical]

      Possible values:
      - logical:
        How many bytes does a file contain
      - physical:
        How many actual bytes on disk, taking into account blocks, sparse files, and compression
      - line:
        How many total lines a file contains
      - word:
        How many total words a file contains
      - block:
        How many blocks are allocated to store the file

Lastly, if you'd like to omit disk usage from the output:

--suppress-size
  Omit disk usage from output

Physical vs logical

Physical size takes into account compression, sparse files, and actual blocks allocated to a particular file. Logical size just reports the total number of bytes in a file.

Matching du output

If you want the same exact disk usage reporting as du, you can do the following:

$ erd --layout flat --disk-usage block --no-ignore --hidden --level

or in short-hand

$ erd -y flat -d block -i -.

failed to load png

Word and line count

When opting to report disk usage in either word and line count, unlike wc, erdtree will make no attempt to count the amount of words or lines for files that cannot be encoded as a UTF-8 string such as a JPEG file. For cases such as these the line or total word-count will just appear as empty.

Additionally, the word and line-count of directories are the summation of all of the line/word-counts of its descendents.

Layouts

erdtree comes with four layouts:

-y, --layout <LAYOUT>
      Which kind of layout to use when rendering the output
      
      [default: regular]

      Possible values:
      - regular:  Outputs the tree with the root node at the bottom of the output
      - inverted: Outputs the tree with the root node at the top of the output
      - flat:     Outputs a flat layout using paths rather than an ASCII tree
      - iflat:    Outputs an inverted flat layout with the root at the top of the output
  • The inverted layout a more traditional tree-like layout where the root node is at the very top of the output.
  • The regular layout is a tree with the root node at the bottom of the output for quick information about total disk usage.
  • The flat layout is a tree-less output that more closely resembles du.

gitignore

-i, --no-ignore
      Do not respect .gitignore files

.gitignore is respected by default but can be disregarded with the above argument. .gitignore rules are also respected on a per directory basis, so every directory that is encountered during traversal that has a .gitignore will also be considered.

If .gitignore is respected any file that is ignored will not be included in the total disk usage.

Hidden files

-., --hidden
      Show hidden files

  --no-git
      Disable traversal of .git directory when traversing hidden files

Hidden files ignored by default but can be included with -., --hidden. If opting in to show hidden files .git is included; to exclude it use --no-git.

If hidden files are ignored it will not be included in the total disk usage.

Icons

-I, --icons                      Display file icons

Icons are an opt-in feature because for icons to render properly it is required that the font you have hooked up to your terminal emulator contains the glyphs necessary to properly render icons.

If your icons look something like this:

failed to load png

this means that the font you are using doesn't include the relevant glyphs. To resolve this issue download a NerdFont and hook it up to your terminal emulator.

Maximum depth

Directories are fully traversed by default. To limit the maximum depth:

-L, --level <NUM>
      Maximum depth to display

Limiting the maximum depth to display will not affect the total disk usage report nor the file count report.

Pruning empty directories

Sometimes empty directories may appear in the output. To remove them:

-P, --prune
      Remove empty directories from output

Sorting

Various sorting methods are provided:

-s, --sort <SORT>
      How to sort entries
      
      [default: size]

      Possible values:
      - name:    Sort entries by file name in lexicographical order
      - rname:   Sort entries by file name in reversed lexicographical order
      - size:    Sort entries by size smallest to largest, top to bottom
      - rsize:   Sort entries by size largest to smallest, bottom to top
      - access:  Sort entries by newer to older Accessing Date
      - raccess: Sort entries by older to newer Accessing Date
      - create:  Sort entries by newer to older Creation Date
      - rcreate: Sort entries by older to newer Creation Date
      - mod:     Sort entries by newer to older Alteration Date
      - rmod:    Sort entries by older to newer Alteration Date

  --dir-order <DIR_ORDER>
      Sort directories before or after all other file types
      
      [default: none]

      Possible values:
      - none:  Directories are ordered as if they were regular nodes
      - first: Sort directories above files
      - last:  Sort directories below files

--dir-order and --sort acan be used independently of each other.

Directories only

You output only directories with:

--dirs-only
  Only print directories

This will not affect total disk usage.

Long view

Currently only available on Unix-like platforms. Support for Windows is planned.

erdtree supports an ls -l like long-view:

-l, --long
  Show extended metadata and attributes

    --group
      Show file's groups

    --ino
      Show each file's ino

    --nlink
      Show the total number of hardlinks to the underlying inode

    --octal
      Show permissions in numeric octal format instead of symbolic

  --time <TIME>
      Which kind of timestamp to use; modified by default

      Possible values:
      - create: Time created (alias: ctime)
      - access: Time last accessed (alias: atime)
      - mod:    Time last modified (alias: mtime)

    --time-format <TIME_FORMAT>
      Which format to use for the timestamp; default by default

      Possible values:
      - iso:
        Timestamp formatted following the iso8601, with slight differences and the time-zone omitted
      - iso-strict:
        Timestamp formatted following the exact iso8601 specifications
      - short:
        Timestamp only shows date without time in YYYY-MM-DD format
      - default:
        Timestamp is shown in DD MMM HH:MM format

By default the columns shown in the order of left to right are:

  • permissions in symbolic notation
  • The file owner
  • The date the file was last modified (or created or last accessed)

Regular expressions and globbing

Filtering for particular files using a regular expression or glob is supported using the following:

-p, --pattern <PATTERN>
      Regular expression (or glob if '--glob' or '--iglob' is used) used to match files

  --glob
      Enables glob based searching

  --iglob
      Enables case-insensitive glob based searching

-t, --file-type <FILE_TYPE>
      Restrict regex or glob search to a particular file-type

      Possible values:
      - file: A regular file
      - dir:  A directory
      - link: A symlink

If --file-type is not provided when filtering, regular files (file) is the default.

Additionally, any file that is filtered out will be excluded from the total disk usage.

Lastly, when applying a regular expression or glob to directories, all of its descendents regardless of file-type will be included in the output. If you wish to only show directories you may use --dirs-only.

References:

Truncating output

In instances where the output does not fit the terminal emulator's window, the output itself may be rendered incoherently:

failed to load picture

In these situations the following may be used:

--truncate
  Truncate output to fit terminal emulator window

failed to load picture

Redirecting output and colorization

By default colorization of the output is enabled if stdout is found to be a tty. If the output is not a tty such in the case of redirection to a file or piping to another command then colorization is disabled.

If, however, the default behavior doesn't suit your needs you have control over the modes of colorization:

-C, --color <COLOR>
      Mode of coloring output
      
      [default: auto]

      Possible values:
      - none:  Print plainly without ANSI escapes
      - auto:  Attempt to colorize output
      - force: Turn on colorization always

erdtree also supports NO_COLOR.

failed to load picture

Parallelism

The amount of threads used by erdtree can be adjusted with the following:

-T, --threads <THREADS>          Number of threads to use [default: 3]

Why parallelism

A common question that gets asked is how parallelism benefits disk reads when filesystem I/O is processed serially.

While this is true, parallelism still results in improved throughput due to the fact that disks have a queue depth that, when saturated, allows requests to be processed in aggregate keeping the disk busy as opposed to having it wait on erdtree to do CPU-bound processing in between requests. Additionally these threads aren't just parallelizing disk reads, they're also parallelizing the processing of the retrieved data.

It should be noted however that performance, as a function of thread-count, is asymptotic in nature (see Amdahl's Law) so you'll quickly reach a point of dimishing returns after a certain thread-count threshold as you'd be paying the cost of managing a larger threadpool with no added benefit.

For empirical data on the subject checkout this article.

Completions

--completions is used to generate auto-completions for common shells so that the tab key can attempt to complete your command or give you hints; where you place the output highly depends on your shell as well as your setup. In my environment where I use zshell with oh-my-zsh, I would install completions like so:

$ erd --completions zsh > ~/.oh-my-zsh/completions/_erd
$ source ~/.zshrc

Same filesystem

If you are traversing a directory that contains mount points to other filesystems that you do not wish to traverse, use the following:

-x, --one-file-system
      Prevent traversal into directories that are on different filesystems

Rules for contributing

For rules on how to contribute please refer to CONTRIBUTING.md.

Security policy

For information regarding erdtree's security policy and how to report a security vulnerability please refer to SECURITY_POLICY.md

Comparisons against similar programs

It goes without saying that the following programs are all amazing in their own right and were highly influential in erdtree's development. While each of the following are highly specialized in acting as modern replacements for their Unix progenitors, erdtree aims to take bits and pieces of each that people use most frequently and assemble them into a unified highly practical tool.

No case will be made as to why erdtree should be preferred over X, Y, or Z, but because of some notable similarities with the following programs it is worth a brief comparison.

exa and erdtree are similar in that they both have tree-views and show information about permissions, owners, groups, etc..

The disadvantage of exa, however, is that it does not provide information about the disk usages of directories, which also makes sorting files by size a little dubious. The advantage exa has over erdtree, however, is in the fact that exa is much more comprehensive as an ls replacement.

Both tools are complimentary to one another and it is encouraged that you have both in your toolkit.

dua is a fantastic interactive disk usage tool that serves as a modern alternative to ncdu. If you're in the mood for something interactive and solely focused on disk usage then dua might suit you more. If you're interested in file permissions and doing quick static analysis of your disk usage without spinning up an entire interactive UI then perhaps consider erdtree.

dust is another fantastic tool that is closer in geneology to the traditional du command. If you're strictly looking for a modern replacement to du then dust is a great choice.

fd is much more comprehensive as a general finder tool, offering itself as a modern replacement to find. If you're looking for more granularity in your ability to search beyond just globbing, regular expressions, and the three basic file types (files, directories, and symlinks) then fd is the optimal choice.

Questions you might have

Q: Why did you make this? It's totally unnecessary.

A: Ennui.

Q: Why is it called erdtree?

A: It's a reference to an object of worship in Elden Ring.

Q: Is it any good?

A: Yes.

Q: Why is there no mention of this project being blazingly fast or written in Rust? Is it slow or something?

A: Okay fine. erdtree is written in Rust and is blazingly fast.

erdtree's People

Contributors

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erdtree's Issues

BUG REPORT: et doesn't shows mp4 files

My et doesn't shows mp4 files
Version: erdtree 1.6.0

❯ ls                                                                                      
'0001-FINAL [573011600].mp4'  '0003-FINAL [573012721].mp4'   lessons_links.txt
'0002-FINAL [573011998].mp4'  '0004-FINAL [573013069].mp4'   video_links.txt
❯ et                                                                                      
00-intro (709 B)
├─ video_links.txt (328 B)
└─ lessons_links.txt (381 B)

[feature] Option to filter files

It would be nice to be able to do:

$ erdtree --filter <glob_pattern>
$ erdtree -f <glob_pattern>

For example,

$ erdtree -f !*.snap

Would filter all insta snapshot files, and

$ erdtree -f *.snap

Would only display the snapshot files.

It seems like the ignore crate already supports adding ignore overrides.

Would you accept a PR that implements this?

[Feature request:] Pruning (when filtering using glob, don't print the empty branches)

I really like erdtree, here is little idea that I came across while using erdtree to search for files on my disk.

As the title says, it would be useful to enable "pruning" so the output only contains branches that aren't empty at the end.

Example:
let's say we have directory:

 folder_a
├─  folder_b
│  ├─  file_d (0.00 B)
│  ├─  file_c (0.00 B)
│  ├─  folder_ba
│  │  └─  file_x (0.00 B)
│  ├─  folder_bc
│  │  └─  file_z (0.00 B)
│  └─  folder_bb
│     └─  file_y (0.00 B)
├─  file_a (0.00 B)
├─  folder_c
│  ├─  file_ab (0.00 B)
│  ├─  file_ac (0.00 B)
│  ├─  file_ad (0.00 B)
│  ├─  file_f (0.00 B)
│  └─  file_e (0.00 B)
└─  file_b (0.00 B)


and I want to filter for files that contains "a": et -g "file_*a*" and the output is:

 folder_a
├─  folder_b
│  ├─  folder_bc
│  ├─  folder_ba
│  └─  folder_bb
├─  file_a (0.00 B)
└─  folder_c
   ├─  file_ab (0.00 B)
   ├─  file_ac (0.00 B)
   └─  file_ad (0.00 B)

but with the "pruning" enabled, it would skip the "dead-ends" and print just:

 folder_a
├─  file_a (0.00 B)
└─  folder_c
   ├─  file_ab (0.00 B)
   ├─  file_ac (0.00 B)
   └─  file_ad (0.00 B)

The idea is that when searching through bigger trees, the dead-ends are cluttering the output.

[feature] binary prefixes

hello, thank you for making this program. i think it'd be a good idea for erdtree to support binary prefix, since other programs like du uses binary prefix as default like following:

 $ du --help
...
 --si              like -h, but use powers of 1000 not 1024

As recommended in IEC 80000-13, this command will report sizes using SI units rather than binary units.

also, could you point me in the direction of source where it states SI unit is preferred over binary units?

Definition of prefixes using powers of 10—in which 1 kilobyte (symbol kB) is defined to equal 1,000 bytes—is recommended by the International Electrotechnical Commission (IEC)

i found relevent paragraph in byte, and it looks like it's for SI prefix using 1000 vs 1024, not that it's preferred to use SI unit over binary prefix.

Error when directory contains too much directories and files

$ erdtree -l 1

thread 'main' panicked at 'called Result::unwrap() on an Err value: Os { code: 2, kind: NotFound, message: "No such file or directory" }', src/file_tree/tree_node.rs:48:51
note: run with RUST_BACKTRACE=1 environment variable to display a backtrace

`--dirs-first` flag does nothing if no SortType is specified

for example: et --dirs-first will not sort directories above files, but if sort type is specified: et --dirs-first -s name it works as expected.

i was able to produce the expected behavior by adding a None enum variant to SortType and adding:

} else if ctx.dirs_first() {
	Order::from((SortType::None, true))
		.comparator()
		.map(|func| current_node.sort_children(func));
}

to this line, but there are probably "cleaner" approaches.

also, i noticed that clippy suggests a bunch of stylistic refactors all over. do you have an opinion against such stylistic approaches?

Does erdtree have a configuration file or environment variable?

I'm getting used to erdtree and liking what I'm seeing. I usually run it as et --icons or et --icons --dirs-first, etc.

So now I'm wondering: Is there some file or variable I can set that sets the "default" options for et? That is, export ERDTREE=--icons ... or an .erdtreerc or .config/erdtree.toml or such file where I could put in my "always show icons" options?

I know I can make an alias, but, well, if there's a more "canonical" way of doing this, I'd prefer that.

Add winget support

Now that winget is the official package manager for Windows, it would be useful to use winget since it's already pre-installed for Windows machines.

Feature idea: folders only

Use case: you have a small number (dozens) of folders, each of which may contain thousands of files. They may be at different depths, e.g.

a/{1k files}
a/b/{1k files}
b/c/d/{1k files}

in which case you might want a report like

├─ a (123.45 MiB)
│  ├─ b (67.89 MiB)
├─ b (234.56 MiB)
│  ├─ c (56.78 MiB)
│  ├─ ├─ d (8.90 MiB)

For cases like this, would be real nice to have "dirs only" flags (e.g. -D / --dirs-only).

Apologies in advance if this is already doable and I have missed it.

fix config locations

i still do not understand what is the point of making $HOME more clutter to maintain, even when we try to make it Clean / Neat

issue is regarding config-location

  • $HOME/.erdtreerc
    make location good , i mean standards of unix as `.config/et/.etrc'

some work around or TIPS which i have been using to tackle it
in Window (coz i use it for now ) :(
in $profile put this
$env:ERDTREE_CONFIG_PATH="path/to/conf/"

in Unix
in .bashrc put
export ERDTREE_CONFIG_PATH=path

`--ignore-git-ignore` in erdtreerc is ignored

To reproduce, put --ignore-git-ignore in $HOME/.erdtreerc.

Then run et from a directory that has some gitignored files. They won't be printed.

For comparison, if the flag is supplied through command line: et --ignore-git-ignore, it works as expected.

> et --version
erdtree 1.4.1

[FEATURE] use `-L` flag for level

In tree, -L is used for specifying the depth of the tree. Currently -L flag is not used by et, so can et use both -L and -l for the level to match the convention?

Provide option to print without colors

I want to use erdtree to print a project's folder structure and use it in README's, but the ANSI escape sequences make it unreadable.

Something like --no-colors or --plain would do the trick.

I'd be happy to work on this feature if that's alright.

[feature] Sort directories first

À la tree --dirsfirst, an option to sort directories above normal files.

In my view, there are two ways to implement this:

  • et --sort dir, a manually-implemented "sort by directory"
  • et --sort ... --dirs-first, an option for all sorting methods to sort directories first

I have both implemented, don't know which (if either) to make a pr for.

[feature] Add `args_override_self(true)`

Reasoning: I would like to make an alias to change some default behavior (sort, prefixes (future), etc). However, supplying the same argument twice (et -s name -s size) is an error.

Current behavior: et -s name -s size will not execute, with the message (from clap) that --sort cannot be used multiple times.
Expected behavior: et -s name -s size will execute, and sort output by size.

(This is a 3 line change and I have a PR ready, just wanted approval first as stated in the readme)

--suppress-size still recursively computes file sizes even when sorting is disabled

I'm a simple man. I like pretty colors and file icons. So I installed this to replace tree and exa. I put up an alias to run et -i -I -s size -l 2. all nice and pretty.

Then I tried running the command at my root directory with and realized that wait, this is a tool that was made to calculate disk usage, not just print pretty trees! It took longer than necessary to just print 2 layers of folders.

So I tried --suppress-size. Still, it took the same amount of time.
So then I thought this was using the size data to possibly sort the files. I checked the source code and, yeah, it holds the data until it tries to sort. But it would be nice™ with

struct Context {
    // ...
    #[arg(short, long)]
    max_depth: Option<usize>,
}

impl Context {
    // ...
    fn max_depth(&self) -> usize {
        self.max_depth.unwrap_or(usize::MAX)
    }

    fn walk_depth(&self) -> usize {
        self.max_depth().max(self.level())
    }
}

and a little bit of WalkBuilder::max_depth() in TryFrom<&Context> for WalkParallel then account for max_depth < level by setting the file sizes of deeper folders to 0 and hopefully done?

Now this should let you look at the shallow sizes of directories, if ever that's a thing that you need to do.

hang with non-existant directories?

when given a directory that doesn't exist, erdtree seems to hang until it is terminated manually.

These are the last three lines displayed when running with strace:

getcwd("/home/arisun/Projects/andrea", 1024) = 29
readlink("/home/arisun/Projects/andrea/bogus", 0x7ffec44b6d50, 1023) = -1 ENOENT (No such file or directory)
futex(0x56497ab84a58, FUTEX_WAIT_BITSET_PRIVATE, 4294967295, NULL, FUTEX_BITSET_MATCH_ANY

I am running the latest release, 1.7.0 on Arch in case that matters

Feature idea: files count

Idea: a flags that enables reporting total file count for directories,

Could be especially useful with #84, so you could report files count like

├─ a (123.45 MiB, 123 files)
│  ├─ b (67.89 MiB, 67 files)
├─ b (234.56 MiB, 234 files)
│  ├─ c (56.78 MiB, 56 files)
│  ├─ ├─ d (8.90 MiB, 8 files)

This might be somewhat confusing because it's not the number of files in a given directory but rather total files in this directory and all subdirectories (but is otherwise consistent with total file size being reported recursively).

`--ignore-git` doesn't seem to work

running et with hidden files and ignore git doesn't seem to work. I looked into it but I couldn't track it down fully yet (I'm still trying to grok OverrideBuilder atm).

[bws:~/circadian_tools] avgday(+19/-0)+ ± et -H --ignore-git
circadian_tools (220.02 KB)
├─ src (6.18 KB)
│  ├─ chrono.rs (2.01 KB)
│  └─ lib.rs (4.18 KB)
├─ .git (197.54 KB)
│  ├─ FETCH_HEAD (96.00 B)
│  ├─ packed-refs (112.00 B)
│  ├─ refs (809.00 B)
│  │  ├─ remotes (399.00 B)
│  │  │  └─ origin (399.00 B)
│  │  │     ├─ tau (41.00 B)
│  │  │     ├─ main (41.00 B)

Maybe this code here is getting called before the show-hidden-glob gets added so it basically gets overwritten?

if self.ignore_git {
    builder.add("!.git/**/*")?;
}

Sort by filesize could be a good feature

The performance of this tools is great! Amazing~

If a sort option for this command can be added. It would be better. In many cases, we might want to find the largest file or directory. Sort function can save the time for users to check from top to button.

For example:

OPTIONS:

……
-s: Sorted by file size

v1.3.0 is unable to build from source on windows via cargo install+ crates.io with rust 1.67.1 stable

Hello!

Thanks for continuing to improve this tool It's one of my favorites 🙂

After trying to upgrade to erdtree 1.3.0 with cargo install via crates.io, I got the following error output (placed inside a <details> block for brevity, with truncated path)

error[E0425]: cannot find value `metadata` in this scope
  --> ${HOME}\.cargo\registry\src\github.com-1ecc6299db9ec823\erdtree-1.3.0\src\fs\inode.rs:54:13
   |
54 |             metadata.file_index(),
   |             ^^^^^^^^ not found in this scope
   |
help: consider importing one of these items
   |
1  | use core::ptr::metadata;
   |
1  | use std::fs::metadata;
   |
1  | use std::ptr::metadata;
   |

error[E0425]: cannot find value `metadata` in this scope
  --> ${HOME}\.cargo\registry\src\github.com-1ecc6299db9ec823\erdtree-1.3.0\src\fs\inode.rs:55:13
   |
55 |             metadata.volume_serial_number(),
   |             ^^^^^^^^ not found in this scope
   |
help: consider importing one of these items
   |
1  | use core::ptr::metadata;
   |
1  | use std::fs::metadata;
   |
1  | use std::ptr::metadata;
   |

error[E0425]: cannot find value `metadata` in this scope
  --> ${HOME}\.cargo\registry\src\github.com-1ecc6299db9ec823\erdtree-1.3.0\src\fs\inode.rs:56:13
   |
56 |             metadata.number_of_links(),
   |             ^^^^^^^^ not found in this scope
   |
help: consider importing one of these items
   |
1  | use core::ptr::metadata;
   |
1  | use std::fs::metadata;
   |
1  | use std::ptr::metadata;
   |

error[E0425]: cannot find value `nlink` in this scope
  --> ${HOME}\.cargo\registry\src\github.com-1ecc6299db9ec823\erdtree-1.3.0\src\fs\inode.rs:58:42
   |
58 |             return Ok(Self::new(md, dev, nlink));
   |                                          ^^^^^
   |                                          |
   |                                          a field by this name exists in `Self`
   |                                          help: a local variable with a similar name exists: `nlinks`

error[E0308]: mismatched types
  --> ${HOME}\.cargo\registry\src\github.com-1ecc6299db9ec823\erdtree-1.3.0\src\fs\inode.rs:58:33
   |
58 |             return Ok(Self::new(md, dev, nlink));
   |                       --------- ^^ expected `u64`, found struct `Metadata`
   |                       |
   |                       arguments to this function are incorrect
   |
note: associated function defined here
  --> ${HOME}\.cargo\registry\src\github.com-1ecc6299db9ec823\erdtree-1.3.0\src\fs\inode.rs:18:12
   |
18 |     pub fn new(ino: u64, dev: u64, nlink: u64) -> Self {
   |            ^^^ --------

Some errors have detailed explanations: E0308, E0425.
For more information about an error, try `rustc --explain E0308`.
error: could not compile `erdtree` due to 5 previous errors
error: failed to compile `erdtree v1.3.0`, intermediate artifacts can be found at `${HOME}\AppData\Local\Temp\cargo-installK25LHL`

To replicate this, I simply use cargo install erdtree

et crashes when --prune is combined with a non existing --glob

et crashes when --prune is combined with a non existing --glob, e.g.:

$ cargo run -- --no-config --level 1 --prune --glob "main.rs" tests/data
    Finished dev [unoptimized + debuginfo] target(s) in 0.05s
     Running `target/debug/et --no-config --level 1 --prune --glob main.rs tests/data`
thread '<unnamed>' panicked at 'internal error: entered unreachable code: Try to access a freed node', ~/.cargo/registry/src/github.com-1ecc6299db9ec823/indextree-4.6.0/src/node.rs:45:13
note: run with `RUST_BACKTRACE=1` environment variable to display a backtrace
thread 'main' panicked at 'called `Result::unwrap()` on an `Err` value: Any { .. }', src/render/tree/mod.rs:156:24

Add support for installation via curl command

As a user, I would like to be able to install the erdtree CLI application using the curl command. This would allow me to easily download and install the application without having to download the binary file manually or other installation methods.

I would like to contribute to this feature by creating the installation script.

Regex may should be consider in the prefix exclustion

The -p options is used to exclude files or directories with some specified prefixes. But if some hidden or system files start with "." prefixes, they can't be ignored.

I guessed the match didn't use Regex?


[... tensorflow]$ erdtree -l 1 -p "."
. (228.41 MB)
├─ CODE_OF_CONDUCT.md (5.37 KB)
├─ .pylintrc (0 B)
├─ .bazelversion (6 B)
├─ tools (4.91 KB)
├─ arm_compiler.BUILD (1.18 KB)
├─ configure.py (53.52 KB)
├─ LICENSE (15.50 KB)
├─ configure (285 B)

thread panics when called from root ('/') directory

I really like this program, just a (small?) issue I found:

when I do cd / and then et, I get this panic:

[tom@tom-pc ~]$ cd /
[tom@tom-pc /]$ et
thread '<unnamed>' panicked at 'called `Option::unwrap()` on a `None` value', /home/tom/.cargo/registry/src/github.com-1ecc6299db9ec823/erdtree-1.2.0/src/fs/erdtree/node.rs:220:25
note: run with `RUST_BACKTRACE=1` environment variable to display a backtrace
thread 'main' panicked at 'called `Result::unwrap()` on an `Err` value: Any { .. }', /home/tom/.cargo/registry/src/github.com-1ecc6299db9ec823/ignore-0.4.20/src/walk.rs:1302:31
^C

WSL2 & Google Drive Shared Drives

I'm using:

  • WSL2
  • Windows 11 Pro version 22H2
  • Debian (Debian GNU/Linux 11 (bullseye))
  • Erdtree v 1.7.1
  • Google Drive (Windows application) version 72.0.3.0

Running erdtree in /mnt/g/Shared drives/$DRIVE appears to hang - I've outputted to a file and run tail on the file for 10 minutes and had no output. Seeing as there does not appear to be a verbose output, is there any other documentation you'd like?

error: unexpected argument '--dir' found

config file: ~/.erdtreerc, as follow:

--level 1
--icons
--scale 3

-s size
--dirs-first

run: et SomeDir

error occured:

error: unexpected argument '--dir' found

  note: argument '--dirs-first' exists

Once I delete the .erdtreerc file, and run the equivalent command: et -l 1 --icons --scale 3 -s size --dirs-first SomeDir, everything works fine.

Publish to crates.io?

Hello!

This is a really fantastic tool. I was wondering if there's any hope of possibly publishing this to crates.io?

thread 'main' panicked; symlink issue?

The et command works fine - except in my home directory:

thread 'main' panicked at 'called `Option::unwrap()` on a `None` value', src/fs/erdtree/node.rs:271:28
note: run with `RUST_BACKTRACE=1` environment variable to display a backtrace

The only difference I can see is that my home directory has links from other directories. Like this:

lrwxrwxrwx@   19 dave dave 26 Feb  2022 Documents -> /foo/Documents
lrwxrwxrwx@   16 dave dave 10 Jan  2022 Downloads -> /blah/Downloads

Any other ideas? Let me know if you require additional information. Using version 1.20.

backtrace.txt

Potential name clash

- to Reddit user `/u/lucca_huguet` (can be found as [luccahuguet](https://github.com/luccahuguet) on Github) for suggesting that the compiled `erdtree` binary be shorted to `et`.

Hi, I noticed erdtree is in the AUR and I installed it. Works very well, congrats!

As long-time user and collaborator to the Firejail project it didn't take long before creating a firejail profile for erdtree. That profile also works quite well, but then I hit a snag. Apparently the spreadsheet component of WPS Office is also called (and installed as) et.

Obviously that's not a problem for the erdtree dev(s) as such. I sure like short, easy to remember command names myself. Realizing what a name change of the binary entails, I don't want to suggest to do so. I just wanted to bring this to your attention.

[Feature request] Displaying modification time

Hi!

I've been using erdtree for a bit of time now and I'm quite happy with it, thanks for making this tool :)

I have one request though: would it possible (don't if it is) to add an option to also display the modification time of elements? It'd very, very useful for me.

Currently I use fd ... -x ls -lhd but it is quite slow, especially compared to erdtree.

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